Date: 21/08/25 - 08:04 AM   48060 Topics and 694399 Posts

Author Topic: Andy Kennedy ...  (Read 4038 times)

February 18, 2006, 08:33:30 AM
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sonofdaxjones

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5 Scholarship Players ...

18-9

7-6 in the Big East


February 18, 2006, 08:35:08 AM
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sonofdaxjones

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Andy Kennedy is the first to admit that it is not under ideal conditions that he gets his first head coaching position.

The University of Cincinnati associate head coach was tapped as interim head coach on Aug. 26, following the resignation of veteran mentor Bob Huggins. Kennedy has vowed that he is up to the challenges of mending the shocked program and preparing the Bearcats for their first season of competition in the BIG EAST, whom many think is the best basketball conference in the nation.

Kennedy has proven himself both as an astute strategist and a top notch recruiter during his decade of coaching in the college ranks.

Kennedy, who joined the Cincinnati staff as assistant coach and recruiting coordinator in 2001, was promoted to associate head coach in 2004. On the floor, he has worked both with the Bearcat guards and has tutored the big men.

Kennedy was also intricately involved in developing game plans. When Huggins suffered a heart attack in late September of 2002, Kennedy assumed a larger role in game preparations.

During Kennedy's first three years as the program's recruiting coordinator, Cincinnati attracted three consecutive Top 10 recruiting calsses with the class of 2002 rated as high as fifth in the nation by Bob Gibbons of All Star Sports, the class of 2003 finishing seventh by both PrepStars and FutureStars, and the class of 2004 receiving 10th by All Star Sports.

Kennedy has been exposed to the coaching styles of the late Jim Valvano while a player at North Carolina State, and legendary Gene Bartow at UAB in addition to what he has picked up at Cincinnati the past four seasons.

Kennedy previously served as assistant coach at UAB for five seasons, helping the Blazers compile a 90-66 record and make three postseason tournament appearances. The highlight of that tenure was the 1998-99 season when the Blazers tied for the Conference USA regular season title and advanced to the NCAA Tournament.

Kennedy draws from his experience as a standout player on the high school, college and professional levels.

The 1986 prep Parade All-American started his career at North Carolina State where he was a member of Jim Valvano's 1987 Atlantic Coast Conference championship team. He then transferred to UAB where over the next three seasons he became the school's No. 2 all-time leading scorer with 1,787 points, an 18.8-point career scoring average.

The two-time all-conference performer still holds or shares 20 Blazer records, including most 3-point field goals (318), highest career 3-point percentage (.437), most 20-point games (43), most 30-point games (7) and the single game scoring mark of 41 points.

Kennedy, who completed his BA in history at UAB in 1991, played professionally for four seasons starting with the NBA Charlotte Hornets. He competed professionally abroad for three seasons, playing in Greece, Holland, Spain and Puerto Rico.

Kennedy began his coaching career as an assistant at South Alabama during the 1994-95 season. He returned to UAB two years later after working a year in commercial real estate.

He and his wife, Kimber,are parents of two daughters, Meagan (9) and Kaitlyn (5).

February 18, 2006, 09:41:03 AM
Reply #2

michigancat

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I'd be cool with Andy Kennedy.

February 18, 2006, 04:49:06 PM
Reply #3

sys

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he's a fine settle candidate.  shouldn't be the first offer tendered though.
"these are no longer “games” in the commonly accepted sense of the term. these are free throw shooting contests leavened by the occasional sprint to the other end of the floor."

February 18, 2006, 04:53:03 PM
Reply #4

michigancat

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he's a fine settle candidate.  shouldn't be the first offer tendered though.

I agree, but if it were me, he'd be offerred before guys like Lowery, Capel, and probably McDermott.

February 18, 2006, 05:01:27 PM
Reply #5

sys

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i haven't paid enough attention to lowery and mcdermott to offer an opinion.  better than capel definately though.

but, i think we are on the same page here.  ksu should get a name coach.  a no-name might turn out, but a guy like huggins is pretty much a guarantee.  any time you choose a chance over a guarantee you're an idiot.
"these are no longer “games” in the commonly accepted sense of the term. these are free throw shooting contests leavened by the occasional sprint to the other end of the floor."

February 20, 2006, 05:51:17 AM
Reply #6

michigancat

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http://news.enquirer.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20060220/SPT0101/602200386/1078

Back in November, two days before the University of Cincinnati basketball team opened its season against Murray State, Andy Kennedy said he was entering the unusual situation with his eyes wide open.

