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Bob Knight (B1G Champion, National Champion, CBB HOF, R.I.P.)

Are you proud that Bobby Knight is a Buckeye?


  • Total voters
    117
There are some things to love about Bobby and this is one. Will be interesting to see how this affects his TV gigs.

Now to call my Kentucky friends and see how they are spinning this.
 
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southcampus;1622862; said:
While I agree with what he said, Bob is a 'do as i say, not as i do' type of guy. He hasn't exactly been the poster child for good morals or ethics while coaching.


Off the top of my head, I can't think of any violations that he committed as a coach. In fact the guy has always been known to run clean programs and graduated a high percentage of his players. Of course he did throw the occasional temper tantrum and was rough with some of his players. The guy learned how to coach in an era where the "tough love" style of coaching was much more accepted plus he began his career at Army where he didn't have to deal with a bunch of primadonna crybabies.

Kudos to you Coach Knight. I am glad that somebody finally spoke up about Calipari. It is getting old listening to everybody praise this guy, especially considering the state he has left his previous two programs in.
 
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During the Butler/Xavier game, Bob just brought up the [very bright and obvious] idea to punish the coaches involved in investigations and sanctions rather than just punishing the school. Said that Sampson should have never been allowed to coach at Indiana after what happened at Oklahoma.

Would certainly help to clean up the game, if coaching privileges were at stake.
 
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I live in Kentucky (born and raised.) I have a brother in law that cheered at UK so I get to go to any Kentucky fball or bball game I want. These UK fans are so passionate about bball it's scary. All they want to do is win and do whatever it takes. They are a fan-base that hated Calipari prior to his signing, and that hatred changed over night. I will tell you that they are heated about what Coach Knight said. The funny thing about it is most of them liked Knight before this and just 1 year ago would have agreed 100% with him. But they are undefeated right now and are fun to watch to they will suck Calipari's 8=== no matter what. But it is a matter of time and he will have them in trouble with the NCAA and they will hate him again.
 
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bucknut502;1622940; said:
I live in Kentucky (born and raised.) I have a brother in law that cheered at UK so I get to go to any Kentucky fball or bball game I want. These UK fans are so passionate about bball it's scary. All they want to do is win and do whatever it takes. They are a fan-base that hated Calipari prior to his signing, and that hatred changed over night. I will tell you that they are heated about what Coach Knight said. The funny thing about it is most of them liked Knight before this and just 1 year ago would have agreed 100% with him. But they are undefeated right now and are fun to watch to they will suck Calipari's 8=== no matter what. But it is a matter of time and he will have them in trouble with the NCAA and they will hate him again.

Yeah, Musberger (sp?) mentioned that Kentucky fans aren't happy with Knight. Knight's reply was basically that he couln't care less about what Kentucky fans thought. Most people have a filter between what they think and what they say.....Bob Knight was born without that filter. I have a buddy just like him in that way, it is refreshing in a world full of bullshit.
 
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Yeah, Musberger (sp?) mentioned that Kentucky fans aren't happy with Knight. Knight's reply was basically that he couln't care less about what Kentucky fans thought. Most people have a filter between what they think and what they say.....Bob Knight was born without that filter. I have a buddy just like him in that way, it is refreshing in a world full of bullshit.
Musberger was trying to go about that conversation in the most politically correct way possible, almost to a point where he was putting words in Knight's mouth, but Bobby made sure to get his true feelings out there. :lol:
 
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Bob Knight
0131_osu_knight_sp_01-31-10_C1_TLGF8GL.jpg

Age: 69

Family: Married, with two children and two grandsons.

Residence: Lubbock, Texas

Occupation: ESPN basketball analyst after winning three national championships as Indiana coach and a Division I-record 902 victories at Army, Indiana and Texas Tech.

1960 champions: 50 years later | BuckeyeXtra
 
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Bobby Knight's fondness for his 1960 championship mates remains strong, even if the NCAA still sparks his ire: Bill Livingston
By Bill Livingston, The Plain Dealer
January 31, 2010

knighthorizjlpjpg-f7b299101eb98ab5_large.jpg

Jay LaPrete / Associated Press
For only the second time since he graduated from Ohio State, Bob Knight took part in an OSU ceremony on Sunday as the school honored its 1960 NCAA championship men's basketball team. Knight, a reserve on that team, spoke of his respect for his old coach, the late Fred Taylor.

COLUMBUS -- Flushed with victory before anyone thought it was their time to win, several members of Ohio State's 1960 NCAA basketball championship team went looking for sustenance after the game. The Buckeyes had just trounced California in the Bears' backyard at the San Francisco Cow Palace, but the doorman at the first restaurant they found said it was closing time.

