Oklahoma coach Kelvin Sampson will undertake the pressure of returning the Indiana basketball program to elite status. He will replace Mike Davis, who resigned in the middle of the season, saying that the program needs “one of their own.”
Indiana athletic director Rick Greenspan called Sampson’s teams “hard-nosed, disciplined and unselfish.”
“Every coach sees it as a great basketball state with tremendous coaches and players, and we will do our best to keep those players in the state,” Sampson said in a news release.
The 50-year-old Sampson, AP’s Coach of the Year in 1995, replaces Mike Davis, who announced last month he was resigning. Davis went 115-79 in six seasons as head coach, was the first Indiana coach to win 20 games in each of his first three seasons and led the Hoosiers to the national championship game in 2002, two seasons after Bob Knight was fired.
At first glance, this is a strange move for Sampson, who has built Oklahoma into a top basketball program. The NCAA is still investigating OU’s recruiting practices, so maybe there’s more to the move than meets the eye. Sampson will bring a little more toughness to Indiana program and his teams’ physical style is probably a good fit for the Big Ten.
