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Thad Matta (OSU's All Time Winningest Coach & 3x B1G COY, Butler HC)

FWIW, the Trib said today that Matta would probably only go from Ohio State if the NCAA votes more sanctions. However, they also made a big deal of pointing out that the recruits didn't have to honor their OSU commitment if there were certain sanctions either. Sounds like we are fine, unless the NCAA decides to lay the hammer down, but if they do, we could really see a bottoming out.

According to the Indy Star, the recruits have a signed letter from OSU stating they will be released from their letter of intent should OSU be sanctioned.
 
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I don't get all of this talk about Matta leaving. Regardless of Indiana as a dream job, there is no finer place in the world to be a respected head coach in football or basketball than Columbus, Ohio. Matta has to be thinking about his life after basketball, as well as his career that lies ahead.

In the now, Ohio State pays extremely well and there are lots of endorsements etc if he chooses to do that more. In the future, he will be a hero.

Although it is true that Fred Taylor did not get the respect he deserved from Ohio State, that was another era. Fred also did not really understand public relations as well as Matta or have the media open to him as Thad does. He also lived in the shadow of Woody.

Indiana? What did Bobby Knight get out of Indiana in the end? Contrast that to Earle Bruce. Bruce was a good coach, not great, and look at what he gets today still.

Bring a national championship to Columbus, perform like you have been, put that down for a decade and Thad Matta will have a security and job satisfaction available nowhere else.

Why go to a dream job when you can create one? Matta has all he needs to build a bigger, better dynasty right where he is.

If you had the chance to become the Joe Pa of basketball at Ohio State, wouldn't you think twice before throwing that away?
 
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I don't get all of this talk about Matta leaving

The talk is out there because sports programming has voids to fill and this is a good - and at least semi-legitimate - topic. My brother called from Arkansas yesterday to find out what the scoop was becasue he is hearing that Matta is a strong candidate for the IU job. Legit or not, it is out there.


IU is close to 60% in all-time winning percentage and leads the Big Ten. OSU is nearer 50%. That is a significant difference.

You almost have to try to fail at IU. The people in Indiana hate Davis, but he is still bringing in more talented players than Obie was. Win at IU and you are a legend in the state. What happened to Knight he did to himself but he is still worshipped by many Hoosiers.

To talk about whether it is better to build something at OSU is to suppose things about the way Matta thinks that we are not privy to. If your goal is to win championships you might as well do so on an existing foundation than to build one yourself.

And OSU IS a football school. This team went into the Big Ten undefeated and playing exciting basketball. Really exciting basketball. But when we opened the Big Ten against PSU we had 4,000 empty seats. We had


But all that said, I am arguing just for the sake of argument.

I wrote a lengthy post some time ago about OSU being a sleeping giant, arguing that our 'down' years were more the result of poor decision making by AD's than any systemic problems.

And the truth is that in this post Title IX world football schools have a big advantage. At IU BBall has to provide a large share of their athletic budget. Barn or not - IU would struggle to build a facility like the Schott. And I understand that facilities are already a recruiting issue for the Hoosiers.
 
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I agree with everything you said, especially the sleeping giant belief. I think Matta will get the Schott full for every game. Next year, it will be as hard to get a seat in the Schott as one in Ohio Stadium.

Besides, I lived in Indianapolis for a year. I realize that Columbus isn't New York or LA but, in the same way, Indianapolis isn't Columbus. It is a cultural backwater of note where the word boredom takes on the idiosyncratic meaning of something interesting to do.

Matta has the opportunity to be as loved and as seminal as Woody Hayes in Columbus or to play second fiddle to Indy car and Nascar. Doesn't sound like much of a choice to me. :slappy:
 
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Besides, I lived in Indianapolis for a year. I realize that Columbus isn't New York or LA but, in the same way, Indianapolis isn't Columbus. It is a cultural backwater of note where the word boredom takes on the idiosyncratic meaning of something interesting to do.

Great points, but IU isn't exactly in Indy. Bloomington is out in the friggin' sticks an hour or two south of civilization. I went to the tOSU-IU football game, and for anyone that has never been there...that place is straight outta "Deliverance". No joke.:horse: <---not beating that horse in the cliche sense, if you get what I mean...
 
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You almost have to try to fail at IU. The people in Indiana hate Davis, but he is still bringing in more talented players than Obie was. Win at IU and you are a legend in the state. What happened to Knight he did to himself but he is still worshipped by many Hoosiers.
this I don't agree with. Davis had a decent run at IU, but nobody wants to see his face again. It is a similar fanbase to kentucky, where they worship basketball, but hold their coach to absurd expectations. Lots of people in kentucky are furious with tubby these days despite his track record. Perhaps we will get to that point here in columbus, but I have a feeling that if Tressel stays near the very top of CFB like we are now, OSU fans won't be nearly as grumpy if Matta struggles some years.
 
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Dispatch

2/24/06

Some Ohio State men’s bas ketball recruits don’t seem concerned that coach Thad Matta could jump ship for Indiana. Matta has declined to say publicly whether he’s a candidate for the job and is an overwhelming favorite of voters at InsideIndiana.com with 39 percent of the vote. (Iowa’s Steve Alford is next with 20 percent.)

