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

Dispatch

2/18/06

OSU MEN’S BASKETBALL

Matta refuses to talk about Indiana job

Saturday, February 18, 2006

Bob Baptist
THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH

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Two years ago, Thad Matta said he wasn’t a candidate for the Ohio State coaching job.


Three days after saying he had not developed a standard response to speculation he might be a candidate for the Indiana job, Ohio State men’s basketball coach Thad Matta had one yesterday.

"I think it’s a tremendous compliment to our players and our staff" that he would be mentioned as a potential candidate, said Matta, who played and coached at Butler University in Indianapolis and has strong recruiting ties in Indiana.-What Matta did not say is whether he is interested in the job.

"I’ll never comment on another job or on rumors or speculation or anything like that," he said.

He has his reasons.

One, Matta left himself open for criticism two years ago at Xavier. One day after secretly meeting in Cincinnati with an Ohio State delegation searching for Jim O’Brien’s successor, he told The Cincinnati Enquirer, "I’m not a candidate. It’s that plain and that simple." A week later, Ohio State hired him.

Two, coaches routinely use the candidate-speculation process to feather their own nests. When Mike Davis was still Indiana’s interim coach in 2001, Iowa coach Steve Alford — as he is now — was reported to be a candidate to return to his alma mater. Indiana eventually decided to stick with Davis, and shortly after that, Alford signed a contract extension with Iowa that raised his salary $300,000 a year.

Matta, 38, is in the second year of an eight-year contract worth more than $11 million in guaranteed income. He has an annual window, from the end of the regular season to April 15, during which he can discuss or negotiate a job with another school. He would have to pay Ohio State $500,000 to terminate his contract.

But then he would have to game-plan against Greg Oden next season instead of gameplan with him — unless, of course, the NCAA bans Ohio State from the 2007 NCAA Tournament and Oden is released from his letter of intent.

[email protected]
 
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Before anyone gets worried, just remember we all wanted Knight at tOSU after O'Brien was fired. Fans do not hire coaches. :wink2:

Dispatch

2/18/06

Alford focusing on Iowa, not IU

Fan poll favors Ohio State’s Matta over Hawkeyes coach

Saturday, February 18, 2006

Steve Herman
ASSOCIATED PRESS

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DARRON CUMMINGS | ASSOCIATED PRESS Many are speculating that when Mike Davis walks away at Indiana at the end
of the season it will be Steve Alford who replaces him.


INDIANAPOLIS — Within minutes of Mike Davis’s resignation, Steve Alford was a reluctant and tight-lipped front-runner for the Indiana basketball coaching job.

The Iowa coach was Indiana’s Mr. Basketball and a two-time All-American under Bob Knight who led the Hoosiers to the 1987 NCAA championship.

Even Davis, who coached Indiana for six years but remained in Knight’s shadow, speculated the Hoosiers would be better served by one of their own.

There’s just one problem.

No matter how popular he remains in his home state, Alford is still the Iowa coach, at least through the end of the season. He refuses to comment publicly about the Indiana job or his status with the 18 th-ranked and Big Ten-leading Hawkeyes.

"I have this comment: My entire focus and energy is helping my team win a Big Ten championship and get ready for the NCAA Tournament," he said during an Iowa teleconference yesterday. "This is my only concern. And you can underline entire and only."

Each time the question was broached, albeit in different forms, Alford repeated the mantra, "My entire focus . . . "

Finally, asked whether the questioning about Indiana was inappropriate or unfair, he groaned, "You really don’t want me to repeat the thing again, do you? I’ve had to repeat it seven times."

But Alford likely will have to repeat it many more times before the end of the season, which still has four more games before the Big Ten tournament and then the NCAA. Especially because Indiana athletics director Rick Greenspan said he wouldn’t select a new coach until after the Final Four.

That leaves a lot of time for speculation, and Alford is consistently among the first names mentioned, along with Ohio State coach Thad Matta, a former coach at Butler, and even Rick Majerus, a former coach at Utah and Ball State.
The Inside Indiana Web site listed six names for visitors to vote on their preference for Indiana’s next coach. Matta was first with 35 percent, followed by Alford at 21 percent. Golden State Warriors and former Stanford coach Mike Montgomery, Tennessee’s Bruce Pearl, Majerus and Marquette’s Tom Crean were all far behind.
 
