Season Preview: HoopsHD interviews Belmont G Austin Luke

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College basketball lost most of its great PGs to the NBA draft last June (Markelle Fultz/Lonzo Ball/De’Aaron Fox/Dennis Smith) but if you are a fan of AST then allow me to direct your attention to Nashville, TN.  Belmont SR PG Austin Luke led the OVC with 6.3 APG as a sophomore in 2016, then followed that up with 7.1 APG in 2017 to finish 2nd in the nation.  The Bruins went 15-1 in conference play last year before being upset by Jacksonville State in the OVC tourney, but they will do their best to get back to the NCAA tourney this season for the 1st time since 2015.  HoopsHD’s Jon Teitel got to chat with Austin about what makes a good PG and how he makes so many shots from behind the arc.

You grew up in Texas: what made you choose Belmont? I first got into contact with Belmont after a tournament in Orlando. I got really lucky and had a good game in front of a few college coaches: Belmont assistant coach Mark Price happened to be one of those coaches in attendance. They started to send me letters and eventually Coach Price and I started to talk on a regular basis via phone. One thing led to another and I went on a visit to Nashville. I met the players/coaches and walked around campus. I fell in love instantly and I guess the rest is history. They offered me that same weekend and I committed the moment that they offered me because I knew there was no place better for me.

You play for Coach Rick Byrd: what makes him such a great coach, and what is the most important thing that you have learned from him? I think his attention to detail is what sets him apart from others. It can be frustrating at times as a player because his expectations are so high but I think that is part of what makes him so good at what he does. He also is the most competitive person I have ever met no mater what sport is being played. He hates losing and that kind of attitude is contagious to the teams that I have been a part of. It does not matter who we are playing: we go into the game expecting to win and I think that is a direct reflection of Coach Byrd’s mindset.

As a sophomore you shot 47.7 3P% during conference play: what is the key to making shots from behind the arc? The biggest keys for me are simply staying confident in myself and living in the gym. I feel like confidence is such a big part of shooting: you have to think the ball is going in anytime you shoot it and I cannot think of a time that I was more confident in my shot than during my sophomore year. The other part of that is being in the gym and working on certain things. I feel like I worked harder this summer than I ever have before so I am excited to see how that work pays off this season.

In the 2015 OVC tourney title game Taylor Barnette scored 9 PTS including an off-balance 3-PT shot despite a man in his face with 3.2 seconds left in a 1-PT upset win over Murray State to snap the Racers 25-game winning streak: did you think the shot was going in, and what was the feeling like in your locker room afterward? I knew that shot was going in from the moment it left his hands. Taylor is known for hitting huge shots whether it is in pick-up games, practice, or actual games during the season. He always seems to hit the right shot at the right time so when I saw the play was going to Taylor I knew that if he got a good look it was going down. That win was enormous for our program. The atmosphere in the locker room was like nothing I will ever forget. Murray State was the best team we had played the whole year and it was great seeing us finally put it all together, especially on the offensive end. We really got things going on offense and were so confident after that game going forward. We were so excited that we were getting a chance to play in the NCAA tournament because that is something we had dreamed of doing ever since we started playing the game.

In the 2016 OVC tourney semifinal you had 8 AST but missed a 3-PT shot in the final second of a 1-PT OT loss to Austin Peay: where does that rank among the most devastating losses of your career? It is definitely up there. We get so used to success and winning big games that when we drop one like that it always hurts and leaves a bitter taste in our mouths. It hurts even worse because the last two years we felt like we were the best team in the conference for 5 months of the season…and then one bad game cost us a spot in the NCAA Tournament. Personally, I have not played my best in OVC Tournament games. Missing that shot was big and it will probably be something I remember for the rest of my life…but at the same time it was just one shot and as a basketball player you have to have a short memory. Hopefully this year we can turn the corner and be at our best during the OVC Tournament because winning the tournament is always our main goal at the beginning of the season and we have fallen short two years in a row.

In the 2016 NIT you scored 16 PTS in a loss to Georgia and in the 2017 NIT you scored 7 PTS in a win over Georgia and then scored 8 PTS in a loss to Georgia Tech: is there some unwritten rule that you are required to play postseason games within the state of Georgia?! I guess so! I am not really sure what that is about but it seems that every year that we make the NIT we play somebody in Georgia. I guess it was just written in the stars but regardless we were just excited for the chance to play more basketball.

