Kelvin Sampson can coach. The guy has won at least 20 games in 11 consecutive seasons. He
may not get the opportunity to do it again as the head man at Indiana.
When Sampson walked off the floor following the Hoosiers victory over Purdue
last night, it may have been for the final time.
The administration is expected to make a decision on his status prior to Indiana’s next game, which comes Saturday against
Northwestern.
According to sources, a decision still has not been made on Sampson’s future.
It’s unlikely he will coach another game on the sideline for the Hoosiers,
but not completely out of the question.
There is one scenario that would have Sampson continue to coach the Hoosiers
until the end of the season before he is fired. The more likely routes would be
that Sampson is suspended, fired or comes to a financial agreement with the
school later this week.
All of this could have been avoided if Sampson had just come out and said, “My
bad.” All he had to do was say he messed up and he would have been given a
second (well, maybe a third) chance.
Just look at Jason Giambi. Or wait to see how fans react to Andy Pettitte.
However, Sampson is now accused of five major NCAA violations – including lying
to investigators.
Was he wrong? Absolutely.
Are there coaches who have done worse acts than making an abundance of phone
calls?
No question.
CREAN ADDS KEY PIECE
Marquette guards Dominic James, Jerel McNeal and Wesley
Matthews can match up with just about anyone.
However, it’s Tom Crean’s frontcourt that has been questioned.
Ousmane Barro has been inconsistent in the middle.
Well, Crean just got some much-needed help in the form of athletic 6-foot-8 freshman
forward Trevor Mbakwe, who was cleared and played limited minutes in the rout
over Pittsburgh on Friday.
Mbakwe is Crean’s most talented inside player, but he’s missed most of his
freshman since after a knee injury sustained back in November.
``He can definitely have an impact for us,” Crean said. “There’s no doubt about
it.”
Don’t be shocked if Crean increases Mbakwe’s minutes down the stretch and in
the Big East tournament and the Minnesota native becomes an important piece of the team in the
NCAA tournament.
MCDONALD’S NEEDS A CHANGE
We touched on it yesterday, but this McDonald’s All-American Game is getting
out of hand.
Kids grow up dreaming of playing in the game and you’ve got people making
decisions that shouldn’t be involved.
How else do you explain the inclusion of Mike Rosario and Larry Drew into the
game?
Rosario made the cut because his coach is Bob Hurley and he
plays for a high-profile high school. Drew earned the invite because he is
committed to North Carolina, it’s a weak point guard crop and his high school
coach led the west squad in last year’s McDonald’s Game.
Neither is one of the Top 24 players in America.
The voting panel for the McDonald’s Game is embarrassing.
There are too many guys on the panel who have a political agenda, aren’t
objective and/or don’t see the majority of the players in the mix for this
prestigious honor.
I am not taking shots at these guys, but Dave Krider hasn’t been on the AAU
circuit in years. Mike Sullivan is exclusively a New York guy, Vince Baldwin works for Nike, Tim Stevens is a
writer from Raleigh who watches a handful of kids.
The voting panel needs a major overhaul. Here’s my suggestion for what it’s
worth. Use the following 10 guys, who see more basketball than anyone and don’t
have any political agendas:
Dave Telep, Scout.com – The best in the business. Period.
Justin Young and/or Jerry Meyer, Rivals.com – Take your pick. You can’t go
wrong with either.
Clark Francis, Hoop Scoop – A veteran who is out on the road as much as anyone.
Rob Harrington, Prepstars – He’s completely objective and can evaluate talent.
Van Coleman, Hoopmasters – He’s a fixture in the spring, summer and at high
school events.
Tom Konchalski, H.S.B.I. – One of the most respected analysts in the industry.
John Carroll, Scouts, Inc., ESPN – A former college and NBA guy who sees all of
the elite players.
Frank Burlison, Long Beach Press Telegram – The best newspaper guy in the
industry at covering preps and AAU.
Eric Bossi, Freelance Writer – He’s on the road as much as just about anyone
and knows the Midwest as well as anybody.
Bob Gibbons, All-Star Report – He’s a big name and he’s out on the road a lot,
but we question his objectivity.
I appreciate the blog, but with all due respect I'm surprised you didn't do more research before you posted your opinion.
The NCAA will surely place a "Show Cause" label on him. What this means is that any school who wants him to coach their team must go before the NCAA and have a valid reason why they think he deserves a chance. Given his history, I don't think a school or the NCAA will waste their time.
The Show Cause recommendation is not permanent, but suffice it to say that you probably won't see him coaching in the NCAA for 5-7 years.
Whether or not show cause would have been brought down on him had he simply admitted his wrong doings is debatable. But it didn't happen that way, so I won't debate it.
Last edited by Ineedascreenname on February 20th at 8:29 AM.
The main problem is that he comes off as being slimmmmmy, sneakk########y, and there is not one coach around, let known in his own conference that has ever trusted him nor will they ever. Indiana will do a better this time around. Would you rather replace Bobby Knight or Kelvin Sampson. Thats a no brainer.
Don't even get me started on who I or any other IU fan would rather have coaching Indiana. Bob Knight can never be replaced. Sampson has to go. As for "all the stuff knight did", 35 years coaching and 0 NCAA violations. Not bad.
No one who knows anything about college basketball would deny that Indiana is one to the premier teams. All of college basketball would be hurt if Indiana went down because of Kelvin Sampson.
It's kinda sad. The guy can obviously coach. Yet like others before and unfortunately after him, he put himself above the law. I've been associated with coaches like him before. The rules are for someone else and not them. As coaches we need to remember that we are coaches and not god. Our arrogance will catch up with us some day.
Indiana will suspend Sampson until the allegations are investigated....they won't fire him YET because they don't want to violate his contract and be sued for wrongful termination.
This type of knee-jerk reaction got Ohio State into trouble when they fired Jim O'Brien before they knew all the facts and they ended up losing a court battle.
Last edited by Rameses The Great on February 21st at 8:47 AM.
Bumsin51:
Why would Indiana being put on probation because of Sampson's violations be bad for all of college basketball?
Indiana knew what they were getting BEFORE they hired Sampson. And now he betrayed their trust, just like he did Oklahoma's trust.....
This is all good for college basketball....lets just hope that the current team, this season, doesnt take the hit.
Georgia destroyed its team after Herrick and his son were found to be cheating...they self imposed a post-season ban on its current team (totally unfair) to try to limit NCAA sanctions...that clearly showed the administration didnt give a #### about the student athletes...they only cared about their program....and Georgia knew what they were getting when they hired Herrick...UCLA had fired him...just like OU fired Sampson.
Jeff Goodman is a senior college basketball writer for FOXSports.com - This is the only place you'll find continuous daily updates from the world of college basketball, so check back as often as you'd like.