"I know exactly what I'm dealing with," UC's interim head coach said as he prepared to replace the popular Bob Huggins, whose contract was terminated in August.

But of course he didn't.


By then, walk-on guard Ryan Patzwald has already left the team, but Kennedy couldn't know he would lose senior Armein Kirkland to a season-ending knee injury in January; that freshman center Abdul Herrera would be academically ineligible for the season; that freshman forward DeAndre Coleman would leave the program in December; that assistant coach Keith LeGree would resign after a DUI charge; or that walk-on forward Erick Murray would be dismissed from the program.

He certainly didn't know that by February one of his first substitutes off the bench would be Connor Barwin, a freshman tight end from the football team.

On Sunday, as the regular season reaches its final few weeks, Kennedy took time to reflect on what has been a rather bizarre first season as a head coach.

He has seen a little bit of everything, and yes, at times, it has been difficult to bear. But he has done his best to shield from his players whatever frustration he feels

"I've never said, 'How am I going to do this?' " Kennedy said. "I've never said, 'Why me?' I sometimes feel bad that I can't do more to help our guys. I sometimes feel like I've let them down, that I've got to think of something to gives us more of a chance.

"No one likes to lose ... we've lost nine times. Those days aren't easy."

Much of what has happened this season has been a learning experience for Kennedy, 37, as it would be for any first-year head coach, regardless of the circumstances.

As the associate head coach last year, he made suggestions on the bench during games. Now he calls the shots.

And as much as he believed he was prepared for that, he concedes that it's a little different sitting in the head coach's chair.

"That's something that takes a little more getting used to," Kennedy said. "We're 27 games into this, so I'm more comfortable doing that than I was in game one, which is to be expected.

"I've always wanted to be a head coach. I've thought about this for a long long time so I was never overwhelmed initially. At the end of the day, you trust your instincts."

Kennedy says he talks with Huggins occasionally, but not about basketball strategy.

The former UC coach doesn't call him with suggestions on how to coach this team, nor does Kennedy call Huggins seeking them.

From the start, this has been Kennedy's team. He has done things his way, from his dealings with the media to the way he relates to his players and to the officials during games.

Kennedy's primary job is to have his players mentally prepared for every game and to make sure they're set with the right strategy.

Occasionally, he'll try to fire them up in the locker room with an emotional speech, but for the most part he prefers thorough preparation to fiery speeches.

"I just constantly reinforce and explain to them where we are," Kennedy said. "I tell them here's where we're at, here's where we want to be and here's how we're going to get there.

"In basketball, you play so many games you can only draw on emotion so many times. That emotion may help you for two or three minutes but at the end of the day you've got to be sound in what you're trying to do."

Kennedy has viewed this season as an on-the-job audition. He understood that if the Bearcats did well he would have a chance to become a head coach, either at UC or somewhere else if UC officials decide they don't want him.

He believes he has enhanced his career prospects. Not only does he now have experience as a head coach, he said, but his experience has been gained at one of the nation's most successful programs competing in the Big East Conference, generally considered the nation's most competitive league.

UC fans have embraced his work. As the Bearcats wrapped up their victory over Providence on Wednesday, the student section at Fifth Third Arena, chanted, "We want Andy! We want Andy!"

Kennedy said his wife told him about the chant later.

"Our students have been great," Kennedy said. "I think our crowds have been really emotionally into the game, really vested. That's what I want.

"I appreciate the support that I've gotten externally and internally. I've told people, 'Don't spend a lot of time and energy worrying about Andy. Let's spend that time investing in our guys.' "

No matter what happens when the season ends, Kennedy said - whether he gets the UC job or whether he becomes a head coach someplace else - he'll always remember this team fondly. It was his first as a head coach and the players have responded enthusiastically to him in the face of sometimes overwhelming odds.

"I love these guys," Kennedy said. "They're giving us everything they've got. That's all I can ask.

"These guys are vested in this as much as I am. They want to have success. They don't want to be part of a losing legacy or be a part of the team that didn't make it to the NCAA Tournament."

February 24, 2006, 05:54:41 AM
Reply #7

michigancat

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I would love for KSU basketball to be hated.  No one hates bad teams.


http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/sportsline/main9262602.shtml


CINCINNATI -- You can't hate Cincinnati. Not this Cincinnati. Not anymore.