You have led the conference in APG during each of the past 2 years: what is the secret to being a good PG? I get asked this question a lot from a variety of people but I never really know how to answer it. We are a team whose culture is so focused on team accomplishments that individual statistics are not really emphasized, and we like it like that. As long as we win games we do not care about who is putting up big numbers or getting the attention. We all just do what we are asked to do, which is whatever will put us in the best position to win every game, and what I can do to help the team is pass the ball and get people good shots. The only thing I can really do is give credit to the amazing coaches/teammates I have around me. The coaches do so much for me like help me work on my weaknesses during the off-season, break down film for me to help me improve on the things I do wrong during games, and most importantly put me in the right spots for me to be successful on the court. My teammates are another obvious reason for the assist numbers that I have been lucky enough to put up the last two years. They hit all of the shots: there is no assist without the made shot so I have the easy job.  I just get guys the ball where they like it and then they do the rest so I cannot take credit for any of that: it is really the people around me who enable me to do that and I could not do it without them.

You have a 20-day stretch in November featuring several good non-conference opponents including Washington/Vanderbilt/Middle Tennessee/Providence/TCU: how are you preparing to face such a gauntlet? That is an incredibly tough stretch against some amazing teams. Other programs might shy away from opponents like that in a span of 20 days but we embrace the challenge. We enjoy going into hostile environments and playing talented teams because we know that we will get better as a result and become better in March because of the strength of schedule that we face in November. We go into every game with the mindset that we are going to win so I think that those games are the most fun. We really look forward to playing those teams that are going to make us better. My best memories of my time in a Belmont uniform have come from wins against the likes of North Carolina, Marquette, Georgia, and a top-25 Murray State team two years ago. It gives us a few chances to get a few really big wins for our program.

You are 1 of 4 seniors on the roster: how much pressure is there on you to be a leader this year? I do not think any of us feel pressure to lead at all because those skills come naturally, but at the same time the seniors as a whole are ready to step up and make up for the leadership that we lost in Evan Bradds/Taylor Barnette/Nick Smith. We definitely will miss the leadership they brought to the table but it is an exciting opportunity for guys to lead that have not had a chance to do so in the past. We do not see it as a pressure situation: we are excited about it, along with the other guys who are younger but ready for the chance to lead as well.

What are your goals for the upcoming season, and what are your expectations for the upcoming season? Our team goals are to be the best team we can possibly be by the time the postseason rolls around, win the OVC Tournament, and get back to the NCAA Tournament. We have fallen short of this two years in a row and it has left a bitter taste in our mouths. We are extremely hungry to achieve this goal and are ready to work as hard as we possibly can to get there. Setting our sights on something even greater, we want to win our program’s 1st-ever NCAA Tournament game. Individually, I just want to do whatever I can to help achieve these team goals. Like I said, our team takes pride in an unselfish culture so each person is willing to do whatever they need to do individually in order to reach our common team goals.

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Season Preview: HoopsHD interviews Mississippi State head coach Ben Howland

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Even if Mississippi State coach Ben Howland goes undefeated in non-conference play this fall he has already achieved his highlight for 2017: back in January he helped lead a rescue effort to save a woman from an overturned car on the side of the highway.  He has had plenty of on-court success as well over the past 2 decades: back-to-back Big Sky regular season titles at Northern Arizona, 2002 national COY at Pitt, and 3 straight Final Fours at UCLA from 2006-2008.  Hired by the Bulldogs in 2015, he is hoping to make the leap during year #3 in Starkville as he tries to ascend the SEC standings.  HoopsHD’s Jon Teitel got to chat with Coach Howland about guarding John Stockton and coaching Russell Westbrook.  

In the 1979 NCAA tourney as a player at Weber State you scored 16 PTS off the bench in a 3-PT OT win over New Mexico State: where does that game rank among the highlights of your playing career? That is up there because it was a great win for our program. We had played them earlier in the year and lost a close game by 5 PTS so it was nice to beat them in the rematch. The Aggies were a really good team: that February they missed a shot at the buzzer that would have beaten Larry Bird’s Indiana State team (the eventual NCAA tourney runner-up).

As an assistant to childhood friend Jay Hillock at Gonzaga you got to test your defensive skills against some of the players during practice: what was it like to guard future Hall of Famer John Stockton? I got to play against him every day so looking back it was a real thrill. All I did was foul him and grab him but fortunately Jay used a half-court offense! Jay and I grew up together in Santa Barbara and he was the 1 to get me into this business.

