RON MALY HAS BEEN WATCHING THE PARADE GO BY FOR A LONG TIME. THIS IS ONE OF HIS WEBSITES.

Saturday, March 25, 2017

Nobody's Happy



By RON MALY

It's hard telling whose basketball fans are the unhappiest today--Indiana's, UCLA's or maybe even Iowa's.
The reason for such widespread emotion is that Steve Alford decided he wouldn't resign as UCLA's coach and go to Indiana, where he was a standout player many moons ago.
Once the decision-makers at Indiana learned that Alford didn't have interest in succeeding the fired Tom Crean, they named Archie Miller of Dayton today as their nexrt coach.

Shortly after UCLA lost to Kentucky, 86-75, in an NCAA Sweet Sixteen game at Memphis, Tenn., Alford said he's not loading the wife and kids into the family SUV and moving to Indiana.
There are a lot of UCLA fans who wanted him to take the Indiana job, and there are a lot of naive Indiana fans who think Alford actually knows how to coach and wish he would've come to the campus in Bloomington.
As for Iowa's fans, many of them would have liked Alford--who coached the Hawkeyes from 1999-2007--to return to the Big Ten so Iowa could've kicked his butt on the court.
Frankly, they don't think he knows that much about coaching. When he resigned at Iowa to take the New Mexico job in 2007, it was not a happy ending.
Many Hawkeye followers were thrilled that he was bailing out.
Alford is pictured in his years as Iowa's coach.
UCLA's fans are now frustrated and disappointed.
They wonder how Alford's team could end Kentucky's 42-game home winning streak in December, then lose to the Wildcats in the Big Dance when it mattered more in March.
Alford will lose four starters from this team--including freshman Lonzo Ball, who will be an early signee with an NBA team and also Alford's own son.
Prior to last night's game, I wrote that I hoped neither Kentucky nor UCLA would win. But the phone lines to the NCAA offices at Indianapolis were always busy when I called to ask if that was actually possible.
Just kidding about that.
Whatever. I finally picked Kentucky as the team I wanted to win. It was plainly a case of choosing the lesser of two evils.
Never in my worst and wildest nightmares did I think I'd be wanting Kentucky and its coach, John Calipari, to win a game--certainly not a game in the Big Dance.
Now that Calipari has knocked UCLA out of the tournament, I can resume hoping his Kentucky team loses.