BleedGopher
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per Pat:
Pitino would have been gone if Norwood Teague, the disgraced former athletic director, had not presented Richard with the going-away present of a contract extension with a $7 million-plus buyout if it occurred before this season.
University President Eric Kaler had to settle for calling out Pitino’s program when making the announcement that Mark Coyle had been hired as the athletic director on May 12.
In response, Richard Pitino did what Pitinos do. He developed a plan for survival. He went from limited media availability to being interviewed everywhere … apologetic (sort of) and vowing better days ahead.
That was an easy promise to make, since future days could not have been worse on the court.
Actually, the upswing had started when Pitino swept Kevin Dorsey out of the program in early April. He was more trouble than a guy who didn’t want to pass the ball on a fast break was worth.
The other two suspended players, Nate Mason and Dupree McBrayer, stayed. Reggie Lynch also was reinstated after being cleared on an accusation of sexual misconduct. Freshman Amir Coffey was outstanding, and Eric Curry was a strong addition.
Better personnel — and a nonconference schedule that showed off the Pitino gene for survival.
There would be no trip to an eight-team tournament with a strong field where the Gophers might get beat twice.
There would be nonconference games at Williams Arena, and another against a mediocre Vanderbilt team in the neutral-site game in Sioux Falls. The ACC/Big Ten challenge required the lone road game, and also the lone loss at Florida State.
The Gophers topped the Big Ten with 11 of the 13 nonconference games at home. Ohio State played 10, with nine apiece for Northwestern, Iowa, Maryland, Michigan and Indiana, not counting this Saturday’s game against Louisville in Indianapolis.
Nebraska, Penn State, Purdue. Rutgers, Wisconsin and Illinois played eight at home, and Michigan State — the opponent for the Big Ten opener on Tuesday night — played seven in East Lansing.
When faced with a crisis, a Pitino knows how to survive. And how to schedule.
http://www.startribune.com/pitino-s-plan-a-little-pr-a-lot-of-home-games/408469815/
Go Gophers!!
Pitino would have been gone if Norwood Teague, the disgraced former athletic director, had not presented Richard with the going-away present of a contract extension with a $7 million-plus buyout if it occurred before this season.
University President Eric Kaler had to settle for calling out Pitino’s program when making the announcement that Mark Coyle had been hired as the athletic director on May 12.
In response, Richard Pitino did what Pitinos do. He developed a plan for survival. He went from limited media availability to being interviewed everywhere … apologetic (sort of) and vowing better days ahead.
That was an easy promise to make, since future days could not have been worse on the court.
Actually, the upswing had started when Pitino swept Kevin Dorsey out of the program in early April. He was more trouble than a guy who didn’t want to pass the ball on a fast break was worth.
The other two suspended players, Nate Mason and Dupree McBrayer, stayed. Reggie Lynch also was reinstated after being cleared on an accusation of sexual misconduct. Freshman Amir Coffey was outstanding, and Eric Curry was a strong addition.
Better personnel — and a nonconference schedule that showed off the Pitino gene for survival.
There would be no trip to an eight-team tournament with a strong field where the Gophers might get beat twice.
There would be nonconference games at Williams Arena, and another against a mediocre Vanderbilt team in the neutral-site game in Sioux Falls. The ACC/Big Ten challenge required the lone road game, and also the lone loss at Florida State.
The Gophers topped the Big Ten with 11 of the 13 nonconference games at home. Ohio State played 10, with nine apiece for Northwestern, Iowa, Maryland, Michigan and Indiana, not counting this Saturday’s game against Louisville in Indianapolis.
Nebraska, Penn State, Purdue. Rutgers, Wisconsin and Illinois played eight at home, and Michigan State — the opponent for the Big Ten opener on Tuesday night — played seven in East Lansing.
When faced with a crisis, a Pitino knows how to survive. And how to schedule.
http://www.startribune.com/pitino-s-plan-a-little-pr-a-lot-of-home-games/408469815/
Go Gophers!!