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 Thursday, July 6
Guthridge leaves in his own way
 
 By Andy Katz
ESPN.com

Bill Guthridge's departure Friday was classic Carolina. Guthridge resigned on his terms, just like his predecessor and mentor Dean Smith did three years ago.

Smith resigned in October of 1997, on the eve of the season. He said he didn't have the energy to keep going and thought the timing was right to step aside.

Bill Guthridge
Guthridge didn't have to be pushed out -- he left UNC on his own terms.

Guthridge did the same thing Friday, exhausted and unable to get his energy up for another draining season. He retired a week before the July recruiting period. It may not be the regular season, but it's just as important a stage of the college basketball calendar year.

North Carolina's program lacked energy during the regular season but perked up in March during the Final Four run. Guthridge was probably unfairly criticized after taking the Tar Heels to two Final Fours in three years. He was handed a loaded roster and kept it stacked with the addition of Joseph Forte, Jason Parker, Adam Boone and Brian Morrison over the past two years.

But Guthridge never had a chance to be lauded as Chapel Hill's chosen one. Replacing a legend is never easy, and Guthridge was expected to compete for the national title every season. He did two of the three years, but the sense that the soon-to-be 63-year old Guthridge was near the end of his career rather than the beginning gave the program a perception that it was stagnant.

"He has one of the best active records in a three-year period (80-23) but the expectations on him were unrealistic," said new Tulsa coach Buzz Peterson, a former North Carolina player. "He was really put in an unfair situation. Any time you switch coaches and the personalities aren't the same, they don't always work out for people. But coach Guthridge was his own head coach and did his own thing."

Peterson said he, like many of the Tar Heels alumni, were pumped up at the Final Four after Guthridge was roasted for the marginal 18-13 regular season.

"He was able to put egg on the face of all his critics," Peterson said.

But no one seems to be panicking in Chapel Hill. North Carolina has experience at easing coaches into a new situation. Smith passed the baton to Guthridge for a three-year stint. The likely successor, Kansas' Roy Williams, will get the torch next. No one seems to be concerned about the timing. Smith said Friday that he and Guthridge have more basketball knowledge than athletics director Dick Baddour and would be influential in the hiring process.

That means it will be a Carolina disciple such as Williams. As long as Smith is still active on campus, it will be a coach from Smith's lineage. Carolina is one of the top two jobs in the country along with Kentucky, and going outside the family tree is unacceptable to the Carolina faithful.

Staying put
Want to see proof that coaching longevity is rare in college basketball? If Roy Williams leaves Kansas for North Carolina, there will be only 19 coaches who have been at their current school for 10 years or longer among the top 10 conferences.
Coach School Started
Bob Knight Indiana 1971-72
Denny Crum Louisville 1971-72
Jim Boeheim Syracuse 1976-77
Gabe Catlett W. Virginia 1978-79
M. Krzyzewski Duke 1980-81
Gene Keady Purdue 1980-81
John Chaney Temple 1982-83
Lute Olson Arizona 1983-84
N. Richardson Arkansas 1985-86
Jim Calhoun UConn 1986-87
Speedy Morris La Salle 1986-87
M. Montgomery Stanford 1986-87
Riley Wallace Hawaii 1987-88
Perry Clark Tulane 1989-90
Bob Huggins Cincinnati 1989-90
Rick Majerus Utah 1989-90
Dave Odom W. Forest 1989-90
Gary Williams Maryland 1989-90
Eddie Sutton Okla. St. 1990-91

While Williams would be leaving tradition-rich Kansas, Carolina is on another level. And leaving after a decade or more at one school isn't all that bad. Sometimes it's time to leave. Williams was under scrutiny in Lawrence, Kan., for criticizing fans last season. He has been chastised for his postseason troubles, even though the Jayhawks have been one of the most dominating regular-season teams the past decade.

Guthridge was tired of the recruiting and the speaking engagements. Williams seems to relish those roles, constantly flying around the country to meet with prospects, even after they have signed. If Williams accepts the job, North Carolina will immediately have life this July.

The Tar Heels need an infusion of talent at center and shooting guard. They'll lose senior center Brendan Haywood and senior forward Brian Bersticker, and sophomore guard Joseph Forte is a likely early-entry NBA draft candidate in 2001. The Tar Heels' 2001-02 lineup is likely to include forwards Jason Capel, Kris Lang, guard Ronald Curry and four incoming freshmen on this year's squad -- forward Jason Parker, center Neil Fingleton, guards Adam Boone and Brian Morrison.

Miami search picks up the pace
A source close to Kent coach Gary Waters told ESPN.com on Friday that he interviewed well with Miami athletics director Paul Dee the day before. Waters is expecting to hear by Sunday whether or not he can visit Miami. Dee is expected to interview Tulane's Perry Clark this weekend for the second time. The only other potential candidate is South Florida's Seth Greenberg. He has talked on the phone with Dee.

