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June 7, 2006

Coach Hirings Made Official

Filed under: Uncategorized — Chas @ 6:57 pm

Finally.

University of Pittsburgh head men’s basketball coach Jamie Dixon announced the appointment of two assistant coaches–former Saint Joseph’s assistant Mike Rice and Pitt’s former director of operations Orlando Antigua. Rice and Antigua will join fellow assistant coach Pat Sandle as members of Dixon’s coaching staff.

The press release has short bio summaries for each. That just leaves the video coordinator position to fill and technically/officially the Director of Basketball Operations *cough* Brandin Knight *cough*.

Whither Antonio Bryant

Filed under: Uncategorized — Chas @ 6:30 pm

The year and a half Antonio Bryant was in Cleveland, he was not considered a trouble maker by the media. He was the best healthy receiver they had, but that was damning with faint praise. When he left, it was with a shrug from the populace. Just chalking it up to him not being part of the present Browns’ strategy and planning in letting him go. Considering their two primary receiving targets are coming off broken legs (Edwards and Winslow, Jr.) it seems a little strange to me. Of course the former top Pitt receiver got a nice 4-year, $15 million deal from San Francisco. This being mini-camp time, Bryant is saying and doing all the right things (Hell, so is Terrell Owens, so what does that really mean?) (hat tip to Jon).

Bryant wasn’t the ideal replacement for Lloyd, not with Antwaan Randle El and Joe Jurevicius available in the same free-agency pool. But the 49ers have upgraded substantially, and if Bryant follows through on his promises of even-tempered maturity, the team will have its first real game-breaking threat since Terrell Owens left San Francisco.

That “if” could be one of the great dramas of the season.

The 49ers say they did their homework on Bryant and that past coaches have vouched for him. Bryant insists that he has learned to set aside the frustrations of football before they become explosive.

“I try to live my life drama-free,” he said.

That may be impossible. Bryant’s intensity is palpable. On the practice field Friday, he fidgeted frequently between plays, his energy overflowing. In an interview afterward, he was both cerebral and emotional, often expressing himself in metaphors and aphorisms. (His position coach in college, recognizing Bryant’s fondness for witty sayings, once gave him a book of quips and quotes.)

I’m kind of surprised that an article in a San Francisco paper on Bryant wouldn’t get a quote from his former coach now up in Stanford. Still, it’s obvious the writer wants to believe Bryant is different from his rep and the jersey tossing incident at Parcells.

Coaches Answering For Their Sins

Filed under: Uncategorized — Chas @ 12:15 pm

So, one of the underreported portions of now Indiana Head Coach Kelvin Sampson’s penalties for making a slew of impermissable phone calls to recruits, is the disparate penalty tossed on his former assistant coach Ray Lopes.

His top assistant at Oklahoma, at least at the time of the initial violations, was Ray Lopes. Lopes then continued the practice of making impermissible phone calls as a head coach at Fresno State. He made a total of 457 impermissable calls over a two-plus-year period (which includes time at Oklahoma, as well).

Sure, Lopes made twice as many calls, but what was his punishment? He was handed a three-year show-cause penalty (that started when he was terminated at Fresno State) and is out of work. His attorney, Toby Baldwin, has already been quoted in the local media saying he would like to appeal the penalty.

On the surface, it appears to be an inequity. Sampson didn’t get a show-cause penalty and his new school, Indiana, only has to show up at a show-cause hearing if it wants to challenge the sanctions handed down, which it doesn’t.

Well, not unemployed. He is working as a scout in the NBA.

I admit I probably would have read the article and let it slide out of my consciousness except for two points. The first is the fact that Pitt is tangentally involved.

If Lopes were hired during his three-year show-cause, the employing institution would have to go in front of an infractions committee to discuss what sanctions should or could be placed on him. Lopes has been actively trying to get a job. He made an attempt to join Pittsburgh’s staff, but to no avail.

[Emphasis added.]

Lopes was a decent recruiter, but he did nothing to distinguish himself as head coach at Fresno St. — other than fail to clean up the reputation of the school following Tarkanian. In fact, he helped continue the reputation as a basketball program that is morally void and courrupt. He has even less credibility regarding ethics from Fresno St. and the whole phone call thing there and at Oklahoma. So while he may have wanted the Pitt job, I don’t think (or at least I hope) Coach Dixon and/or the Pitt Athletic Department were interested in him regardless of the outcome of the penalty ruling.