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This may be the ultimate "sky is falling" scenario, but given Matta's history of upgrading quickly from job to job, it's not out of the question. If someone can think of a reason why Matta would want to stay at Ohio State if postseason sanctions come, then I'm all ears. If someone can think of a reason why Matta SHOULD NOT be a the top candidate for the Indiana job in that situation, then I'm all ears.

He would not be upgrading. He is going to have the number one team in the country or at the least top 5 and IU will lose alot of their guys.
 
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IndyStar

2/18/06

analysis

Who's Mr. Right

IU will be looking for several characteristics in its new coach

From the moment it was learned Wednesday night that Indiana basketball Mike Davis had submitted his resignation, effective at the end of the season, the focus switched to his replacement.
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Sunday's game
Who: Indiana (13-9, 5-6 Big Ten) at Illinois (21-4, 7-4).
When: 3:30 p.m.
TV: WISH-8.
Radio: WFBQ-94.7 FM.

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IU athletic director Rick Greenspan said he will conduct a nationwide search, identify a few select candidates, then bring them to Bloomington to meet with IU president Adam Herbert.
Will IU look to reunite its fan base by bringing in one of its own as Davis suggested in a teleconference Monday, or hire the best person for the job? Or can one man be the answer to both questions?
Greenspan hasn't made his criteria public, but the following questions address some potential characteristics pertaining to the next IU basketball coach:

Does he need to be a big-name coach?

There's no question name recognition will be a big factor. A name coach not only will help unite the IU family, but also aid recruiting and potentially keep a few players from transferring.
Keep in mind, the hiring process for IU basketball is completely different from IU football, where Greenspan hired Terry Hoeppner. IU's football program can't work off the "A" list in terms of candidates.
The basketball program can. It continues to be a destination job. While IU no longer is a top-five program, it can be argued that the perception exists that it is. Greenspan could have his pick of name coaches.

Would a coach at a destination school consider a lateral move to IU?

This depends on Greenspan. To persuade a coach like Bill Self to leave Kansas or Billy Donovan to leave Florida, the administration must make concessions.
First, it must commit to facilities. Not a new basketball arena as much as new coaches' offices, locker room facilities, weight room, etc. Indiana's facilities are subpar. You must be able to sell recruits by more than just walking into Assembly Hall and staring at the national championship banners.
Next, IU must allow the coach to make the schedule. Davis' complaints about scheduling were met with deaf ears by fans, but the truth is the coach at a top program must have control over scheduling.

Does Indiana have to hire "one of its own" to unify the fractured fan base?

No. Hiring Steve Alford or Randy Wittman certainly would expedite the healing process, but there's more to it than that. And it's more than hiring someone who can get Indiana back to the NCAA Tournament on a yearly basis, though that clearly would help.
The next Indiana coach needs to be the complete package. Off the court, he needs to be engaging, charismatic and inspiring, like Ohio State's Thad Matta or former Utah coach Rick Majerus. The next IU coach must feel comfortable with the summer alumni golf circuit and do all the dog-and-pony shows to get the alumni back on board. (Anyone know Mark Few's golf handicap?)
On the court, he needs to have a recognizable offensive plan, prove he can make in-game adjustments and preach fundamentals. It doesn't have to be Dan Dakich or Scott Skiles; coaches such as Tennessee's Bruce Pearl, Marquette's Tom Crean and Wake Forest's Skip Prosser have shown they can handle those duties.

How important is it to sign the top in-state high school talent?

The most important thing is to get the best talent from any state to Bloomington, but there's no question that too many good in-state players have gotten away, and that trend has to change.
Alford could make a difference with the parents of many recruits, but those players weren't born when Alford led IU to the national championship in 1987.
It's important to hire someone who makes it a priority to own the state. Matta knows that, and Crean tapped in to Indiana talent when he brought in Dominic James (Richmond).

Who could best handle the pressure of a win-or-else, high-profile job?