In 2002 you were named national COY at Pitt: what did it mean to you to receive such an outstanding honor? That was an incredible honor for a kid who grew up on the West Coast and got his 1st head coaching job at NAU. Having the chance to coach in the Big East was unbelievable and we had good players including All-American Brandin Knight. I obviously had a great staff including current TCU coach Jamie Dixon.

In the 2006 NCAA tourney as coach at UCLA you had a 2-PT win over Gonzaga: how were you able to overcome a 9-PT deficit with just over 3 minutes to go by scoring the final 11 PTS of the game? I think it was about a 17-PT deficit with 12 minutes to go. Our players had the mindset to never quit and just play as hard as they could.  Gonzaga had the national POY in Adam Morrison but we had 5-6 future NBA guys on our own roster.

You lost to eventual champion Florida in both the 2006 NCAA title game and the 2007 Final 4: you obviously had great teams both years so was it just a situation where you kept running into a team that just happened to be a little bit better? They were really good: their front line of Al Horford/Joakim Noah were very special and have had nice long careers in the NBA.  They were also very well coached by Billy Donovan (who now coaches Russell Westbrook in Oklahoma City).

You are 1 of just 4 active college coaches who had a player eventually become an NBA MVP (Bob McKillop/Rick Barnes/John Calipari): how good was Russell Westbrook in college, and how proud are you of all his success? He was an incredible player who just blossomed into a force during his sophomore year through his hard work. He has 1 of the best work ethics in the entire sport, which is a great lesson to younger players. He has had an incredible career and I think that the best is yet to come.

You started 14-8 last year before a 7-game losing streak (with 6 of the 7 losses coming by 7 PTS or less) put you back under 500: did it make you feel discouraged (because you were not playing your best basketball down the stretch) or encouraged (because you remained competitive against good teams)? The bottom line is that the schedule gets tougher as the season progresses and this year will be no different. We had the youngest team in the entire nation last year but we have a lot more experience this year and have added some new players who will give us strength/size/toughness.

You only had 1 senior on the roster last year and only have 1 again this year: how do you find your team’s leaders when everyone is so young? We are actually devoid of seniors this year but that does not mean we cannot have leadership. I feel good about the fact that we finally have some players beginning their 3rd season with us.

Your non-conference schedule includes games against Dayton/Cincinnati: which of these games do you feel will present your biggest test? We are only focused on the very 1st game of the season and will move ahead from there.

What are your goals for the upcoming season, and what are your expectations for the upcoming season? Our #1 goal is to stay healthy (which is hard to control) but if we can then I think we can be a really competitive team. We want to finish really strong and I think we will play well down the stretch and be the best team that we can be.

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Season Preview: HoopsHD interviews Houston Baptist C Josh Ibarra

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There are already enough distractions for college basketball players in 2017 that they hardly need another, but when you are born in Houston and play for Houston Baptist like SR C Josh Ibarra, the very last thing you want to deal with is Hurricane Harvey. Josh was 2nd-Team All-Southland Conference last year as he helped the Huskies win their final 9 regular season games and reach the CIT before falling to Campbell.  HoopsHD’s Jon Teitel got to chat with Josh about the hometown hurricane and how to replace the loss of his top-2 scorers from last season.  

 (photo credit: Juan DeLeon)

What made you choose Houston Baptist? As soon I came on my visit to HBU everyone around me including the coaches/teammates made me feel welcome and like I was a part of the team. Being close to home is nice too.

You play for Coach Ron Cottrell: what makes him such a good coach, and what is the most important thing that you have learned from him? What makes coach so special is that he has the patience to actually teach and show you different things, whether it be plays/skills.

Last year you started 8-12 before winning your final 9 regular season games: how were you able to turn things around in February? In the beginning of the season we were not playing as a team. I think we were more worried about our own stat lines rather than just playing to win. What helped us was realizing that doing things individually was not going to get us anywhere and we began to play as 1 unit.

In the 2017 CIT you scored 11 PTS in a loss to Campbell: what did you learn from that game that you think will help you this year? What I learned from that game is to never underestimate another team. We went in too relaxed, thinking it was going to be an easy game, and they showed us up.

Your non-conference schedule includes games against Providence/Virginia Tech/Oklahoma State/Michigan State/Vandy: which of these games do you feel will present your biggest test? I think they are all big tests. We will see where we are as a team versus tougher opponents that will push us harder than any Southland team will, and those games will prepare us for the long run during conference play.