You could have hated Cincinnati before this year without hearing a peep from me. You could have hated Cincinnati irrationally for years and been well within your rights. Cincinnati was bigger than your team, tougher than your team, meaner than your team and -- in most cases -- better than your team. For most of America, hating Cincinnati was OK. It was normal. Have another.

Not this season. You can't hate this Cincinnati. This Cincinnati is something to be admired. To be enjoyed. Respected. Cherished, if you're the mushy kind.

This Cincinnati had no business taking No. 2 Villanova to the last possession before losing 74-72 Thursday night. Villanova oozes skill and athletic ability. Cincinnati isn't oozy. Cincinnati is woozy. The Bearcats' best player, center Eric Hicks, is playing on two bad ankles. The Bearcats' leading scorer for much of Thursday's game, Chadd Moore, has a bad back that forced him to quit the sport -- he thought -- midway through last season. The Bearcats' first substitute Thursday, Connor Barwin, is a midseason pickup from the football team. Barwin is a 6-foot-4 center who plays below the rim. That's one heck of a midseason pickup.

But that's Cincinnati this season. Cincinnati lost to Villanova when Dante Cunningham broke free for an easy inbounds basket with 3.2 seconds left -- someone's mental error that could ultimately keep the Bearcats out of the 2006 NCAA Tournament -- but this Cincinnati season has become bigger than the NCAA-or-NIT debate. In one season, Cincinnati has gone from pariah to popular. You can continue to hate Cincinnati, but only if you're not paying attention.

Somewhere in the transition from Bob Huggins to Andy Kennedy, from Kenyon Martin, Kenny Satterfield and DerMarr Johnson to Hicks, Moore and Barwin, Cincinnati stopped being villainous. Somewhere along the way, Cincinnati became valiant.

Cincinnati was villainous before, we'll grant you that. Cincinnati was never as bad as the stereotype -- the looting, hooting, pillaging thugs who beat up opponents and skipped classes and fled police -- but Cincinnati wasn't likeable, either. It's hard to like a program that produces the occasional Ruben Patterson and Donald Little, and while Huggins at his worst wasn't nearly as vile as some would have you believe, he wasn't remotely huggable.

This Cincinnati team? This team is huggable. Even Hicks, whose arms are bigger than your legs and whose legs are bigger than your oven. He plays with a large red mouth-guard because he understands teeth are going to be rattled, and he'd prefer those teeth not be his. He plays with the ferocious passion and effort that have come to characterize this undermanned, overachieving Cincinnati team.

Go ahead and like these Bearcats. It's OK now. Their tallest player, Ronald Allen, is here only because his real school, Xavier of New Orleans, closed after Hurricane Katrina. Their shortest player, freshman Devan Downey, is a 5-7 ball of charisma.

Their coach, Kennedy, is sitting first chair only because Huggins lost a stare down with UC president Nancy Zimpher. Kennedy has worn the interim tag with more grace, humor and ability than anyone could have imagined, and he has won over nearly everyone to cross his path. That included one of the game officials Thursday, Tom Lopes, who saved Kennedy from a technical foul in the second half. Kennedy had stomped to half-court and began pantomiming the call missed by official Ed Hightower when Lopes spotted him and hurried over. Lopes escorted Kennedy back to the UC bench before Hightower could give him a technical. Huggins would have been escorted to the locker room with two.

Cincinnati fans have fallen for Kennedy to the point that Zimpher and her henchmen are considering hiring Huggins' former top assistant. If the fans had their way, Kennedy would have been hired long ago. At least five different "Hire Andy" signs were being waved in the crowd Thursday, and because that wasn't enough, the crowd of 13,176 chanted that slogan for nearly a minute of the second half.

Huggins was the captain of the baddest pirate ship in the sea. Kennedy is the conductor of the Little Engine That Could. Cincinnati's collection of eight scholarship athletes includes one NAIA player (Allen), two medical emergencies (Moore and Hicks) and two sub-6-foot freshmen (Downey and Domonic Tilford). This isn't an NCAA Tournament team. This is a freak show.

But Kennedy has this team on the brink of an NCAA Tournament bid anyway. Beating Villanova surely would have clinched it, making this the most painful of Cincinnati's 10 losses. The crowd, surly all game, had enough left to thank the father of this feast.