The only way to confidently handle that kind of pressure is to have already done it. Davis clearly didn't have that experience, but Greenspan will encounter plenty of coaches who do.
Alford has felt that kind of pressure at Iowa, just as Self has at Illinois or Kansas and Donovan at Florida.
One thing is certain: Whoever gets this job will need a thick skin. If it's an in-state guy, his honeymoon might be extended a year, but not much more.
The pressure Davis felt to perform will be there for his successor. Pressure comes with the territory at IU. The only thing that can completely ease that is being the guy who hangs the sixth national championship banner in Assembly Hall.

Call Star reporter Terry Hutchens at (317) 444-6469.
 
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I'm not worried, that is unless the NCAA comes down hard on us......If that were to be the case I'd probably think Matta will be gone. That is the only chance of anything happening.

He's got something special going here, and has the opportunity to win national championships here in Columbus.
 
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Oden, Conley believe Matta

Oden, Conley believe Matta to stay at OSU

http://www.indystar.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20060219/SPORTS0601/602190477


By Jeff Rabjohns
[email protected]

Greg Oden and Mike Conley said they are confident Thad Matta will remain the basketball coach at Ohio State.
The Lawrence North High School seniors said they spoke to the Buckeyes' coach between the time Mike Davis announced his resignation at Indiana University and Matta's name being mentioned by media as a potential replacement.
"I talked to him (Thursday) night and it didn't even come up," said Oden, the top-ranked high school player in the nation. "I'm really not worried about it. I'm pretty sure nothing's going to happen."
Two-fifths of the heralded "Thad Five" recruiting class, Oden and Conley signed with Ohio State in November.
"I'm not worried about it at all," said Conley, one of the nation's top-ranked point guards. "I'm confident that everything will work out."
Speculation regarding the IU job only added to the off-court drama for Ohio State's recruits. They have been waiting on the NCAA to announce penalties regarding violations committed under former coach Jim O'Brien. The recruits have a letter from Ohio State stating the university will free them to play elsewhere if the Buckeyes receive a postseason ban that would affect their class, an unlikely scenario given previous NCAA decisions.
Lawrence North coach Jack Keefer said he thought speculation regarding Matta as a candidate for Indiana was off base.
"I think if people understood how much Matta was being paid, they would not say that," Keefer said. "The boy's got a nice paycheck. I can't speak for him, but that would be a tough, tough move. I don't think he's interested in a move like that."
Matta is in the second year of an eight-year contract worth $11 million in guaranteed income, according to the Columbus (Ohio) Post-Dispatch.


Call Star Reporter Jeff Rabjohns at (317)-444-6183.


Copyright 2006 IndyStar.com. All rights reserved
 
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http://www.dispatch.com/bball/bball.php?story=dispatch/2006/02/19/20060219-E1-00.html

tossed around in connection with the soon-to-be-open Indiana job must make Ohio State basketball fans very, very nervous. How else do you explain the spontaneous standing ovation he received yesterday when he walked out during warmups in Value City Arena?

The Buckeyes were coming off a loss at Wisconsin. They were playing a Saturday afternoon snoozer against Northwestern, the kind of game that rarely raises so much as a pulse, let alone 18,500 bodies, among this city’s sometimes-apathetic basketball fans.

Did Matta notice it and did he have any reaction to that?

"He’s a rock star," Terence Dials said, before his coach could answer.

Matta grinned.

"Thank you," he said. "No, today, I thought our fans were tremendous and really elevated us through the hard times. I think they were feeling the missed shots there to start the game at the same pace that we were. As I’ve always said, these people love the Buckeyes and I know our guys truly appreciate that. And we’re going to need it here the last two games as we finish out the Big Ten."

Translation: "I’m not going to answer that question."

That is probably why people are nervous. Matta hasn’t said he’s interested in the Indiana job now that Mike Davis has said he will resign at the end of the season. He also hasn’t said he isn’t. By simply declining comment, it makes it seem as if he’s hiding something, as if he sits at home wearing an IU stocking cap and waving an IU pennant, waiting to be offered the job.

