Author Archives: Kent Sterling
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Time has come to allow Bob Knight’s returns to Assembly Hall to pass without notice
Legendary Indiana University Basketball coach Bob Knight was back at Simon Skjodt Assembly Hall – again – for Hoosier Basketball Fan Fest yesterday.
After so many heralded returns, it might finally be time to allow Knight to slip in and out of IU Basketball events without notice or coverage.
Since Knight was fired over 21 years ago as the result of an ill-conceived and poorly executed zero tolerance policy he was incapable of adhering to, Knight refused all overtures of come back to IU or be honored in any way.
Statues have been erected inside and outside Assembly Hall honoring Knight’s three NCAA Championship teams, but Knight is featured in none of them, per his request. Former Indiana athletic director Fred Glass routinely tried to bury the hatchet with Knight, to no avail. Invitations were extended and rejected.
Knight and his wife moved back to Bloomington as they wanted to be near friends who might make the sunset of Knight’s fascinating journey through life more enjoyable. There were rumors of Knight coming to Assembly Hall to walk around a bit. He then attended a women’s basketball game with friend Bob Hammel.
Finally, in February, 2020, right before Covid disrupted raucous gatherings, Knight returned to Assembly Hall for a reunion during halftime of IU’s game against Purdue. Alums over 50 years of age wept as Knight exhorted the crowd as many of his former players hugged him. Current students wondered who all the old guys were as they surrounded the emotional white-haired fellow.
The team stayed in the locker room rather indulge in a little history of the program they represented. The focus failed to pay off as IU lost to the Boilermakers by 12.
When Indiana replaced Archie Miller with alum (Class of 1980) Mike Woodson, that opened the door for Knight to pop back repeatedly first to a practice and then to the Fan Fest. Who knows how many other visits he has made in the half year since one of his favorites players and a successful NBA coach re-established connectivity to the 29-year Knight era?
Knight’s health is not great. He has good days and bad as his memory fades bit by bit, but he still enjoys being around basketball – and that building and court where so many of his favorite moments occurred.
It’s good to have Knight back. It always felt odd that he wasn’t around. For those who attended Indiana between 1971-2000 and became basketball fans as a result, Assembly Hall was always the place where Knight furiously commanded his team and everyone else who crossed its threshold. Now, he’s back. The fury is gone, but the hair, gut, sweaters and stare remain.
So again and again, back Knight comes. It’s not quite like Gene Keady at Mackey, where the torch was passed (mostly) smoothly to protege Matt Painter, but we have likely gotten to the point where media people no longer need to lurk in the corners to catch Knight walking in – or note his comings and goings in any way.
Despite Brand’s belief to the contrary 21 years ago, Knight belongs at Assembly Hall. And he is there quite a bit these days. Let’s leave it at that and allow him some peace, if he wants it.
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HBO’s “Hard Knocks – In Season” will expose good & bad of your Indianapolis Colts
Allowing television cameras where people work is always a dicey proposition. People working there rarely shine compared to the images created by our imaginations.
HBO and the NFL have partnered on a behind the scenes look at pro-football training camps for a number of years. The annual ritual of watching Hard Knocks goes like this. Fans watch. Fans wince and laugh. Players get cut. Coaches and GMs get fired.
I remember watching Cleveland Browns general manager John Dorsey call coach Hue Jackson and a couple of other guys in for a group hug in his office. I told my wife, Jackson would soon be fired, and Dorsey would follow not long after. The lesson? Never hug your boss – EVER! And never hug your staff – it’s creepy.
I remember watching Miami Dolphins coach Joe Philbin awkwardly try to project what he believed leadership looked like. I knew he was a goner. Almost every coach is going to get fired eventually, but football separates leaders from the non-leaders very quickly, and Philbin was sure as hell not a leader.
When it was the Atlanta Falcons turn, I shuddered when I watched our old neighbor Brian Wozniak get cut. He had a nice career as a blocking tight end at Wisconsin after spending part of his childhood around the corner from our house leading with his head as he de-cleated kids three years his senior. I hated to watch Brian’s NFL dream end on national television.
It was more than a little grotesque and fascinating to watch then Raiders wide receiver Antonio Brown destroy his feet with cryotherapy. He was also more than happy to allow us inside his very quirky life.
Until now, the televised circus had been restricted to training camp. Not anymore. On November 17th, HBO will debut the first no-holds-barred look at a regular season operation – Hard Knocks – In Season. And it will feature your Indianapolis Colts. On its face, this seems like a terrible idea.
What will this look like? Hopefully, not football’s version of The Office with Frank Reich in the Michael Scott role and Carson Wentz as Dwight Schrute. I want to see a well-oiled machine preparing for opponents as the Colts try to re-emerge as a threat to sneak their way into the playoffs.
In the hopes that someone in a position of power within the Colts organization reads this and can author a preemptive memo in advance of the film crew showing up, here are four things I absolutely do not want to see during Hard Knocks – In-Season:
- Players and coaches holding hands while praying together. (Prayer is personal. It can also be creepy to watch. When my family holds hands as we say Grace before holiday meals, I go to my happy place and silently pray to myself it ends soon.)