The other reason is it lends credence to an earlier assertion I have made that the NCAA is far happier to penalizes individuals much more than the institutions and that is what happened here.

Colonial Athletic Association commissioner Tom Yeager, who was the acting chair of the infractions committee for the Sampson case, said Tuesday that there was logic behind the differentiation. He said that if Sampson and Lopes were both employed or unemployed, the penalties likely would have been the same.

“When it’s one in each category, it looks like a different deal, but with Kelvin employed, there are activities that can be directly impacted right now,” Yeager said. “If Ray were to get a job, then he might face similar sanctions, but the difference is that once [the three years is up], then he’s done.”

“To sit and say that he got three years and the head coach got one year is apples and oranges,” Yeager said. “If Kelvin were out of work, it could have been the same, and if Ray was at some place he might have gotten what Kelvin did. That’s where the distinction lies. It’s all based on whether or not you’re currently employed at an NCAA institution.

“The big difference is that Ray Lopes is working as an NBA scout right now. If Ray is in the NBA for another two years [as a year of the penalty has already elapsed], then he comes back in with no impact on his employment. But with a current employee like Kelvin, there is a direct restriction on his activity for a period of time right now.

“If all you’re looking at is three years versus one year, [then] yes, it looks like Ray Lopes got a much worse deal, but he’s beyond the reach of the NCAA.”

I do get the logic to some extent in that he is saying that if they had placed the same penalties on Lopes or even extended a bit longer, it would be meaningless since he isn’t working for a member team of the NCAA.

Of course, the argument could be that you declare that the penalty is tolled and enforced starting when he becomes employed by an NCAA member institution. Instead, by instituting a “show cause” ban on him, he is effectively unemployable until at least a few years after the ban ends. No NCAA team will touch him during the penalty and few will want to deal with negative publicity of hiring him too soon after the penalty ended. It’s not worth the risk or negative publicity.

It’s unstated, but I think the penalty was also much harsher because of where he was Head Coach. Fresno St. and following Tark. The NCAA doesn’t exactly have any love for Tark and the fact that Lopes essentially continued the behavior would fit the NCAA pattern of taking out its frustration on others when it can’t get at the one it really dislikes.

Additionally, you could argue that Sampson got off very easy because of his employment by Indiana when he has the added sin of complete and blatant hypocrisy.

Meanwhile, Sampson’s presence as one of the chairs at the National Association of Basketball Coaches ethics summit in Chicago in 2003 has prompted an angry response from one head coach in the West.

The coach, who didn’t leave his name on the voicemail at NABC director Jim Haney’s office and preferred to stay anonymous with ESPN.com, said he was furious. The coach essentially said he left a message saying the summit was a joke, that he’s done with any ethics meetings, the whole ordeal is a fraud and that all the NABC has done is open it up for people to do what they want to do with the inequities for the haves and have-nots in the coaching profession.

“What kind of message has been sent here?” the coach said. “Why aren’t other people standing up and saying something? Most coaches would be fired for this. Look, I like Kelvin and know him well but this isn’t right.”

The coach also said the NABC should publicly censure Sampson.

Haney said the ethics committee, which associate director Reggie Minton chairs, would likely look into this issue. Minton was in Kuwait (along with Sampson) the past week as part of Operation Hardwood II and could address it when he returns. Haney said one of the provisions as part of the ethics summit was to ensure that a head coach is held accountable for his assistant coaches. He said that legislation has passed.

Regardless, the events surrounding Sampson caused Haney to say, “No question that it stings. I feel it.”

Whether or not the irate coach is willing to go public soon is uncertain. He said he wants to work in the field for the next 10 years and doesn’t want to be blacklisted. Still, he said he felt it was unfair the way Lopes was treated in comparison to Sampson.

And the odds of the NABC actually saying something negative against one of their fellow coaches who is presently employed and they’d have to actually face is what? 600 -1? 1,000-1? Higher?

Let’s be honest, it takes a conviction before Congress will censure one of its own and they ostensibly have to answer to the voters. Who exactly do the coaches have to answer to for failing to censure one of their own? Their ADs?