You are 1 of 3 seniors on the roster: how much pressure is there on you to be a leader this year? There is not too much pressure on me. We have a lot of young guys on the team this year so we just have to make sure they are ready and know what to do.  I believe they will be great for us so that takes the pressure off of the seniors’ shoulders.

You lost your top-2 scorers from last year (Colter Lasher/Reveal Chukwujekwu): how will you try to replace all of that offense? Making up for those 2 is going to be a difficult task. I think that sharing the ball a lot more to even things out will be best for us. We need to have points scored by a greater number of players rather than trying to put it all on certain people.

You were born in Houston: what impact did Hurricane Harvey have on the campus (if any), and how is your family doing? Harvey did not have too much of an impact on campus (thankfully) and my family managed to stay dry the entire time.

What are your goals for the upcoming season, and what are your expectations for the upcoming season? My goals for this season are to just take it 1 game at a time and not get too caught up in thinking about winning the conference, which just adds more pressure on us as a team. My expectation for us this year is just to be better than we were last year.

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Season Preview: HoopsHD interviews Iowa State G Donovan Jackson

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The good news for Iowa State is that they were only a few points away from reaching the Sweet 16 last March. The bad news is that they lost a ton of senior starters but the cupboard is not totally bare thanks to guys like SR G Donovan Jackson.  He played in all 35 games during his 1st year with the Cyclones and shot 45.4 3P%/80.5 FT%.  Winning the Big 12 tourney may have been the cherry on top, but 1 of his sweetest moments was a game-clinching 3-PT shot in OT to end Kansas’ 51-game winning streak at Allen Fieldhouse.  HoopsHD’s Jon Teitel got to chat with Donovan about winning the conference tourney and trying to replace all of those seniors.  

You began your career at Iowa Western CC and had offers from Illinois/Miami/Oklahoma: what made you choose Iowa State? At the time assistant coach TJ Otzelberger (now the head coach at South Dakota State) was a good family friend and I had developed a nice relationship with him.  Iowa State was just the best fit for me.

You play for Coach Steve Prohm: what makes him such a good coach, and what is the most important thing that you have learned from him? He has taught me a lot both on/off the court. He has a great track record of developing very successful guards including Cameron Payne/Isaiah Canaan/Monte Morris.

On 2/4/17 you scored 10 PTS including the game-clinching 3-PT shot in a 3-PT OT win over Kansas to end the Jayhawks’ 51-game win streak at Allen Fieldhouse: did you think the shot was going in, and where does that rank among the highlights of your career? I actually called that shot because I am a pretty confident player: I think it was the best shot of my career so far.

Last year your 45.4 3P% was 4th-best in school history: what is your secret for making shots from behind the arc? Repetition, repetition. I put up 500 shots a night in the gym and try to make all of them, which carries over into the game.

In the 2017 Big 12 tourney title game you scored 6 PTS in a 6-PT win over West Virginia: how hard is it to win 3 games in 3 days, and what was the feeling like in your locker room afterward? It is tough because there is not a lot of time to recuperate but our whole team was on a mission. Everyone was excited after the win because the Mountaineers had swept us during the regular season.

In the 2017 NCAA tourney you had a perfect shooting night (4-4 FG/4-4 FT) in a win over Nevada: was it just 1 of those scenarios where every shot you put up seemed to go in because you were “in the zone”? I felt at home during that game because it was in my hometown of Milwaukee and I had a lot of family there.

Your non-conference schedule includes games against Missouri/Iowa/Tennessee: which of these games do you feel will present your biggest test? The very 1st game will show everyone where we are at: I think we are looking good.

You are the leading returning scorer after losing each of your top-4 scorers from last season (Monte Morris/Nazareth Mitrou-Long/Deonte Burton/Matt Thomas): how much pressure is there on you to be a leader this season, and how are you going to try to replace all of that offense? All of the new guys are looking up to me/Solomon Young/Nick Weiler-Babb. We have a lot of talented players on our team including some aggressive freshmen who can shoot the ball very well.

You have several graduate transfers including Hans Brase/Jeff Beverly/Zoran Talley: how hard is it to get everyone on the same page when you are bringing in so many new people? It is tough at 1st but everyone has bought in to what is going on. We are known for winning so everyone is comfortable with taking a role to help us win as many games as possible.

What are your goals for the upcoming season, and what are your expectations for the upcoming season? My goal is to win as many games as possible and prove to everyone in the country that I am 1 of the best players. I am not settling for anything less than winning another championship and making the NCAA tourney.