- People getting fired. (Anyone who has been fired understands how personal a moment this is. To have it captured for the world to see – and see again on-demand – is a terrible intrusion.)
- Carson Wentz exhorting teammate while substituting fake profanity for the real words. (“Golly, you darned freaking guys! We have got to come together right the heck now and leave the BS outside the freaking door!” That’s just too humiliating to contemplate. Seeing Ned Flanders as the Colts quarterback would haunt me in my sleep.)
- Players showering. (No explanation necessary.)
Anything else is fair game, I suppose. Whatever happens, Colts fans everywhere will be watching, hoping to find reasons for wins and losses. There is an extreme danger to this kind of transparency. The reasons for wins tend to only fleetingly be recognized, while the inferred causes for losing tend to stick, and can cause rapid career change.
Let’s hope for a lot of wins, little drama, and no nudity.
Indiana Basketball just five days away – fans trusting to hope just one more time!
Only five days to Indiana Basketball’s first game of the season, and I’m getting nervous.
Really nervous.
The last seven months have been filled with hope and optimism that the Hoosiers will be better than under former coach Archie Miller – good enough the earn their first invitation to the NCAA Tournament since 2016.
Miller getting the ax was a positive start toward a return to respectability, but the hire of IU alum Mike Woodson seemed inspired. When coupled with the return of fellow alum Dane Fife as an assistant and Thad Matta in an administrative role, fans offered to donate bolts of red fabric for new banners.
Woodson is not only a coach who led the Atlanta Hawks and New York Knicks to NBA success, he cut his teeth as a player in Bloomington under Bob Knight. The tether to Knight re-established a connection for those longing for a return of Knight – and Knight style basketball to Assembly Hall. For so long, Knight was angry with Indiana and like children of divorced parents, some fans and former players were conflicted as to who to love more – their school or coach?
With Woodson bringing what he learned during the 41 years in the NBA and from 1976-1980 under Knight, nostalgic Indiana fans are hoping this year is different from all the years since Knight left (minus 2002 and 2013, which were anomalous in their prosperity).
Hope and all forms of that horrible word are what make me nervous. I can remember how much fun IU Basketball can be when things are rolling. I remember two of the National Championships very well, as well as the Cheaney Era that should have brought another banner if not for Alan Henderson‘s knee and Ted Valentine’s whistle.
I was smart enough to understand Kelvin Sampson and Tom Crean were ill-fitting leaders for the program from the moment I learned they were hired. I heard that Sampson would be Mike Davis‘s replacement from an assistant of athletic director Rick Greenspan prior to the announcement. He told me, “Well, we got our guy!” I asked who it was. “Kelvin Sampson!” he proudly exclaimed.
My brow furrowed. I nodded, and said, “Oh, Kelvin Sampson…from Oklahoma.” I tried to smile, but my facial muscles balked. My teeth showed and my eyes widened. I looked more like a mental patient than a happy IU fan. With Crean, I felt the same strange disappointment. But with Archie Miller, I wanted so badly to experience better basketball that I plugged into whatever shallow reservoir of hope I managed to protect through the mostly miserable years since the Cheaney Era.
Miller was not in basketball to win friends in media or Bloomington, and promised to recruit the hell out of Indiana. That was enough for me. My threshold for hope had eroded so far toward the end of Crean’s nine years that I would have embraced rock icon Steve Miller as IU Basketball’s next savior.
My hope was obviously ill-invested. After four years of Miller doing a bad Crean impersonation as he clapped and profusely sweated on the sidelines, IU athletic director Scott Dolson agreed with Indiana’s fanbase that another change was due.
After trying to compel Brad Stevens with enough cash to make him the highest paid coach in college basketball history, Dolson set his sights on Woodson. Knight approved, according to a statement over his name, and IU fans decided to embrace that evil little word again.
It has always been thought Indiana should be coached by an Indiana guy, and that the obvious path of succession of leadership veered far off course as the battle of leaders pitted two titans of hubris – then IU president Myles Brand and Knight – against one another. Neither won, and IU fans were the losers. Woodson might just might make this right again – as though the intervening 20 1/2 years were a just a bad dream.
On Tuesday, Woodson will reveal to Indiana fans, alums, and boosters what can be expected in his first season at the helm. If defense is hard-nosed, open shots are made, and players are held accountable, the IU faithful will feel like their program is back, baby! If wins come in bunches, all the better! If hopeful resolve remains through Selection Sunday, we will log onto Travelocity to see about flights to the location of the Final Four (which I have not looked up for fear of jinxing things).
If this grand experiment fails, what then? The missing links that have been discussed for 20 years will have proven as valueless as Archie’s packline defense.
From where does hope spring if this doesn’t work? That is why I am so nervous about Tuesday night’s game against Eastern Michigan.