As long as Matta doesn’t say anything, his name will keep getting tossed into every story about the Indiana job, because that’s the way it works. He has said in the past that he was both an Indiana and Purdue fan while growing up in Illinois, but that he was more of an IU fan. He played and coached at Butler in Indianapolis, less than an hour up the highway from Bloomington. When reporters compile lists of likely candidates for the IU job, his name is going to find its way on it, for precisely those reasons.

Here’s another one: The Inside Indiana Web site listed six names for visitors to vote on for their preference for the next IU coach, and Matta was the runaway leader with 38 percent, followed by former IU star and current Iowa coach Steve Alford at 21.

"‘I didn’t notice any of that," OSU athletics director Gene Smith said, of the ovation and the Web survey. "I don’t worry about any of that. I know you guys do. He’s obviously a very good coach. We would do everything we could to keep Thad Matta.

"He and I had a great conversation yesterday. We know there’s going to be speculation, but we’re not going to get into any of that. His focus and our focus is to help these kids win games. They have a long season ahead of them."

It is a noble thought. It also figures to create more speculation than it ends. So, for what it’s worth, here’s my theory:

Matta likes it at OSU and isn’t looking to go to Indiana. He has a tremendous recruiting class coming in and he wants to coach it. But, and this is a big "but," what if the NCAA surprises everyone in a couple of weeks and bans the Buckeyes from postseason play next year, thus releasing his recruits from their commitment? Suddenly, things could dramatically change. Would he want to be on the record then as saying, "I’m not a candidate; it’s that plain and that simple," as he did two years ago about the OSU job when he was at Xavier?


He was raked over the coals for that one, which doubtless convinced him to zip it in the future, especially when there might be a reason, long shot or not, to change your mind.

So much for the theory; now for a few facts:

Matta is the complete package and a valuable commodity — good coach, good recruiter, tireless worker — and Smith knows it. He had that meeting with Matta on Friday and said that what we’re not hearing is the result of that. "We wanted to be on the same page about what we say," Smith said. So he’s not worried about what he’s hearing from Matta? "Exactly," Smith said. That ought to be worth one good night’s sleep, anyway. Bob Hunter is a sports columnist for The Dispatch.
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This reminds me a lot of the Stoops to OSU stuff after Coop was fired.

Coaches don't make lateral moves between big time schools all that often. I know IU fans would debate the lateral part but thats what it would be. They also don't jump for equal money somewhere else. How much more can IU really pay its coach than OSU? Answer is not one thin dime, no athletic department in the country can blow OSU out of the water with $$. Less pressure, more resources, the list can get pretty long as to why someone would want the OSU job over the IU job.

Count me with those who feel this is much ado over nothing as long as the NCAA doesn't nuke us, which seems highly unlikely.
 
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Coaches don't make lateral moves between big time schools all that often.

Take a look at the list of coaches by winning percentage in NCAA tournament games (for those with 10 games or more). The top 14 spots include the names Rick Pitino, Roy Williams, Tubby Smith, Gary Williams, Bill Self, and Lute Olson.

Kentucky (indirect move conceded), Kansas, Georgia, OSU, Illinois and Iowa are all arguably 'big time' schools. Further, the move most anticipate to resolve the IU vacancy is Iowa to Indiana. We are getting close to 'all that often'.

Don't misread my posts. I am not in a panic and expect Matta to stay. But there is ample precedence for such a move.

I am greatly reassured by Smith's comment that "We would do everything we could to keep Thad Matta" - a comment that has to make Matta's financial planners feel good as well. (It was also nice to see Smith at the game yesterday - something Geiger almost always did and Smith rarely does - at least in his regular seats.)

Ultimately Matta will stay - should the process ever get that far - because there will be a huge difference to IU between the price of Steve Allford and that of Thad Matta. Because IU already knows this the process will not likely get that far.
 
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I don't think Thads going to IU. But I'm still a little antsy about the possibility. I agree that as long as the NCAA doesn't do something unexpected, we're OK, but to me the judge in the OB case did something I didn't expect. And I just feel uneasy when having to rely on the NCAA.

:oh: :io:
 
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