"Hire Andy!" 13,176 chanted when it was over. "Hire Andy!"

No one mentioned the words Nancy or Zimpher. No one had to. For months she's been the antagonist who steals every scene without having to show her face. But maybe it's time to recast her character.

Under Zimpher -- because of Zimpher, even if inadvertently -- Cincinnati has completely remade its image. Cincinnati basketball is no longer something to be feared or loathed. Cincinnati basketball is something to be embraced.

February 24, 2006, 08:48:30 AM
Reply #8

ksu_FAN

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Good article Rusty. 

That article isn't exactly a ringing endorsment for Huggins, and pretty much echos my thoughts on him.  Not nearly as bad as it has been made out; certainly not the forest fire image that has been created, but you can't deny the smoke either.

February 24, 2006, 02:27:09 PM
Reply #9

BarryMcCockner

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any time you choose a chance over a guarantee you're an idiot.

Has Timmy ever, in all his years, done anything other than take a chance?

I challenge anyone to post a list of 5 names...hell, 10 names....that you think contains the next basketball coach at Kansas State.

February 24, 2006, 02:39:18 PM
Reply #10

fatty fat fat

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any time you choose a chance over a guarantee you're an idiot.

Has Timmy ever, in all his years, done anything other than take a chance?

I challenge anyone to post a list of 5 names...hell, 10 names....that you think contains the next basketball coach at Kansas State.


He wanted to fire WoolWorthless (lol) last year.

Weiser was dead-on 100% correct.
It is a tragedy because now, we have at least an extra month without Cat football until next year. I hate wasting my life away but I can hardly wait until next year.

February 24, 2006, 02:41:53 PM
Reply #11

Dan Rydell

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WoolWorthless (lol)

Wow.  Crackin' yourself up over there, Fatty?

 :P




February 24, 2006, 03:04:04 PM
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BarryMcCockner

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Sadly, chances are he would have hired someone who would have fared no better, likely worse, judging from his track record.  Hopefully, for the first time, Timmy will find the diamond in the rough that will be successful for a bargain-basement price.  I'm not optomistic.

February 24, 2006, 03:06:19 PM
Reply #13

fatty fat fat

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Sadly, chances are he would have hired someone who would have fared no better, likely worse, judging from his track record.  Hopefully, for the first time, Timmy will find the diamond in the rough that will be successful for a bargain-basement price.  I'm not optomistic.


He had the foresight to fire Wooly. It shows me he isn't braindead about the situation unlike the ones who pleaded for a sixth year for WoolyWorthless (Your sorry ass)
It is a tragedy because now, we have at least an extra month without Cat football until next year. I hate wasting my life away but I can hardly wait until next year.

February 24, 2006, 03:13:32 PM
Reply #14

ksu_FAN

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If he does goes the somewhat unknown bargain basement route, here's my list:

Jeter
Cronin
Lowery
Taylor

I'm trying to make a long enough list that surely Tim will hit it.

Names out there, kind of in order:

Majerus
Richardson
Huggins
Gillen
O'Brien
Kennedy
Jankovich
Fraschilla
Hobbs
Anderson
Jeter
McDermott
Cronin
Lowery
Taylor
Horn
Capel
Christian
Turgeon
Marshall
Brownell

That's a list of 21, surely our coach will be one of those names.  (added another)
« Last Edit: February 24, 2006, 03:17:34 PM by ksu_FAN »

February 24, 2006, 03:19:00 PM
Reply #15

BarryMcCockner

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Would a similar list made after Snyder retired have contained the name "Ron Prince"?

The primary reason I was in favor of retaining JW last year was because I thought his chances of getting to the next level were greater than the odds of Timmy hiring someone who wouldn't run the program in the ground.  At this point, there is no alternative but to let Timmy roll the dice.

February 24, 2006, 03:20:40 PM
Reply #16

mjrod

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FYI:

Tim Weiser was quoted at a couple Catbacker's functions that he denied wanting to fire Wooldridge.   He doesn't understand how the rumor started.  He had stated before that he was not going to evaluate Wooly until the end of the year, and decided that Wooly was making progress.

February 24, 2006, 03:40:09 PM
Reply #17

michigancat

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FYI:

Tim Weiser was quoted at a couple Catbacker's functions that he denied wanting to fire Wooldridge. He doesn't understand how the rumor started. He had stated before that he was not going to evaluate Wooly until the end of the year, and decided that Wooly was making progress.