"We just won the national championship," said Larry Siegfried.

"Of what?" said the man, shutting the door in their faces.

In 1960, the NCAA Tournament hadn't morphed into the Big Dance. It was a different world, smaller, and not as driven by the need for instant gratification, the players' growling bellies aside.

The luminaries on the Ohio State team were sophomores Jerry Lucas and John Havlicek. Sophomore Bob Knight was a substitute who averaged 3.7 points. They are so well remembered, Knight thinks, because they are the only Ohio State team to win it all.

knightvertjlpjpg-a58579d5a7d34081_medium.jpg

Jay LaPrete / Associated Press
"Where there?s a great team, there?s a great coach. No team ever won a national championship with a better coach than Fred Taylor,? Knight said before a banner honoring Taylor and the 1960 team was raised at Value City Arena.Never the team's best player, he became in later years its lightning rod. He could be a one-man tempest, overheating, boiling and torturing the Indiana University teapot until the school blew the whistle on him in a scream of exasperation. Even to some of his teammates, it was a calculated risk to turn the public address microphone over to him at halftime of the Buckeyes' rout of Minnesota on Sunday.

"Where there's a great painting, there's a great painter. Where there's a great and unique building, there's a great architect. Where there's a great team, there's a great coach. No team ever won a national championship with a better coach than Fred Taylor," Knight said of his old Ohio State mentor.

It was a sweet, self-effacing moment. Knight, making only his second appearance ever at an official OSU function because of his many years of coaching elsewhere, stood in a pool of light in otherwise darkened Value City Arena. He is a man with a very pronounced sense of his own place in the sport, yet he paid a heartfelt tribute to the man who shaped him when he was young.

Bobby Knight's fondness for his 1960 championship mates remains strong, even if the NCAA still sparks his ire: Bill Livingston | cleveland.com
 
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Bob Knight taught Duke's Mike Krzyzewski about life, loyalty and defense
By Jeff Rabjohns
Posted: April 5, 2010

As Mike Krzyzewski stands on the doorstep of passing his mentor in national championships, his affinity and respect for Bob Knight is unwavering.

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Inaccurate image? Coach Mike Krzyzewski, reacting to a play in Duke's victory over West Virginia on Saturday, projects a different persona on television than in person. "You see him as a stern person on TV," former Duke player Dahntay Jones said. "He's totally the opposite once you get on campus."
- ROBERT SCHEER / The Star

The two -- in the small number of men in the conversation of greatest college basketball coaches -- have been linked for more than four decades.
A relationship that began as player-coach has grown to colleagues and expanded to equals.

Knight won three national championships at Indiana University. Krzyzewski, who played for Knight at Army and was a graduate assistant for him at IU, can win his fourth championship at Duke if the Blue Devils defeat Butler in tonight's title game at Lucas Oil Stadium.

"I was lucky to be recruited by him out of Chicago," Krzyzewski said on the eve of coaching in his eighth national championship game. "I didn't always appreciate the lessons I was learning from him while he was teaching them, but I think I became a lot tougher.

"I certainly understood the game lot better. I learned about loyalty, passion and preparation at the highest level. And we formed a great relationship because I was his point guard for three years.
"We're best friends. He's been my coach, my mentor and now he's one of my best friends."

Bob Knight taught Duke's Mike Krzyzewski about life, loyalty and defense | IndyStar.com | The Indianapolis Star
 
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10 years later, Knight nowhere near reconciliation with IU
By Terry Hutchens ? The Indianapolis Star ? September 9, 2010

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Bob Knight comforted his wife, Karen, before he spoke to nearly 8,000 students on the Dunn Meadow field, a short distance from IU's administration building. (Couier-Journal file photo by Durell Hall Jr.) Sept. 13, 2000

Months before the great divorce that rocked Indiana University, Karen Knight told her husband, ?If the horse is dead, get off it.?

IU ripped the reins out of Bob Knight's hands first on Sept.10, 2000, and exactly a decade later, a gaping hole remains in the family portrait.

The conversation has shifted, however, from whether the patriarch deserved to be fired to these lingering questions:

Can IU properly honor its three-time NCAA champion coach, the only 900-game winner in men's DivisionI history?

Is a miracle mending possible via athletic director Fred Glass?

The overwhelming sentiment is that IU and its fans want a reunion but aren't convinced one is forthcoming.

It's clear only one opinion matters: Knight's, and he has provided little reason to start planning the party. He didn't show up last November when IU inducted him into its Hall of Fame, and he didn't respond to interview requests for this story.

