I agree that much of the interview was personal and hard hitting, but Mullin seems very comfortable owning his past and accepting the personal journey that has brought him to where he now is. His honesty, candor, and downright genuine character reflect well on him and on our university. Have to think that his straightforward, no BS, Brooklyn kid who made it approach has to sit well with recruits, whose heads must be spinning from listening to the self-promoting, used car salesmen pitches of the vast majority of college coaches recruiting them.
Mullin talks the talk and has walked the walk. He genuinely does know what it takes to make and stick in the NBA -- and let's hope that his message is resonating with some very talented kids because each game we play makes it abundantly clear that this team does not yet have the talent to play the game that Mullin wants to play or to compete regularly on a national level.