Author Archives: Kent Sterling

Indianapolis Colts sign TY Hilton! IU Basketball coaching search driving fans nuts! Now is time for patience!

Indiana Basketball – Experts torn, Oats gaining traction; Colts to welcome Sammy Watkins for visit! NBA Trade Deadline looms!

Thad Matta – if healthy, can he resurrect IU?; Armaan Franklin enters portal; Pacers Myles Turner – on the block?

Indiana Basketball – Armaan Franklin enters the transfer portal

Armaan Franklin’s name is being entered in the NCAA’s Transfer Portal, but that doesn’t mean he’s leaving Bloomington.

Indiana’s Armaan Franklin entering the NCAA’s Transfer Portal is not good news, but it isn’t necessarily bad news either.

Franklin’s name in the portal allows schools to contact him – or Franklin to contact schools he may be interested in transferring to.  The player can also choose to have his name removed from the portal and Indiana can then choose to continue to honor his scholarship.

Call this a trial separation – the kind that either solidifies or ends a marriage.  By being listed, Franklin is telling potential hookups he is ready to listen to their best pitch.  If none measure up to Indiana, he can re-pledge his love and loyalty to good ol’ IU.

Depending upon who’s hired as Miller’s replacement, job one for the new guy will be to recruit current players to remain with the team.  Franklin is just keeping his options open if that pitch goes south.

Franklin hit 42.4% of his three-point attempts and defended with energy throughout the just ended difficult season.  The new coach will likely want to talk to Franklin as soon as the ink is dry on his contract.  If Franklin wants to return, he will certainly be welcome.

That’s the way college basketball works these days – especially after an athlete’s sophomore season.  Like the spouse discussed above, they begin to ask, “Is that all there is?”  A new coach, who might want to begin a re-build is a scary prospect for Franklin, who has two seasons left to show the type of game that might earn him millions in the NBA.

Real life looms for the Cathedral graduate, and he’s keeping his options open.  Nothing wrong with that at all.

Indiana Basketball coach search should move in new direction! Colts sign OT! Depleted Pacers drubbed

Indiana Basketball – Dane Fife fits – hire him! Colts slow-play free agency again; Pacers not bad or good enough to sell or buy!

Indiana Basketball – Forget the “proven winners” this time, give me the right fit – Dane Fife!

Sometimes learning is painful, but it always pays off – as it did for Dane Fife.

The insanity of a search for a new basketball coach at Indiana University is a lot like an Owen County cockfight.  The chickens all look the same, and the only winners are the beer salesmen in the black shirts.  That includes the chickens, because at some point in the afternoon they all wind up tossed into a pile next to where young children play catch with wadded empty cans of Natty Light.

Archie Miller became the latest chicken hurled onto the pile of carcasses, joining those of Tom Crean, Kelvin Sampson, Mike Davis, and Bob Knight.  This demise came because Miller believed so strongly in his own basketball ideology he was unable to adjust to the vagaries of Bloomington, the Big 10, and college basketball outside the Atlantic 10 Conference where he succeeded quite nicely.

Former athletic director Fred Glass rolled to the podium in his tricked out golf cart on that March day in 2017 to introduce Miller to fans and media as a “grand slam” hire.  After four years, Miller showed himself to be a routine fly ball to the opposite field.  His 33-43 Big 10 record, 0-7 mark against Purdue, and inability to earn an invitation to a single NCAA Tourney led new AD Scott Dolson to conclude only a new coach could restore hope in Bloomington.

And so the search, which began a week ago, landed first on Indiana favorite son candidate Brad Stevens, whose popularity has over-ripened in Boston in what appears to be his eighth non-championship season.  Stevens toyed with Indiana fans briefly with odes to the Hoosier state worthy of James Whitcomb Riley before finally referring to himself as a “Masshole” in a bizarre and inauthentic New England loyalty pledge.