He's so full of crap.  He had no choice but to say that.

February 24, 2006, 03:41:32 PM
Reply #18

michigancat

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If he does goes the somewhat unknown bargain basement route, here's my list:

Jeter
Cronin
Lowery
Taylor

I'm trying to make a long enough list that surely Tim will hit it.

Names out there, kind of in order:

Majerus
Richardson
Huggins
Gillen
O'Brien
Kennedy
Jankovich
Fraschilla
Hobbs
Anderson
Jeter
McDermott
Cronin
Lowery
Taylor
Horn
Capel
Christian
Turgeon
Marshall
Brownell

That's a list of 21, surely our coach will be one of those names.  (added another)


Who is Marshall?

February 24, 2006, 04:11:30 PM
Reply #19

ksu_FAN

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Gregg Marshall is Winthrop's coach, 5 NCAAs in 7 seasons.

The point is valid on Prince, but football hires are much more common from the assistant ranks (many times you don't know about good coaches there) and there isn't nearly as big of a pool of "mid major" programs to get coaches from. 

Plus, given the situation, I think its highly unlikley Weiser goes after an assistant we've never heard of.  I think its highly likely it'll be one of those guys on that list, and give BCA requirements in football, had I had really done some research Prince might have made a list of 20+ candidates.  Its easier to do the research in basketball I think b/c candidates are more likley to be current head coaches and not assistants; you don't have the OC or DC candidates like in football.

February 24, 2006, 05:31:20 PM
Reply #20

sys

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add carmody to the list.  he's a better coach than most of the 21 names already on there.

if i could find his photo and knew how to avatar a photo i'd give myself a nice carmody avatar.
"these are no longer “games” in the commonly accepted sense of the term. these are free throw shooting contests leavened by the occasional sprint to the other end of the floor."

February 27, 2006, 02:47:11 PM
Reply #21

BarryMcCockner

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The point is valid on Prince, but football hires are much more common from the assistant ranks (many times you don't know about good coaches there) and there isn't nearly as big of a pool of "mid major" programs to get coaches from. 

Plus, given the situation, I think its highly unlikley Weiser goes after an assistant we've never heard of.  I think its highly likely it'll be one of those guys on that list, and give BCA requirements in football, had I had really done some research Prince might have made a list of 20+ candidates.  Its easier to do the research in basketball I think b/c candidates are more likley to be current head coaches and not assistants; you don't have the OC or DC candidates like in football.

My fear is that, after all the praise Timmy has received following the Prince hire (even though he hasn't won a game yet), he'll go out and get some division 3 assistant for $70,000.  Next year we'll do slightly better (as we lose only Diarra and Skyler), and Timmy will sell it as a great hire and bask in the glory.  But, the recruiting class will bomb as this guy will have no experience recruiting at this level, and within 2 years we are far worse than we are now.

That's my fear, I hope I'm wrong.  I don't think it is that far-fetched though.

February 28, 2006, 12:59:17 AM
Reply #22

Fausto

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FAN...

You left Chipman off of your list, and Henson, and Blackman, and Evans...

February 28, 2006, 08:47:25 AM
Reply #23

michigancat

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FAN...

You left Chipman off of your list, and Henson, and Blackman, and Evans...

And Richie McKay.

February 28, 2006, 08:49:41 AM
Reply #24

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I love those guys and they would all be great assistants.  But hiring any of them as a head coach would be more head scratching than the Woolridge hire IMO.  Connections with K-State are great, but I'd like a guy with assistant experence (and as a "high" assistant) in a BCS conference (during modern basketball times), experience as a head coach, or better yet both.  

If Chipman wanted to coach at this level he would've left Washburn 15 years ago and took a similar route as Wooldridge did.  Henson needs more experience IMO and I'd rather he be a head coach first.  Ro and Mike are great guys but that would look like Clyde Drexler to me and we know how that turned out.  

McKay, wouldn't shock me.  I hope not, but wouldn't shock me at all. 

My lists combines "IMO" realistic candidates with tangible candidates.  Given TW's past, I should probably have McKay on there.

February 28, 2006, 11:39:07 AM
Reply #25

BarryMcCockner

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FAN...

You left Chipman off of your list, and Henson, and Blackman, and Evans...

And Richie McKay.

That's my worst &@#%ing fear.  It would also be a certain sign that Timmy is lazy.