Upper Sandusky junior Jon Diebler, who committed to play for the Buckeyes in 2007, "feels very secure" after talking with Ohio State coaches that Matta is staying, Diebler’s father, Keith, said this week. "We’re not worried about it."

Indianapolis high-school teammates Greg Oden and Mike Conley Jr., who have signed binding letters of intent to play for Ohio State next season, told The Indianapolis Star the same thing after speaking with Matta a week ago.

"I’m pretty sure nothing’s going to happen," Oden said.

Matta said this week that he hasn’t addressed the issue with players on the current team.
"I don’t think it will be a distraction whatsoever to us," he said. "As I tell our players, believe half of what you see and nothing of what you hear."
 
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cnnsi.com

2/24/06

Matta plans to stick with Ohio State

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -- COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -- Ohio State coach Thad Matta said Friday that if it is up to him he will return as the Buckeyes coach next season.

In the most pointed response Matta has made about rumors he is a candidate for the Indiana coaching job, he said he has no intention of leaving Ohio State.

Asked if he would be back next season with the Buckeyes, Matta said, "I hope so. Honestly, I hope like heck I'm going to be here."

He said he cannot foresee a situation that would cause him to leave.

When asked if he would like to quiet the speculation about the Indiana job, Matta said, "Yeah. I've said this before, I'm as happy as I've ever been, at Ohio State. Our goal coming in here was to build this program into a top-20 program and we're on the verge of doing that."

Ohio State (20-4) is ahead of schedule. In only his second year with the Buckeyes, his team is ranked No. 13 and is tied with Iowa for the Big Ten lead with three games left. Ohio State plays Michigan on Saturday at home.

In addition, Matta has lured one of the top recruiting classes in the nation to Ohio State next season. The linchpin of the class is an Indiana native, Greg Oden, a 7-foot center from Indianapolis Lawrence North High School.

He was selected as the national player of the year as a junior by several publications.

Indiana coach Mike Davis announced last week that he would resign effective at the end of the season. Davis, who coached the Hoosiers for six seasons, succeeded Ohio State alumnus Bob Knight as head coach in 2000.

Matta, 38, grew up in Hoopeston, Ill., as a fan of Indiana basketball, and he has spent several years of his coaching career in Indiana as an administrative assistant, an assistant coach and then the head coach at Butler.

His lone Butler team went 24-8 in 2000-2001 before he took the job at Xavier, where the Musketeers posted records of 26-6, 26-6 and 26-11 in his three years. After first denying he had spoken to Ohio State administrators, he later took the job with the Buckeyes in June 2004 after Jim O'Brien was fired as head coach for providing a $6,000 loan to a recruit.
Matta's first Ohio State team surprised many by going 20-12, even though Ohio State President Karen Holbrook and then-AD Andy Geiger announced in midseason that the team would not be permitted to play in the NCAA tournament as a way of mitigating any penalties for alleged infractions committed during O'Brien's tenure.

This season, the Buckeyes have climbed in the polls and have been one of the major surprises in the Big Ten.

Matta is in the second year of an eight-year contract that will pay him $11 million if he remains at Ohio State for the entire term of the agreement.

Matta said a portion of his contract precludes him from discussing any other jobs, collegiate or NBA, except between the final day of the regular season and April 15.

"I don't have the liberty to talk about other jobs," he said.

Matta said he spoke with Ohio State athletic director Gene Smith last week.

While not divulging what they discussed, he said, "All I can say is that Gene and I are on the same page. I love that about him, the communication and the openness. It's amazing how he came to me and we talked and we know exactly where both guys are."

A message seeking comment was left with Smith on Friday.

After Davis announced his resignation, immediate speculation in Indiana singled out Iowa coach Steve Alford -- a former star for the Hoosiers -- as a possible successor. Matta's name also was mentioned because of his background at Butler and in the Big Ten.
 
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http://www.nbc4i.com/sports/7405872/detail.html

Matta Puts Indiana Rumors To Rest

Ohio State Coach Dismisses Indiana Coaching Rumors

UPDATED: 2:37 pm EST February 24, 2006
COLUMBUS, Ohio -- Ohio State men's basketball coach Thad Matta said Friday that he has no reason to look anywhere else for coaching opportunities.
Thad Matta

The second-year coach of the Buckeyes put to rest rumors that he might be interested in the opening at Indiana University, NBC 4's Joe Weasel reported.
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SPECIAL SECTION: OSU MEN'S BASKETBALL "I'm as happy as I've ever been, at Ohio State," Matta said. Our goal coming in here was to build this program into a top-20 program and we're on the verge of doing that."Matta's name came up as a potential candidate to replace Mike Davis, who announced last week that he would step down as the Hoosiers' coach at the end of this season.Matta has led Ohio State to a 20-4 record and a tie for first place in the Big Ten Conference this season.The No. 13 Buckeyes host Michigan on Saturday.
 
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