I know I'm jacking a lot of this article, but this is important, and curious to read. Nice of NY Times' Rhoden to put Boeheim on blast. Riiight, he doesn't know what "bend the rules" means. And note that Boeheim works in a "you have to get to the tournament to keep your job," which is an oblique reference to his stumping for the expansion of the Tournament to 96 teams.
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/03/22/sports/ncaabasketball/22rhoden.htmlBefore Syracuse took on Gonzaga, Boeheim reflected on the firing of Coach Norm Roberts last week after six seasons at St. John’s. Roberts, regarded as one of the gentlemen of the Big East, was hired to pull the Red Storm from the ashes after the Mike Jarvis era.
“I know he’s a great guy; he’s as good a guy as anybody I’ve known in the league,†Boeheim said. “I have tremendous respect for him. The reality is in this business, wherever you coach, if you don’t go to the N.C.A.A. tournament, you are not going to keep your job. Period.â€
Roberts never did.
Boeheim simply reminded us of the realities of the game. A more troubling assessment was offered by Russell Smith, the coach of the New York Gauchos, one of the major arteries in New York’s Amateur Athletic Union scene.
Smith essentially criticized Roberts for being too laid-back, for not playing the game. “You got to hustle, bend some rules or do something,†Smith said....
For a coach with integrity, bending the rules is problematic. Can you win without operating in a gray area?
You have to talk to A.A.U. coaches, Boeheim said. “That doesn’t mean you have to go in a gray area — I don’t even know what that means,†he said. “Bend the rules, I don’t know what that is. You can’t bend the rules; you either break it or you don’t. There is not bending to me. You either do or don’t.â€
There is a story told of the time this season that Roberts met with a McDonald’s all-American from New York about attending St. John’s. Roberts told the recruit that he would play behind the incumbent, and the recruit’s mother, who was in the meeting, hit the ceiling.
Kenny Charles, a major figure in the New York City youth basketball scene, said Roberts should have told the recruit that in all likelihood he would be starting. “You could say that’s bending the rules because typically a coach won’t say, ‘You’re going to start,’ †Charles said. “That’s a kid you can bend the rules for without breaking the rules: Look, you come here and you’re starting. That might be bending the rules you normally use, but in that case, that’s what you needed to do.â€