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Bruce Pearl and Jimmy Collins call a truce

3 Apr

After a decades long grudge, former Illinois basketball assistant Jimmy Collins has forgiven former Tennessee head basketball coach, Bruce Pearl.

I wouldn’t exactly call Collins forgiving Pearl but he did accept Pearl’s apology when the two ran into each other in New Orleans Friday night.

If you don’t know the story I’ll give a cliff notes version of it. Pearl was an assistant at Iowa back in 1989 and Collins was an assistant at Illinois. Both schools were in a heated recruiting battle over the services of Chicago native Deon Thomas.

Pearl secretly recorded a conversation where Collins alledgedly offered thomas $80,000 and a Chevy Blazer. Illinois was hit with probation, Pearl and Collins were never on good terms, and Pearl eventually climbed the coaching ladder to Tennessee while Collins could only land the top job at Illinois-Chicago. Collins never bit his tongue when asked how he felt about Pearl and held a serious grudge against him. 

Eventually Pearl was done in at Tennessee for his own recruiting troubles and lying to NCAA investigators in a classic case of what goes around comes around.

Now it seems the two have made amends this past weekend.

“I saw Jimmy just before dinner about 7 p.m. on Friday; I put my hand out, and he shook it,” Pearl, the former Tennessee men’s basketball coach, said Sunday. “I told him I’m really sorry about what we all went through, and that Deon Thomas was a victim and there were a lot of victims.


“My apology was it was unfortunate it happened, and it hurt people, ultimately, including me.”

” … I looked up, he was walking toward me,” Collins told ESPNChicago.com. “When he got to me, he started to apologize for what had happened. He made it clear that he was young and didn’t understand things. He ended up saying he really felt bad because he knew Deon Thomas got hurt.
“The truth of the matter was it was fine. It was a guy who had gone through some changes, and as he’s gotten older, he realized some things were wrong, and he apologized for it.”
“I let it go; there’s nothing I can do with what happened then,” he said. “I’m not going around with a lot of hate in my heart. I’m not going to hold a grudge all your life.”

I can see why Collins was cold as ice to Pearl, but it was the unspoken oath that Pearl broke that caused the rift between the two. Maybe after what Pearl went through at the end of his Tennessee tenure he could see what he did wrong. At least he reached out to Collins and wanted to make it right.

Izzo blasts Illinois for firing Weber

10 Mar

Bruce Weber was fired from the head coaching job at Illinois earlier today. That really was no surprise since the Illini struggled mightily down the stretch and Weber ultimately paid the price.

Michigan State coach, Tom Izzo didn’t like the way things went down in Champaign and let everyone know about it at his press conference. Izzo blasted the Illinois administration for firing Weber and said that he’ll help Weber get a new job if he needs it.

“I’m sick about it. I’m sick about it. And I’m sick about it — and make sure you understand the reason why.


“They beat us early in January, and I beat Ohio State, and so I have three problems. Bruce is a friend of mine. He’s been here since the Gene Keady days. He’s done it the right way. He doesn’t cheat. He mans up to his own responsibilities. Incredible, incredible person. I’ve recruited against him and lost, and I’ve recruited against him and won, and (it) hasn’t changed things.


“Number two, we have to understand that we blame kids for a lot of things. Kids have changed. Now we have administrators that are pulling the rug under ourselves in the middle of January, when you’re 16 and 6 or 7 or whatever it was, and we publicly talk about — we’ll make decisions at the end of the year.


“I don’t know what you guys think of kids, because they haven’t changed much, but if there’s one place they’ve changed, they’re a little more fragile. Not as many two-parent homes. Not as good of school systems that are holding kids accountable and demanding. And so now we put that on those poor kids? And then we’re surprised that they lose nine out of 10?


“I don’t know who’s beaten me the worst, probably Bo (Ryan), but second on that list — and I’m canonized as something some of the time … .


“I think it was ridiculous the way that thing was handled. And if I take abuse for that, I really don’t care, because I’m also the president of our association. This isn’t about a friendship. This is about a profession.