Gray Watch:Finally Announcing A Workout

Filed under: Uncategorized — Chas @ 8:55 am

Tomorrow Aaron Gray will conduct his one and only private workout.

Gray, accompanied by his father, Mike, and coach, Jamie Dixon, was scheduled to fly to Orlando, Fla., today and will join three other college players in a private workout Thursday for interested NBA clubs at the league’s annual Pre-Draft Camp in nearby Lake Buena Vista.

“It’s only going to be one workout session,” Dixon said Tuesday. “The NBA said they’d make all the teams aware of it. Aaron is paying his own way because he’s not part of the camp.”

3 other players will be taking part in the workout.

Pitt coach Jamie Dixon will accompany Gray to Orlando and will watch the workout. Because Gray is conducting a private workout separate from the Orlando predraft camp, he must pay for all expenses incurred during his trip under NCAA rules.

Gray will be one of four NBA hopefuls at the workout. The others are Corey Belser of San Diego, Jeff Horner of Iowa and Fran Steyn, a 7-foot-2 center formerly of Oklahoma State.

Those 3 are all Seniors, and if it’s a private workout, I guess they and/or their agents share in the cost.

Krauser will be in Orlando playing in the scrimmages and fully taking part in the camp.

Krauser, listed as the No. 91 player in this year’s draft class by ESPN.com, took part in the predraft camp last year in Chicago and was advised by NBA personnel to return for his senior season at Pitt.

“He’s definitely a better player now than he was last year at this time,” Dixon said. “I’m hearing the same thing from NBA people when I get feedback on Carl. I’m talking with NBA people almost every day. I heard he played very well in Boston and L.A. And I anticipate he’ll play well in Orlando, too.”

It seems that in addition to workouts with the Celtics and Raptors, Krauser has worked out for the LA Lakers.

Coach Dixon must be on a tight schedule. After the Thursday workout, he’s going to have to fly out to Hawaii. Not to mention still work in officially announcing the hiring of Mike Rice.

There has been some wondering what Dixon is doing with all this support of Gray.

Well there’s the “protecting the investment” argument. Dixon knows more than we do about Gray’s feelings about the draft. While the mock drafts and pundits make it seem like an inevitability that Gray will stay in the draft, because it doesn’t seem likely that his draft status will vary much from this year to next. That he will still be a mid- to late-first rounder. Maybe that isn’t so and Gray and his family are genuinely torn on the whole thing. So Dixon is there to both be a reminder of coming back to college and making sure Gray and his family don’t inadvertently do anything to eff up his ability to return to Pitt.

Another perspective is that Dixon is engaged in a fringe part of the kabuki dance of recruiting — or whatever other tortured analogy you want to use — demonstrating his support of one of his player’s dreams. He can go to blue-chip recruits with NBA aspirations and point to this as a tangible example of the way he will stand by their long-term decisions and do what he can to help them realize their dreams even during the off-season.

Finally, there’s this. It’s who Dixon is. Unwavering in his support and standing by his players like they are family. That when he makes that kind of pitch to kids when he recruits them, he means it.

Much the way he kept the solid support of Krauser all of last summer while Krauser debated, hemmed and hawed about the NBA draft and then going overseas. Dixon stood by and offered support to Krauser no matter what he decided while the rest of us gnashed our teeth demanded an answer or wanted to say “farewell” to Krauser, rather than being forced to wait on his decision about the rest of his life.

Ultimately, it is probably some combination of all three factors.

Finally Making It Public

Filed under: Uncategorized — Chas @ 6:57 am

Geez. Lose your leading scorer and two assistants in the offseason. Not Coach Jamie Dixon this time, St. Joe’s Phil Martelli.

Phil Martelli has had an interesting offseason. His leading scorer has transferred and 67 percent of his coaching staff has left. At first glance, these could be perceived as serious issues at Saint Joseph’s.

Upon further review, the player, Abdulai Jalloh, had his own issues that could not be resolved by staying on Hawk Hill, and the two assistants were made offers they really could not refuse.

Hawks assistant Monte Ross took the head job at Delaware in April. Tomorrow, assistant Mike Rice starts at Pittsburgh as Jamie Dixon’s associate head coach.

“The challenge of recruiting and coaching in the Big East is something I look forward to,” said Rice, a Pittsburgh native.

That gives Rice about a month to get situated at Pitt and then out for the July recruiting.

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