Monday, March 25, 2013

UCLA fires coach Ben Howland after tumultuous tenure

 

In the wake of reports Saturday that UCLA jitney Ben Howland has been fired, the school released a statement saying that he has not been fired.(Photo: Kyle Terada, USA TODAY Sports)

UCLA has relieved men's basketball coach Ben Howland of his duties effective immediately, the school announced Sunday night.

"I looked at entire program and where I felt we were peculiarly headed into next year," UCLA athletics director Dan Guerrero said on a teleconference Sunday night. "I felt like instanter was an appropriate time to make a change and overtake a fresh start."

Guerrero said he made his ending on Sunday and that he met with Howland Sunday afternoon to certify him of his firing.

< hygienic>PREVIOUSLY: Bill Walton calls for Howland's job

NCAA TOURNAMENT: Updated bracket

Howland's departure from UCLA appeared like an inevitability after 11th-seeded Minnesota beat sixth-seeded UCLA by 20 points late Friday night at the Erwin Center in Austin, Texas.

Howland did not return a voicemail and school text message seeking comment. The terms of his contract will issuing in a $3.5 million buyout, Guerrero said ($2.3 million the premier(prenominal) year, and $300,000 for the next four).

By the standards at most schools, Howland's on-court performance at UCLA was sterling. He reached three consecutive Final intravenous feedings between 2006 and 2008. He has to a great(p)er extent Final Four appearances than all of the other current Pac-12 coaches combine (virtuoso). He win at least 25 games in five of his 10 anneals. And UCLA is fresh off a Pac-12 standard season title this season.

BAD ENDING: Minnesota ousts UCLA from NCAAs

Despite the success, his tenure has in like manner been delimit by signifi freightert challenges. Last season a Sports Illustrated figment painted Howland in a negative light and brocaded questions about his relationship with rompers. Attendance at home games has been an issue, withaling at the renovated Pauley Pavilion and with a talent-rich roster.

Guerrero said he'd had a great relationship with Howland and enjoyed working with him, prompting him to give him an opportunity this season "to continue with the program and move it forward and try to chafe it on stable hoofing."

And though there were no particular benchmarks Howland had to meet this season to keep his job, Howland disappointed in a few key areas. In addition to not raise the fan base, he also did not get his aggroup past the opening round of the NCAA tournament.

The methodical offensive zeal has at times clashed with the persona of Hollywood, though the Bruins featured a more up-tempo pace this season. Former UCLA great Bill Walton until instantly criticized Howland during a television broadcast this season.

"I know that Ben got a lot of knocks for style of play, scarcely Ben Howland is a very full coach," Guerrero said, adding that he plans on hiring a coach who will play a "fun brand of basketball."

UCLA missed the NCAA tournament in 2012 and 2010, and the Bruins fall in not advance to the Sweet 16 since ambit the Final Four in 2008.

VCU coach Shaka Smart, the 35-year-old who led the Rams to an improbable Final Four berth two seasons ago, is likely to be on athletic director Dan Guerrero's short list. But among the concerns could be Smart's reluctance to be overly marketed and promoted, which stack come with the territorial dominion at UCLA.

It can be a glamorous job, but not an easy one. The expectations are not Final Four berths but rather national championships – plural. John Wooden won 10 in 12 years, and the school is still searching for someone to fit that image ever since he retired in 1975.

What's more, navigating the Southern California world rife with agents and other third-party handlers can be tricky and challenging for any coach who wishes to expire above board.

Guerrero said he hopes to hire a sweet coach that can excite the fan base, recruit athletes who can "thrive" academically (which includes graduating) and also compete in one of the top conferences in the country. He expects to attract great candidates because of UCLA's strong basketball tradition, brand-new facilities and a fertile recruiting ground.

"I have an idea of where we'd like to go," he said, adding that he would not achieve coaches still in the NCAA tournament until their current teams lose.

Recruit the kind of school-age child athletes who will thrive academically and compete at the highest aim in the country.

Howland's final season encountered adversity from the start. A elongated NCAA investigation shadowed star freshman Shabazz Muhammad's debut. An early-season loss to Cal Poly dampened expectations and heightened scrutiny. And even after UCLA won the league regular season title, it motto second-leading scorer Jordan Adams go down with a broken foot in the final moments of a Pac-12 tournament win against Arizona.

During a 10-minute interview with USA TODAY Sports and Sports Illustrated following the loss to Minnesota, Howland rundle at length about how proud he was of his players for diligent through adversity all season. And before Adams was hurt, Howland's optimism for the NCAA tournament soared.

"I thought the team was really close to reaching ceiling," Howland said. "We moreover beat Arizona for third straight time. And we were really on our way. I was really confident about our chances in the tournament."

Said Guerrero: "That was very unfortunate that that occurred to Jordan. He was in many ways the emotional state and soul of our team." But wondering how far UCLA would have advanced had it had Adams would be "speculative" and there was "no need to really dwell on it," Guerrero added, though "the fact that we had such a depleted roster (without Adams) … was one of the reasons for making that decision."

After Adams was hurt, Howland said he was "very subdued" because he knew how significantly the injury could venture his team. And his worst basketball-related fears were realized in the Minnesota game, which will now be the final dubious chapter of a tenure that also included tremendous success.

 



Materials taken from USA Today

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