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Pastimes : Bobby Knight's Tenure - Place Your Bets -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: gulleyjimson who wrote (3)5/16/2000 10:01:00 PM
From: Razorbak  Respond to of 8
 
Early Line on the Early Line: Eight Months

"The General Marches On With A Warning"

MAY 15, 2000

Mike DeCourcy
The Sporting News

INDIANAPOLIS -- Bob Knight was about as far removed as possible from the news conference called to discuss his future as Indiana?s basketball coach, which is one way to assure his tenure with the Hoosiers lasts as long as he would like.

In the future, Knight will be forced to exercise "appropriate decorum and civility" in dealing with the media. There may be no greater threat to his continued employment.

Reporters who squeezed into a hotel conference room Monday afternoon -- while Knight jetted off to Scotland -- laughed when IU president Myles Brand used that phrase.

Many of those who have witnessed numerous Knight outbursts and tirades, or those performance art pieces he unveils each year at the NCAA Tournament, are convinced he will be unable to last long under the "zero-tolerance policy" that Indiana has instituted for Knight.

Seeing as how the NCAA's drive to remove gambling on college sports from the Nevada casinos is only on the pace lap, the legal books ought to make one more college basketball killing by offering this proposition: over-and-under betting on how many months The General lasts without losing his cool and, subsequently, his job.

Early line on the early line: eight months.

Of all the aspects of his new constrictions that will be a challenge to Knight, managing his dealings with the media will be most difficult.

It is unlikely he can avoid reporters completely; if he were to make a policy of non-attendance at postgame news conferences, he would no doubt anger the people who have permitted him to remain on the job.

That means he will have to face their questions periodically, and there is no question that will mean frequently being challenged by vengeful reporters who would love to be able to sit at the bar and claim responsibility for asking the question that led to the meltdown that got Bob Knight fired.

He will be prodded in this fashion, and it may happen often. The depth of media resentment toward Knight was obvious during the press conference announcing the sanctions against him. Reporters hammered IU president Myles Brand for choosing not to dismiss the coach and presenting him with "one last chance."

It wasn't out of desperation to save his basketball program that Brand acted as he did. Knight is a diminished asset to Indiana. His coaching performance over the past half-dozen years, with no NCAA Sweet 16 appearances or Big Ten titles in that stretch, has not been sufficient for the administration to continue tolerating his behavior.

At 59, his age would be a factor to any school that would be interested in hiring him away from IU. Only the most desperate major-conference school would risk the negative publicity that would accompany his hiring.

He is not going anywhere, in other words, unless IU sends him away.

It wasn't out of fear that Brand kept Knight, because Knight had to humble himself to agree to the difficult conditions set before him, including a $30,000 fine, three-game suspension and several apologies.

Brand presented a perfectly logical, rational explanation for taking the course he did. He admitted IU had not dealt effectively with Knight in the past and had been complicit in creating the problem the coach personifies today.

Because the university had been too tolerant of Knight's actions, and because the two-month investigation of his conduct uncovered nothing that went outside the pattern of Knight's aberrant behavior, the only reasonable course for the university would be to set strict standards for his future conduct.

This did not satisfy reporters who came to witness a beheading, and Knight can expect this will not end their crusade.

If Knight is to survive the five to six seasons that will likely be necessary for him to surpass Dean Smith for the NCAA Division I career victories, he will need to hold his temper through any number of efforts by media folks designed to embarrass him on the public stage.

He must learn two words that could allow him to survive when he's pushed to the edge: "Next question."


tsn.sportingnews.com

Mike DeCourcy covers college basketball for The Sporting News. Drop him a line at mailto:decourcy@sportingnews.com



To: gulleyjimson who wrote (3)5/16/2000 10:14:00 PM
From: Razorbak  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 8
 
No Sacred Cows at IU; Just Silk-Suited Chickens...

"Hoosier Heavies Give Knight A Big Break"

MAY 15, 2000

Bill Plaschke
Los Angeles Times

The agitated trustee tossed out a statement that clattered like a metal chair across a hardwood floor.

"There are no sacred cows at Indiana University," John Walda said.

No, just silk-suited chickens.

