Friday, February 4, 2011

UCLA coach hears footsteps from St. John's

Former UCLA Head Coach comes to town. Saxon/AP/AP


UCLA coach hears footsteps from St. John's

By LENN ROBBINS
New York Post
Last Updated: 12:23 PM, February 4, 2011

Posted: 3:13 AM, February 4, 2011


The last thing UCLA coach Ben Howland needs is heading his way with the force of the Santa Anna winds.

Native Californian Steve Lavin, the hip, first-year St. John's coach with the smile as bright and big as the iconic Hollywood sign, is returning to UCLA as a coach for the first time since he was fired as Bruins coach in 2003 and replaced by Howland.

Howland is an Oregonian and as solid as Pacific Northwest pine. His team's halfcourt, physical style has been described as exciting to watch as changing color of leaves. Lavin, on the other hand, likes to run and press, and, in the case of Wednesday night's 58-56 win over Rutgers, draw up a winning play that had not been practiced.

Howland, who took the Bruins to three Final Fours with several players Lavin had recruited, has little to gain tomorrow when the Bruins (15-7) play host to the Red Storm (13-8) in storied Pauley Pavilion.

UCLA went 14-18 last season and Howland has lost some of his key recruits, such center Norvel Pelle of Compton who signed with St. John's. Lavin also signed freshman Dwayne Polee Jr. of Los Angeles.

The St. John's players have made no secret about the fact they would love to win this one for their West Coast coach. Senior Malik Boothe said after Wednesday's night's 58-56 win over Rutgers, in which Lavin drew up the winning play from scratch that he might deliver a "Win One For Lav," message.

"I would consider that," Boothe said. "Maybe that will be something that would light a fire under us before we go out there."

Howland knows what Lavin learned years ago. Following in the footsteps of recently deceased UCLA coach John Wooden is like walking on hot coals.

One source in Los Angeles that is close to the UCLA program told The Post the St. John's game is the one that Howland cannot afford to lose this season.

"I don't look at like that in either way," Howland said yesterday on a conference call. "Both of us, in terms of UCLA and St. John's are going to be very motivated. This is a very good team we're playing.

"Obviously last week they just knocked off Duke pretty handily," Howland said. "They've had some big wins, some Top 20 wins. We need to play well and win the game. It has nothing to do with the fact that I'm the coach now or Steve was the coach before."

Sorry, coach, but that's precisely what it has to do with.

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Lavin brings his new team into UCLA

By BETH HARRIS
AP Sports Writer
New York Post


LOS ANGELES (AP) A week or so after being fired by UCLA in 2003, Steve Lavin got together with successor Ben Howland over margaritas.

"Mine were virgin and I'm sure Ben's were as well," Lavin said. "We talked about the lay of the land at UCLA. He wanted my perspective on things."

Lavin surely had a lot to say.

Now he's returning to UCLA for the first time as an opposing coach, leading St. John's (13-8) against the Bruins (15-7) on Saturday in a nationally televised matchup of teams from the country's two biggest media markets that begins at 10 a.m. PST.

"As we get closer to taking that bus ride from our hotel, the surreal aspect will hit me," Lavin said after arriving in Los Angeles.

He and Howland have known each other since Lavin's days as the No. 3 assistant under Jim Harrick at UCLA.

When Harrick was fired a week before the season began in November 1996, and 19 months after the Bruins won their 11th national championship, Lavin fell into the top job, going from unproven understudy to running one of the most storied programs in college basketball at the tender age of 32.

Lavin went 145-78 during seven years in Westwood and took the Bruins to the final 16 of the NCAA tournament five times in six years, a feat matched only by Duke coach Mike Krzyzewski.

His teams won at least 20 games every season except his last in 2002-03, when their 10-19 record marked the school's first losing season in 55 years.

Under Lavin, the Bruins were known for being unpredictable and unable to close out games against inferior opponents despite a roster of future NBA players that included Baron Davis, Matt Barnes, Earl Watson and Jason Kapono.

For all the electrifying victories during the Lavin era, including four upsets of No. 1-ranked teams, there were losses to Ball State, Cal State Northridge, Detroit Mercy, Northern Arizona, Pepperdine and Tulsa.

In Lavin's final season, attendance at Pauley Pavilion plummeted to its lowest in 10 years. At times, the Bruins were booed off their home floor, and fans wore T-shirts that said "Lose Lavin" and "Fire Lavin Immediately."

"Anything less than a Final Four or a national title at UCLA is a failure and I understand that," Lavin said. "I'm just grateful I was able to be the head coach."

Nearly eight years have passed since he was shown the door, likely long enough for the school's aging fan base to have forgiven the man credited with having great hair and criticized for not knowing his Xs and Os.

Lavin knew being denounced and second-guessed came with the territory at a school where the late John Wooden's shadow forever looms large over the basketball program.

What bothers him to this day are people who insinuate that he doesn't deserve what he calls "this magic carpet ride in basketball that I've had."

"They want you to apologize or feel guilty for having some wonderful opportunities over the last 23 years," Lavin said, ticking off his time as a Purdue graduate assistant, his 12 years at UCLA, his broadcasting gig and now his return to the bench.

"At times that takes you aback," he said. "I've been grateful and thankful."

After his firing, he went on to broadcast games for ESPN, returning periodically to work in the building where his heavily jelled hair was once a fixture on the sideline.

"Walking into Pauley, I've always felt right at home," Lavin said. "I'm not sure I've ever been in the opposing locker room."

The closest he's come is using a restroom during broadcasting gigs that is located on the same east side of the arena as the visitor's locker room. Both are on the opposite end of the building from the Bruins' locker room.

Lavin said UCLA has been generous in helping procure extra tickets for family, friends and former players he expects to attend.

"I would hope and I would think he's going to get a very warm reception," Howland said.

Recalling the creativity of UCLA's student section, Lavin expects the reaction "will be clever or witty in terms of the signs, spirited, and obviously supporting the home team."

Howland knows what it's like to go up against a former employer and friend. The Bruins played Pittsburgh in the 2007 NCAA tournament, giving Howland a victory over former assistant Jaime Dixon, who got the top job after he headed west.

"It wasn't fun," Howland said. "I love Jaime so that was a hard thing."

The Bruins last played St. John's in 2003-04, Howland's first season after replacing Lavin. They lost to the Red Storm 71-55, a defeat similar to their 80-65 loss the previous season under Lavin.

Howland said the latest home-and-home series was already in the works before Lavin was hired at St. John's last March.

Lavin's biggest win in his first season in New York came last week, when the senior-dominated Red Storm upset then-No. 3 Duke 93-78. They also have wins over then-13th-ranked Georgetown and then-No. 9 Notre Dame. They're 3-5 in their last eight games, but followed up the Duke win by edging Rutgers 58-56.

UCLA's best win came against then-No. 16 BYU in December, two weeks after the Bruins lost 77-76 at then-No. 4 Kansas. The young Bruins, who have no seniors, have won six of their last seven, including two straight.

Lavin brings with him former Purdue coach Gene Keady, whom he hired as a special assistant-adviser, and assistant Rico Hines, the first recruit he signed at UCLA.

Now 46, Lavin is married to an actress and he wears less hair gel.

"Part of that is Obama-inspired, trying to do my part with the environment," he said, his sense of humor always intact.

Updated February 4, 2011

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