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Season Preview: HoopsHD interviews Furman head coach Bob Richey

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If you can win 10 straight games in conference play then you will probably make a postseason tourney: Furman won 10 SoCon games in a row last January/February and their reward was a trip to the CIT semifinals.  As is the case with many successful mid-major programs, head coach Niko Medved used the run as a stepping stone to become head coach elsewhere (Drake), which cleared the way for Bob Richey to move up from assistant coach to head coach last spring.  He is a very young head coach but has plenty of experience as a D-1 assistant as he prepares to begin his 1st year as the new guy in charge.  HoopsHD’s Jon Teitel got to chat with Coach Richey about his new job and his spectacular senior backcourt.  

You won a state title and were 3A state POY at Florence Christian School: how good a player were you back in the day? I guess that I was decent. It was a small private school but I set 7 school records so I was not too bad.

You graduated summa cum laude from North Greenville University in 2006: how much importance do you place on academics? It is who I am as a person and I took a lot of pride in it. It was an expectation in my family to do your best in all walks of life.

In the 2017 CIT semifinals as interim head coach at Furman you lost to St. Peter’s: how did it feel to get thrown into the fire on short notice?! It was a great learning experience. It was hard for our team to learn that we were losing our head coach only a few days before that game so my main purpose was to give them support. St. Peter’s played a phenomenal game, defended us as well as anyone had all year, and made almost every shot they took.

You were an assistant to Niko Medved before taking over for good in April: why did you take the job, and how is it going so far? Taking the job was a no-brainer: there are only 351 D-1 head coaching jobs out there and I always felt that once we built a winning program we could be a consistent winner here. I looked forward to the opportunity: there is no better city in the Southeast than Greenville and we attract quality human beings.

You turned 34 back in March but already have more than a decade of experience as a D-1 assistant coach under your belt: do you see your relatively tender age as an advantage or disadvantage when it comes to being a head coach? I think that age is just a number. It is a people business so it is about how well you can relate to/connect with people. You have to be prepared to do whatever you have to do and I have seen a lot over the past 12 years as an assistant.

Last year you set a school record by winning 12 games on the road: what is the secret to winning games away from home? You need an experienced group: this group has as good a chemistry as I have ever seen. They can handle adversity on the road because they have been through the wars. They are willing to defend and have the ability to make shots.

Your non-conference schedule includes road games against Butler/Duke/Tennessee: which of these games do you feel will present your biggest test? We have a lot of really good opponents on our schedule. Duke is at the top of most preseason ballots so they will be a tough test for us but we look forward to taking things game by game and seeing what we can do.

F Matt Rafferty missed more than half of last season due to back surgery: how is his health at the moment? He is not on the injury report and has had an unbelievable summer. He is 1 of the toughest players in the country and has been resilient so we look forward to getting him back out there.

You have a great senior backcourt in Devin Sibley/Daniel Fowler: how crucial will all of their experience be to your team’s success this year? It is huge: Devin was conference POY, Daniel is our vocal leader, and John Davis is the straw who stirs the drink and sets the tone for us defensively. They are a special group of seniors, which is a pretty good formula for success: we will miss them in a lot of ways when they leave next year.

What are your goals for the upcoming season, and what are your expectations for the upcoming season? We have a really good team coming back after a really good season. We lost 2 of our final 3 regular season games and then again in the 1st round of the conference tourney so we have talked all summer about finishing. The seniors have come up with about 6-7 goals but we have a close/talented team and will try to get a little bit better every day.

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Season Preview: HoopsHD interviews Oakland head coach Greg Kampe

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Anytime you are mentioned in the same breath as coaches like Jim Boeheim/Mike Krzyzewski you know that you are doing something right, and when it comes to active guys who have spent 34+ years at their D-1 school the 3rd member of the trio is Oakland head coach Greg Kampe.  He also seems to be getting better with age like a fine bottle of wine: a Horizon League regular season title in 2017 and stands only 17 wins shy of 600 in his career.  Tonight he becomes 1 of 8 inductees into the Michigan Sports Hall of Fame and we congratulate him on this awesome accomplishment.  HoopsHD’s Jon Teitel got to chat with Coach Kampe about his longevity and his health. 

You are about to begin your 34th year as head coach at Oakland, which makes you the 3rd-longest-tenured head coach in D-1 (behind Jim Boeheim/Mike Krzyzewski): could you have ever imagined in the fall of 1984 that you would still hold the same job more than 3 decades later, and how long do you plan on sticking around for? Absolutely not: I thought that I would be here for a couple of years, win a couple of national championships, and then move on to UCLA! I became a head coach at age 28 as 1 of the youngest in the nation and am very fortunate to have survived. I still feel young and expect to be around for a long time.