For 29 years, Bob Knight has seemingly brought such great importance to a school with apparently so little self-respect, his immoral and even illegal behavior was a price gladly paid.

Shame on us for thinking judgment day was going to be any different.

The school addressed the Knight issue Monday in a news conference that was far more egregious than any of his stunts.

The university president cowered, its trustees blushed, and integrity flat-out fainted.

A three-game suspension for the sort of choking incident that cost Latrell Sprewell nearly a full season? Of course, Sprewell plays in that moral bastion known as the NBA.

A set of no-tolerance conduct rules that will result in immediate dismissal if they are broken? Um, haven't those rules been in place for 29 years, or has it always been legal at Indiana to throw a vase at a secretary?

A $30,000 fine? That's shoe money.

Presented with a nicely garnished chance to fire a coach who has outlived his methods and overplayed his madness, Indiana officials did what they always do in these situations.

They listened to the coach. They kissed his red sweater. They ran his strange plays.

In doing so, they behaved far worse than Knight has ever dreamed of behaving.

They head-butted morality.

They punched ethics.

They choked dignity.

They did require two individual apologies. But only to the athletic directory Knight verbally attacked and to the secretary Knight almost beheaded when he smashed a vase against a wall behind her.

What about Neil Reed, the player whose allegations of choking began the investigation, the player university officials tried to smear until videotape proved he was telling the truth?

They are trying to smear him still.

"Coach Knight will offer a blanket apology to everyone else," said university President Myles Brand, sitting amazingly straight for someone with no apparent spine.

And besides, said smirking trustee Walda, "It depends on how you define the word, ?choking.' "

Not only did they not require Knight to face his main accuser, they didn't even require him to face his community.

He might have been sorry, as Walda claimed in a brief message from Knight, but not sorry enough to come to the news conference and tell everyone himself.

"Coach Knight will eventually speak for himself, I'm sure," Brand said.

By the tone of his voice, you could tell that he was not sure at all.

In its finite wisdom, Indiana University has issued a directive to a man who takes orders from no one.

It has drawn up rules for a man who makes his own.

It has penalized a man for whom there is no shame.

It has done nothing to change an environment where bullying continues to be an acceptable form of leadership, as long as that bully wins three national championships and has a chance of becoming college basketball's all-time winningest coach.

Gee, sounds like a great place to send your children.

The message this sends about Indiana and basketball is not just foolish, but frightening.

It's fun to wax poetic about a sport so ingrained in a community, it is like a religion. It's scary when that religion becomes a cult.

The most unsettling thing about Knight's famed chair fling in 1985 was not the actual throw, but the response.

Watch the video. As the chair bounces across the court and nearly hits two cheerleaders, Indiana fans erupt in cheers.

The most uncomfortable thing about all those shoves and head-butts and verbal tirades were never the actual acts, but how everyone else reacted to them.

For nearly 29 years, few people did or said anything.

You can't expect a freshman to fight his coach, but what about the alumni in the stands, or the university officials watching on television? What about a community leader standing up and saying enough is enough?

Are basketball tickets in Bloomington worth that much?

What's most amazing about all the recent allegations toward Knight are not the actual allegations, but that they have been covered up for so long.

Knight is supposedly a tremendous teacher, but are the people of Indiana that desperate for teachers?

Knight is supposedly forever loyal to his players after graduation, but is that a trait so rare that people will let someone punch their neighbors in exchange?

And maybe the most startling thing about Monday's news conference was not the answer, but one of the questions.

A journalist actually asked if this action would have been taken if Knight had not failed to win a national title in the last 13 years.

Good question.

"Our basketball team hasn't been that bad," responded Brand quickly, vehemently, showing far more emotion in defending his coach than in reprimanding him.

A message about Indiana, and a warning for the rest of us.

The sports world is bereft of leaders who stay in one place for long periods of time while demanding consistent overall excellence. We will go to great lengths to place our children in such environments.

But there is always a price. And we have to understand that price before paying it.

Indiana set its price Monday, and it is unconscionably high.

"If Bob Knight persists in this type of conduct, it will not be tolerated," Brand said Monday.

They're giving him 29 more years, tops.


tsn.sportingnews.com

Bill Plaschke, a regular contributor to The Sporting News, is a sports columnist for the Los Angeles Times.