Dee is looking for a replacement for Leonard Hamilton, who left for the Washington Wizards. Dee said he would have a replacement named by the time recruiting starts July 8. Whoever leaves to take the Miami job will put the school he's leaving in a bind. Coaches are allowed to evaluate recruits July 8-31.

Even though recruiting is less than eight days away, new openings could occur at one of three schools -- Kent, South Florida and Tulane -- as a response to the Miami opening, Kansas as a result of the North Carolina opening and then possibly Vanderbilt (Kevin Stallings), Notre Dame (Matt Doherty) or South Carolina (Eddie Fogler) should any of those coaches leave to fill the potential opening at Kansas. The coaching carousel got started late but has never involved so many high-profile jobs this close to summer recruiting.

Weekly chatter
  • Within hours of being shut out at the NBA draft, UCLA's JaRon Rush received nearly 15 calls for free-agent tryouts. Teams were scared off by Rush after the sophomore declared for the draft and didn't work out well.

    But Rush's no-show on the draft board should be the perfect example for players declaring for the NBA draft. Too many underclassmen like Rush, Alabama's Schea Cotton, DePaul's Paul McPherson -- and even Ohio State's Michael Redd -- had a glorified perception of their draft status. Someone was in their ear telling each one of them they could go high in the draft. For that reason alone, declaring made sense.

    In the future, players who could go back to school should think twice before bolting.

  • UCLA coach Steve Lavin was at the NBA draft in Minneapolis and was thrilled to see Jerome Moiso taken by Boston at No. 11. But he's just as jacked about the Bruins next season. Yes, Lavin -- the eternal optimist -- thinks the Bruins can compete at the top of the Pac-10.

    "UCLA doesn't think NIT," said Lavin.

    The biggest hole to fill on the Bruins will be at backup center. They'll lean heavily on freshmen T.J. Cummings and Josiah Johnson to fill in for Dan Gadzuric and his chronic aching knees. The rest of the starting lineup is set with veteran Earl Watson at the point, Ray Young at shooting guard, Jason Kapono at small forward and Matt Barnes at power forward.

    "Remember who Ray and Matt were backing up these past years and that's why they haven't been able to get as many looks," Lavin said of the natural progression for Young and Barnes. The duo played behind Rush and Moiso the past two years.

    Moiso said Gadzuric will relish the role as the sole provider for points in the post. Kapono, the team's leading scorer last season, will be back as the top gun on the wing after declaring for the draft and then withdrawing.

    "I'm glad Jason came back, it would have been tough for them without him to make a starting five," Moiso said. "With Jason, Earl and Dan, they will have veteran guys on the team and will be a good team."

    Meanwhile, DePaul's Quentin Richardson is confident the Blue Demons will wrestle Conference USA away from Cincinnati. Richardson declared for the draft after his sophomore season and was taken No. 18 by the Clippers.

    "They'll be real good," Richardson said. "Lance (Williams), Bobby (Simmons) and Steve (Hunter) will be the leaders, and Rashon (Burno) will be the captain," Richardson said. "Imari Sawyer and Andre Brown are coming (as a point and forward) and if they gel, they'll be good. That's the key thing, they've got to gel."

    Richardson said Simmons would take Richardson's role as the go-to player.

    "He's got the ability to do that," said Richardson. "I think they should win the conference."

    And what about Cincinnati, after losing seniors Kenyon Martin, Pete Mickeal, Jermaine Tate, Ryan Fletcher and freshman DerMarr Johnson?

    "If they've got a catch-and-finisher like Kenyon, they'll be fine," Johnson said.

    The Bearcats may lean on junior college forwards Antwan Jones and Jamaal Davis to be the main scorers inside and out.

  • Gonzaga, New Mexico and TCU recently got creative in their scheduling. The Bulldogs turned down an ESPN date at Creighton on Dec. 23 to host the Lobos in a three-way scheduling deal. New Mexico would then host TCU and Gonzaga would travel to the Horned Frogs. Next year, the three schools would rotate. Gonzaga coach Mark Few said each school was having trouble getting name schools for home games and this turned out to be the perfect way to beef up everyone's schedule.

  • Former Michigan point guard Jamal Crawford said he doesn't have to repay money to the NCAA now that he was drafted in the NBA. Crawford was ordered to repay money he was loaned prior to college. He was suspended for 12 games last season.

    "If I had missed one payment I would have been ineligible," Crawford said.

    Andy Katz is a senior writer at ESPN.com. His Weekly Word is updated Thursdays throughout the offseason.
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