With Stevens refusal to accept whatever offer may have been made to him, there has been a mad scramble of coaches – employed and retired – eager for the enormous payday Indiana will offer to secure the right coach, whatever that means this time.  Every man with a pulse and a whistle is reaching out to Dolson through intermediaries to declare his intention to rescue the Hoosiers.

John Beilein has crawled from his cryogenic chamber to begin the career thaw that could send him to Indiana to take one more swing at winning the national championship that alluded him at Michigan and West Virginia.  Thad Matta‘s chiropractor has worked himself into Carpal Tunnel Syndrome to try to align his vertebrae so he might enjoy showing players how to get in a defensive stance again.  Fans were enthusiastic about Texas Tech’s Chris Beard until his Red Raiders looked oddly Hoosier-esque in their ability to miss layups in yesterday’s loss to Arkansas.

The underdog candidate I have decided to champion is Dane Fife, assistant under Tom Izzo at Michigan State for the past decade.  Fife was a leader during Indiana’s improbable run to its last Final Four in 2002, and then coached at IPFW for six increasingly successful seasons – first as an independent and then member of the Summit League.

Fife was tireless in recruiting players to IPFW, a school no one wanted to play for 15 years ago – not even for free.  He showed up for every game my son’s AAU team played for their last two years.  Fife was joined by Stevens, then a little known assistant coach from Butler, at whatever time the team played.  At eight in the morning, there were Fife and Stevens.  At ten that night, there they were again.  They worked hard enough that Fife secured the services of point guard Ben Botts and Stevens netted Matt Howard and Zach Hahn.

In nearly empty gyms in Louisville, Houston, Durham, Indianapolis, and Fort Wayne is where and how coaching careers are built.  Botts was as critical to IPFW’s wins as Howard and Hahn were to Stevens and Butler.  Last week, Stevens said no.  This week, I want Fife to be the guy who says yes.

Fife understands Indiana.  He knows the basketball culture here as only an alumnus can, and he understands what it takes to win in the Big 10.  Hell, if he could win games as the coach of an independent in Fort Wayne, building a winner in Bloomington should be a given.

Some fans will carp on message boards about how Dolson should have brought a proven winner to Indiana.  They forget that Sampson, Crean, and Miller came to Indiana from successful programs.  Fans want to sprint down that dirt road to wrangle Porter Moser, Nate Oats, or Beard from the places where they already fit.

Just as Stevens did at Butler, Fife is going to win for some program smart enough to hire him.  He might be willing to wait for Izzo to retire to finally accept the gig at Michigan State, or maybe Dolson embraces this moment to reunite Fife with the program for which he still feels a strong affinity.

No one but Stevens would be able to win the press conference, so Dolson might as well hire the right coach.

Fans will bicker about how (insert coach’s name here) might have been better for Indiana than than Fife.  They will yell about how Beilein, Matta, Beard, or Moser should have been the hire – just as they bicker over which similarly feathered chicken emerged victorious as wagers are paid off in Owen County.

Dolson should stick to his guns and hire the coach he prefers.  If he’s going to be held accountable for the success or failure of the basketball program, and he will be, Dolson might as well get the coach he prefers instead of trying to win a press conference.

My guy is Dane.

Indiana can’t get Brad Stevens, so Dolson is left with three paths for his coach

If not Brad Stevens – then who?

Brad Stevens said no to Indiana several times.  The first rebuff was ignored.  We listened to the second.  At least most of us did.

Some are still holding out hope that some miracle occurs, and the rejections are revealed to be an effort by Stevens to disguise his rabid interest in returning home until the end of the season.  Even for crazed IU fans who live in a perpetual state of mediocrity induced hallucination, that’s a stretch.

They don’t call it Hoosier Hysteria for nothing.

Assuming crazy fans aren’t somehow correct in thinking that Indiana and Stevens will wait out the end of this NBA season to finally reach an accord, there are three options for athletic director Scott Dolson.