“And whenever you’re in an organization, whether it be yours, whether it be mine, or whether it be a business one, the only way you can be successful is if, top to bottom, from the president to the trainer, we’re all on the same page, and that in five, six months, you can determine something.


“I feel bad for the Illini nation, because somebody’s — somebody pulled the rug out from under them. I feel bad for those players that have been there that, in my estimation, weren’t given a fair chance back about the middle of January, whenever that famous statement was made.


“But if you look at that team from that statement, it went directly down. And I feel worse for Bruce, because we lost a good soldier. And yeah, friendship is some of it, but it’s not all of it. We lost a good coach. We got a coach that beat me and my team more often than not, and I just — I can’t figure that out.


“I can’t figure out how you guys allow it. You guys are always figuring out the negatives of things. I can’t figure out how you guys allow it.


“And my wife and I shed a tear this morning over it, and it was half for Bruce and half for my profession.


“But unless there’s things — and I will publicly state this — that I don’t know, but when I heard those comments back in January, it made me sick, and I said there’s a problem.


“And so I hope the administrators that made those statements have a good game plan, but you guys lost a good guy, we lost a good guy, and I think — I just hope he gets another job. And I’m going to do everything in my power to help him.


“And I guess that’s all I’ll say, because I’ll probably put my foot in my mouth, because if it was HBO, we could get at it right now, and I’d really be fired up about it, because I just think — I can’t believe — I can’t believe nobody’s looked at when those comments were made and where that team went.


“I mean, this guy has won more games than anybody — percentage than anybody that’s been at the school. And he’s done it the right way, and that’s not easy to do. And it’s not an easy job there. And when a big-time recruit’s father, I think — watch what I say here — comes out and makes statements, I mean, you better have a good idea the guy you’re dealing with.


“And I know this. I’ve known Bruce Weber since the day I was a grad assistant. There’s not a classier, better guy — and I don’t want to just hear he’s a nice guy — better coach. He’s had some things thrown at him, too, with injuries and guys leaving early and stuff like that.


“So I’m sad, more sad for my profession than I am for Bruce, because he’s a man. I’ve seen him in his press conference. He’ll man up, and he’ll get it done.


“So sorry I had to get on a soapbox, but I’ll leave it at that.”


Izzo is safe at Michigan State but it’s good to see him take up for his fellow man. By the way, the “mystery’ administrator Izzo spoke of would be Illinois athletic director Mike Thomas.

A Big 0 For The Big Ten

2 Jan

Well, Gordon Gee. It’s all up to your Ohio State Buckeyes to salvage the reputation of the battered and bruised Big Ten. That was a mighty pimp slap the rest of the college football world put on the boys from the midwest. Throw in Nebraska’s loss to a mediocre Washington team they whacked by 35 earlier this season, that makes it a little bit worse.

For starters Northwestern fought the good fight in losing to Texas Tech 45-38. The Wildcats dug themselves too big of a hole to climb out of, but at least they made a game of it. More than what i can say about the next two games. That would be the simultaneous beatdown suffered by Michigan and Michigan State. The Michgan schools were outscored 101-21 and thoroughly embarassed by Alabama and Mississippi State. The Rodriguez era will end on an ugly note, no matter what David Brandon is saying. The Spartans are not ready for prime time. Penn State and Florida went down to the end until the Gators finally locked up an Outback Bowl victory with a pick 6, 37-24. Then in the Grandaddy of them all, the Rose Bowl, Wisconsin lost to an unbeaten TCU squad, 21-19. No shame in that, except if Ohio State president Gordon Gee didn’t make those ridiculous comments about teams like TCU not playing anyone. It’s not like anyone wants to sign up to play them. Anyway, how did that taste Gordon.

The bowl season actually started out pretty good for the Big Ten, with wins by Iowa and Illinois, only to see the roof cave in during the postseason. Five losses in five games. And I’m not feeling to confident about Ohio State, with the distractions created by the Buckeye 5 and all.