Mo Money, Less Problems


Gary Parrish's column on Dan Monson's decision to leave Gonzaga for Minnesota casts the coaching carousel in a new and important light. Too often, we critique coaches who leave smaller schools for bigger programs, only to struggle in their new environments. Few among us would reject a new job that provided for a thousand percent raise -- even if we knew we would after several years be fired from that job.

Truth is, Monson -- now back in the less-stressful world of mid-major basketball here at Long Beach State -- did what many reasonable people would do in similar circumstances. He weighed the possibility of sustaining success at Gonzaga with a $125,000-per-year salary against the possibility of achieving success at Minnesota with a contract that was essentially guaranteed for a total of $7 million.

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Don't Call it a Comeback


Anticipating the start of the season, I'll soon (re-)start blogging -- with increasing frequency as tipoff approaches.

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May Skip Prosser


rest in peace.

Seth Davis' column for SI is a fitting tribute.

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July 4th


Have a good one.

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Let My People Go


At Fox Sports, I argue that programs that change coaches should release recruits who want out from their national letters of intent.

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Twice as nice


My national championship review at Fox Sports.

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Ohio State by three


My national championship preview at Fox Sports.

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Billy, Tubby and Recruiting Strategies


Times change, eh? From the Lexington Herald Leader in March of 2004:

For years, the most contagious disease in Kentucky was the BDP.

Billy Donovan Paranoia.

In the late 1990s and early 2000s, as the ever-energetic Florida coach reeled in one McDonald's All-American after another on the recruiting trail. You couldn't go on a University of Kentucky basketball Internet site or turn on a sports talk radio show in this town without being swamped by predictions of the coming age of Gator supremacy.

Coupled, of course, with denunciations of Tubby Smith's myriad and supposed recruiting "failures."

All of which, as a backdrop, made what happened in Rupp Arena Sunday striking.

First, Kentucky applied an 82-62 spanking to the Gators. It was the eighth time in the last nine meetings that a Smith-led team has bested a Donovan-led team.

Afterward, the Florida coach faced the media and said he thought he might need to change his recruiting philosophy to look more like ...

Tubby's.

One of the problems at UF has been attrition. One way that ensures attrition is by signing elite players who are on -- or think they should be -- the fast track to the NBA.

Mega-recruits Mike Miller and Donnell Harvey bailed after Florida's run to the 2000 NCAA finals. Miller had stayed only two years, Harvey one.

In 2001, Florida seemed to have landed the power-ball jackpot of recruiting classes.

The Gators signed the player North Carolina most coveted (swing man James White). They got the player Duke most coveted (David Lee). They signed the consensus No. 1 player in the country (Kwame Brown).

Problem was, Brown turned pro without ever reaching Gainesville. White got impatient waiting for playing time and transferred to Cincinnati...

Meanwhile, after Kentucky's Smith got caught short of players following a rash of transfers early in his Kentucky tenure, he has done a masterful job of finding quality talent below the radar of the recruiting gurus.

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I review Florida-UCLA


at Fox Sports.

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I review Ohio State - Georgetown


at Fox Sports.

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Foul Play


In the first game of the night, Greg Oden is tagged with two fouls in the first three minutes.

In the second game, Arron Afflalo is called for two fouls in the first two minutes.

Ugh.

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Apart from


going inside to Roy Hibbert, Georgetown is having the most success (scoring points) in transition. This despite the Hoyas' well-deserved reputation for playing at a slow tempo.

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Final Four Columns


At Fox Sports, on "Unsung Heroes."

On the differences between the four teams.

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Hoya Paranoia


The Hoyas are up eight in overtime with 1:13 remaining.

A huge run to close the game. Brandan Wright's fourth foul in regulation hurt the Tar Heels more than anybody expected.

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Inside Job


EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. -- Three important halftime observations from the Meadowlands:

1) The game is being played at North Carolina's preferred pace -- fast.

2) Twelve Tar Heels players have seen action. That should bode well for well rested UNC in the second half.

3) Of the game's four leading scorers (two for each team), three (Hansbrough, Wright and Hibbert) play primarily on the interior.

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