  • Option One – Select from the list of out of work coaches who have achieved success with other programs.  Thad Matta and John Beilein head this group favored by those who value past glories authored by former Big 10 coaches.
  • Option Two is to choose from frequently discussed current coaches succeeding at the level Indiana would like to return to.  Porter Moser and Chris Beard are big with fans who covet the successes of Loyola and Texas Tech.  There are a bunch of others, whose names will get hotter as underdogs continue advancing in the NCAA Tournament.
  • Option Three is to select from within the Indiana University family, which includes virtually any coach who has ever played at Indiana.  The thought is that it takes an Indiana man to know what Indiana needs.

Previous athletic directors have made the last three Indiana hires using Option Two.  According to rumors, Oklahoma’s Kelvin Sampson was supposedly hired by IU president Adam Herbert in 2006 over the protest of AD Rick Greenspan, who favored Beilein.  Two years later, Tom Crean of Marquette was hired to replace Sampson after an internal audit revealed multiple predictable NCAA violations.  When Crean’s energy became toxic in 2017, Dayton’s Archie Miller was tabbed as the new hope to resurrect IU’s blue blood status.

Now, here we are again.  Given the dearth of success of hiring via the thrice failed second option, I hope Dolson doesn’t venture down that road for a fourth time.

As for option one, choosing between a 68-year-old who decided two years ago to abandon his successful program at Michigan and a guy whose health deteriorated at Ohio State to the point he was forced to walk away, I’m not sure either make a lot of long term sense.

That leaves us with hiring from within the program’s historical greatness to revive it.  It might not make a lot of sense to embrace the Indiana legacy plan, but it has to work better than a methodology proven ineffective in three straight searches or plucking proven winners out of retirement.  Michigan State assistant Dane Fife and former Atlanta Hawks and New York Knicks coach Mike Woodson are among alums who appear most qualified.

Whichever Dolson chooses, he will do it without a search committee or a search firm, which gives me hope he will get it right.  The IU job is about fit, and the bigger the pool of those consulted, the more likely an attractive resume’ will be hired instead of the right coach.

With Stevens out of the mix, Dolson has no perfect options.  Whether he tabs Beilein, Matta, Beard, Moser, Fife, Woodson, or someone else, there will be cheers and boos.  The hire will represent a reason for hope or doom depending upon the fan’s belief in how Dolson has gone about the business of making the most important hire of his era.

I have my personal preference, but I will embrace anyone who Dolson anoints as long as the hire comes without the input of nattering boosters who demand that millions of dollars in donations buys them a seat at a table for one.

IU still looking! Sister Jean’s scout/prayer beats Illini! Colts sign Rhodes! Pacers win in OT!

Brad Stevens decides to stay in Boston – dream dies for IU

I always thought Brad would look better in Cream and Crimson. He seems to like green better.”I have a great deal of love for Indiana so I want to make sure everyone knows that but you can still so that and love where you are and do your job and be thankful for all this place has done for us.”

“I have a great deal of love for Indiana so I want to make sure everyone knows that but you can still so that and love where you are and do your job and be thankful for all this place has done for us.”  Brad Stevens, March, 19, 2021

So Brad has told the Celtics players and management that he is staying, and our beautiful little dream ends.

The prudent thing would be to shake it off, understanding it was a long shot to begin with, and begin to adjust our sights toward a coach who wants to come to Indiana to coach the Hoosiers.  But I’m not going to be prudent, at least not today.

For a while, this loss needs to be mourned because for four days there was hope, and hope’s loss always must be processed.

There will be time for examining candidates to replace Archie Miller, Tom Crean, Kelvin Sampson, and Bob Knight.  We will come to understand that Brad staying put might open the door for a coach who can end the seemingly endless string of disappointingly mediocre seasons.  That time is not today.

In the end, Indiana wasn’t good enough for Brad.  The opportunity to stay with the Celtics was too enticing to come home and rescue basketball at his state’s university.

A different kind of March Madness ended today just as the games being played all around our state for the next three weeks begin.