Author: John Paulsen (Page 301 of 937)

Is Coach K the main reason everyone hates Duke?

Israel Gutierrez of Miami Herald writes that everyone hates Duke, and it starts with Mike Krzyzewski.

No one wants Duke to win (Duke alumni excluded, of course). Not even a game. Not even a half.

Everyone hates Duke, and we’re not even sure why. For some reason, we know that if the devil had a face, it would have little beady eyes (like Mike Krzyzewski’s). If he had a voice, it would be nasally and annoying (like Krzyzewski’s) and if he had a name, it would be impossible to spell and the sound would follow no laws of language (like, well, you know).

Well, we all know that first part isn’t true. Any successful program/franchise is going to have fans outside of its alumni base and the Blue Devils are no different. Some might call these “bandwagon” fans, but as a 12-year-old back in 1986, I really liked Johnny Dawkins and loved the color blue, so I rooted for them all the way to the final, where they lost to Louisville. (Damn you, Pervis Ellison! And the color red!)

There’s no arguing that he elevated a basketball program into elite status upon arrival. From 1986 to 1999, he reached a ridiculous eight Final Fours and won those memorable back-to-back national championships, when NCAA basketball was still drenched with NBA talent.

But since then, it seems a lot of his colleagues have placed themselves in similar company, and yet, the head Blue Devil remains the most arrogant of the bunch.

To this day, he carries around a superiority complex that doesn’t match the success — at least not in the past decade.

Just last weekend, when he was asked about Duke’s “drought” about not reaching the Final Four since 2004, Krzyzewski offered this ego-heavy response.

“There are two words when you compete that are interesting — `since’ and `never,’ ” he said. “I’m glad we’re in the `since.’ ”

That’s not the most considerate thing to say when you’re about to face a Baylor coach who was on the “never” side of that coin.

But that’s who he is.

Gutierrez uses words like “arrogant,” “superiority complex” and “ego-heavy,” but what is this based on — that quote about “since” and “never”? Really? I’ve heard Krzyzewski interviewed plenty of times, and while he’s justifiably confident (not unlike any of his less-successful peers), he never has come off as cocky, at least not to me. Maybe he tires of the same questions over and over and he’s determined to put those last few tournament exits into perspective.

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St. John’s hires Steve Lavin

It looks like ESPN has an opening for a college basketball analyst…

Lavin has been with ESPN the past six years after being fired at UCLA in 2003. He coached the Bruins to the NCAA tournament six times in seven seasons, including one Elite Eight appearance and five trips to the Sweet 16. He inherits a team that could return 10 seniors for 2010-11.

St. John’s has been searching for a big-name hire to increase the team’s profile in the New York media market. The university made an overture to Florida’s Billy Donovan and a formal offer to Georgia Tech’s Paul Hewitt, who declined.

The Red Storm also interviewed former Boston College coach Al Skinner and former Siena coach Fran McCaffery, who took the Iowa job, and were interested in talking to Rhode Island’s Jim Baron.

I always thought St. John’s should be better since it is THE biggest name in New York City college basketball, and the city is a hotbed for high school hoops.

But the last St. John’s player to have any success in the NBA was Ron Artest. Before that, it was Mark Jackson and Chris Mullin, so we’re going way back. (By the way, I wonder if they considered Mark Jackson, or is he just waiting for an NBA job to open up even though he has zero experience coaching a team?)

St. John’s hasn’t been to the NCAA tournament since 2002, during the tail end of the Mike Jarvis era. Jarvis led the team to the Elite 8 in 1999.

Lavin always drove me nuts as a coach because of the slicked-back hair, but his teams always played pretty well in the tournament, when the lights were the brightest. There were a few seasons where he went into the tourney with his job on the line, but the Bruins would make a Sweet 16 or an Elite 8 run that saved his job. His analysis on ESPN has always been good, so it will be interesting to see how he does in the Big Apple.

Spend four minutes with Rodrigue Beaubois [video]

Here’s a video of Rodrigue Beaubois’ 40-point night against the Golden State Warriors. (Yes, it’s Golden State, but still.) The kid hit nine three-pointers.

The funny thing about Beaubois’ effort is that it came off the heels of a game against the Blazers where he played one minute…one minute

According to John Hollinger, Beaubois has a PER of 18.92, which ranks #6 amongst shooting guards. Why is he listed as a shooting guard when he’s only 6’0″? Because pretty much all he does is shoot. He has an assist ratio (% of possessions that end in an assist) of 16.1, which would rank 66th out of 69 players if he were listed as a point guard.

“60 Minutes” interview with new Nets owner Mikhail Prokhorov

Maybe the most interesting thing about the piece is that, due to a controversy in France where he flew in several models to entertain his friends, Prokhorov was “encouraged” to sell his part of a lucrative metals company…right before the global financial meltdown. The timing turned out to be perfect…

I’m really interested to see what kind of ownership style he brings to the NBA.

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