Bob Hammel, former sports editor of the Herald-Times in Bloomington and one of Knight's closest friends, said the coach, who will turn 70 in October, is ?rigid? about the idea of reconciliation and still harbors ill will.

?I just think he's so locked into the fact that there are still so many people (at IU) that he can't stand,? Hammel said. ?There are still too many and still too much of a negative feeling, at least in his mind anyway. Most of them are gone, but not all of them. Until they're all gone, I don't think it will happen.?

10 years later, Knight nowhere near reconciliation with IU | courier-journal.com | The Courier-Journal
 
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Updated: September 19, 2010
Bobby Knight cheered at roast
Associated Press

HAMMOND, Ind. -- Bob Knight was screaming at players, berating officials and hurling that chair across the court again.

It was all there on that introductory highlight video, prime fodder for a general roasting of "The General."

Back in Indiana a decade after his firing, the former Hoosiers coach was the honored guest this time at a roast to benefit Chicago's St. Joseph High School on Saturday.

For one night, no one was debating Indiana's decision to fire him 10 years ago. This was a night of unity involving one of the most polarizing figures in the state and the game, one dominated by laughter and praise, and Knight wasn't discussing his former employer.

http://sports.espn.go.com/ncb/news/story?id=5590602
 
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Bob Knight was 35 years old when he coached the most recent unbeaten NCAA men's Division I basketball champion, the Indiana Hoosiers of 1975-76.

Knight is now 70 and has seen few teams approach the perfecto (32-0) posted by his Scott May-Kent Benson-Quinn Buckner team. The latest challenger is Knight's alma mater, Ohio State (24-0), which faces a tough test at No. 13 Wisconsin Saturday. Does Ohio State have a realistic chance to run the table?

"There will always be a chance, in anything except baseball," Knight said this week. "In baseball I don't think anybody is going win all 162 games."

Knight is retired from coaching and is an analyst on ESPN basketball broadcasts. He was known for his blunt and sometimes fiery persona during his coaching career, which included three NCAA championships and a Division I men's basketball record of 902 wins. Knight does not spend much time reflecting on the magnitude of his Naismith Hall of Fame r?sum?, including his unblemished Indiana team of 35 years past.

"I'm not going to make any comparisons," Knight said. "I will say that Ohio State has a very, very good team and Thad Matta has done a very good job with that team. They have different players who can do different things, and they play hard at both ends."
Praise for Matta

Knight, for his part, looks beyond the 24-0 record when he praises what Matta has done with OSU.

"The most important thing with Ohio State is that they have developed through the course of the season," Knight said. "They have not just come in as a good team, but they've been a good team throughout the season. Same with Texas."

Can someone go unbeaten again?

"If you ask 10 people you'd get 10 different answers, and I'm not as smart as some of those people," Knight said. "Who knows? There's always a chance."

http://communitypress.cincinnati.co...21/Can-Buckeyes-go-unbeaten-?odyssey=nav|head
 
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Men's basketball: Advice from Knight helps Buckeyes tighten up defense
Monday, February 28, 2011
By Bob Baptist
THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH

For much of this season, Ohio State coach Thad Matta has been accustomed to seeing the ball go in the basket more often than not for his team. The Buckeyes lead the Big Ten and rank second nationally in field-goal percentage.

Matta wasn't nearly as thrilled, though, when opponents began doing the same.

So after five teams in a row had shot better than 50 percent against the Buckeyes, he decided to seek outside counsel before a game against Indiana yesterday.

"I reached out to the master," Matta said.

He called Bob Knight, who had no qualms about helping the coach of his alma mater beat the school that fired him 11 years ago after an unparalleled run of success.

"He gave me this defensive drill," Matta said. "Our players hate it, but I think it made us play a lot better."

Matta was dissatisfied with his players' awareness on defense, and said the drill Knight gave him -which Knight had used since he coached at West Point in the 1960s - addressed that.

"We played five-on-four for 15 minutes, and the four people on defense were the main people that play," guard Aaron Craft said.

"I've helped facilitate a few things for him, and he's (reciprocated). But he's like, 'Don't you tell anybody that I'm doing this,'" Matta said.

"He wants us to do well. It's unbelievable. I love talking to him because, No.1, you get so much basketball-wise. And then you get a lesson in history. And then you laugh your (rear end) off because he's one of the funniest human beings I've ever talked to."

http://www.dispatch.com/live/content/sports/stories/2011/02/28/general-overhaul.html?sid=101

[ame="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Dp3aHG_u2gI"]YouTube - Thad Matta seeks advice[/ame]
 
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