Take me through the magical 2005 postseason:
Despite entering the Mid-Continent Conference tourney with a 9-18 record, Pierre Dukes made a 3-PT shot with 1.3 seconds left in the title game to clinch a 1-PT upset of #1-seed Oral Roberts and earn the school’s 1st-ever NCAA tourney berth: did you think the shot was going in, and what was the feeling like in your locker room afterward? It is still 1 of the most euphoric moments of my basketball career. I have seen both sides of a game that is decided at the very end but that basket changed the face of Oakland basketball after we had moved from D-2 to D-1. That was supposed to be a rebuilding year but we turned a magical moment into a chance to make the NCAA tourney.

In the NCAA tourney play-in game Rawle Marshall scored 29 PTS in a 10-PT win over Alabama A&M: what did it mean to you to win a tourney game? We became Cinderella for a few days and the university got a taste of what the national media can do for you.  After that, we could start getting into homes and winning recruiting battles.

In the 2017 NIT you had a 4-PT loss to Richmond: what do you think your team learned from that game that will help them this year? We were the #1-seed after winning our league championship but had a devastating loss to Youngstown State in the conference tourney that still stings to this day. Kansas/Purdue can still make the NCAA tourney if they lose as #1-seeds but we cannot. We won at Clemson in the NIT and were leading Richmond but had a call that did not go our way late in the game.

You had 3 surgeries in July due to infected kidney stones: how close did you come to dying, and how is your health at the moment? I came as close as you can come and still live: I do not know how to put it any other way. We are still unsure about what a 106-degree temperature did to my organs, but I feel good and am on the path to a 100% recovery by the start of the season.

You have a brutal non-conference schedule featuring Syracuse/Kansas/Michigan State: which of these games do you feel will present your biggest test? Both Kansas/Michigan State might be #1 when we play them. We try to challenge ourselves year in and year out with the best teams we can play against, and if you want to get an at-large berth you have to play/win some of those games. We have 11 high-major wins, which is quite a few, and we want a couple more this year.

You have a strong senior class including Kendrick Nunn/Martez Walker/Jalen Hayes/Nick Daniels: how crucial will all of that experience be to your team’s success? We have a chance for this to be a special year so we have very high expectations. I think that Kendrick will be a 1st-round pick eventually and Martez/Jalen might work their way onto draft boards. Nick has had a very solid career as well and you do not get a group of 4 guys like that at the mid-major level very often. When you have a veteran team you can handle pressure.

If you win 17 more games this year you could become the 100th men’s coach ever with 600 career wins: do you just view it as a nice round number or a way to help cement your legacy as a great basketball coach or other? It is not something that I am focused on but it is a big # so it is being put in my face a lot. I have to give it its due without making it too important. The 4 players you mentioned will make it a heck of a lot easier to reach and if I get 17 wins I will be very proud of it. It is rare to win 600 games at 1 place so it would be a great reward, but it is a minor accomplishment that would come along with the major accomplishment of our team having a great year.

Your son Keith played on the Golden Grizzlies’ baseball team, your son Branch played football at LSU, your father Kurt won a national championship on the Michigan football team, and your brother played football for the Wolverines: who is the best athlete in the family? Me by far! My youngest son is a drummer who is probably more talented in music than any of us were in sports. I will ask the family what they think when we are all together this weekend.

Tonight you will be inducted into the Michigan Sports Hall of Fame: where does that rank among the highlights of your career? It is probably far and away #1. Michigan is an unbelievable state in terms of both pro/college sports so there is an array of great players in our Hall of Fame. 1 of those was Al Kaline, who I wanted to be growing up: I wore #6 and when the basketball coach would not give me that # I pitched a fit! To enter a Hall of Fame that includes Al is unbelievable.  I talked to him after they made the announcement because I could not believe it and he told me I belonged, which is the greatest thing that has ever happened to me. I do not like to talk about awards but it is hard to downplay joining a Hall that has legends like Barry Sanders/Sparky Anderson.

What are your goals for the upcoming season, and what are your expectations for the upcoming season? I want to reach the Final 4 but my boss would say “how about you just win the conference tourney this year?”! At a place like Oakland we do not often have 4 good players who are all seniors at the same time (3 of whom are among the best players in our conference), so we are going after it, have very high expectations, and will not back down.

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