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New OU Coach, former Dukie

Discussion in 'NBA Draft' started by pgabriel, Apr 12, 2006.

  1. pgabriel

    pgabriel Educated Negro

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    I can't believe this guy is my age


    "In everything we do we're going to strive to be excellent, in the community, in the classroom and on the court," Capel said at a news conference after being introduced by Sooners athletic director Joe Castiglione.
    "I really feel this is a place, the University of Oklahoma, where you can win the whole thing."

    Castiglione predicted success for the 31-year-old Capel.

    "We know he is going to be the next great coach of Oklahoma basketball and one who is going to make all of you and our fans everywhere very, very proud," he said.

    Capel, a former Duke player, was 79-41 in four seasons as coach at VCU. He signed a two-year contract extension last month that ran through 2012.

    "We are both sad and happy with Jeff's announcement that he is going to Oklahoma," VCU athletic director Richard Sander said. "He did a great job here, and we know he will do a great job there."

    Sampson left to become Indiana's coach March 29. Sampson was 279-109 in 12 seasons at Oklahoma.

    The Sooners are awaiting a decision from the NCAA in a case involving more than 550 improper recruiting phone calls by Sampson and his staff. The accusations against Oklahoma include "lack of institutional control," one of the NCAA's most serious findings.

    Oklahoma has argued for a lesser "failure in monitoring" finding and instituted self-imposed sanctions including probation and recruiting cutbacks. A hearing is scheduled April 21 in Utah.

    Capel, whose father is an assistant coach for the Charlotte Bobcats, led VCU to the Colonial Athletic Association title and an NCAA tournament berth in 2004 and then to the NIT in 2005 - the school's first consecutive postseason berths since 1985. His Rams finished this season 19-10 and did not make the postseason after losing to Hofstra in the conference tournament quarterfinals.

    The signature of his VCU teams was defense. This season, the Rams allowed 62.4 points a game. On offense, they averaged only 12.5 turnovers and made nearly eight 3-pointers a game.

    Capel inherits an Oklahoma team that loses three of its top four scorers and top three rebounders in seniors Taj Gray, Terrell Everett and Kevin Bookout, but features a strong recruiting class that includes McDonald's All-American guard Scottie Reynolds from Herndon, Va.

    Capel started 28 games as a freshman guard alongside Grant Hill on Duke's 1994 team that made it to the NCAA championship game but lost to Arkansas. He graduated in 1997, then played in the CBA and in France before beginning his coaching career as an assistant to his father, Jeff Capel Jr., at Old Dominion.

    He moved to VCU as an assistant in 2001 and became the head coach the following year. At 27, he was the youngest head coach in Division I at the time.
     
  2. HI Mana

    HI Mana Member

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    Seems like a good hire here. Wonder if he can get more national publicity for Oklahoma; they're always a team that I hear nothing about, then I look up and they're seeded high in the bracket.

    Also, hate to hijack your thread, but I can't believe that there isn't a thread about one of the coaching legends of college basketball being replaced:

    A bit late, but Temple is replacing John Chaney with Penn's Fran Dunphy

    As a Penn student, I'm immensely disappointed in Dunphy leaving, yet I understand that he felt the need to take on a completely different challenge. If only he could have stayed for one more year; next year is really a year we could make some serious noise in the tourney; If we can get a 13 seed next year, I could easily see a Bradley-esque run to the Sweet 16. We'll have 5 of our top 7 players returning, and a very strong (for the Ivy League at least) recruiting class next year.

    As for the impact on the NBA, I'm extremely interested to see what Dunphy is able to do with scholarships and a much lower academic standard to meet; he has immense credibility in the Philadelphia-New Jersey area, and runs a much more conventional system than Coach Chaney did. I wonder though, if Dunphy will continue to look for extremely underprivileged and unrecruited kids from the bad parts of Philly, like Chaney did, making boys into men. I have to think Dunphy will do well on the basketball side, but can he have the same impact on the city as he did when coaching the intellectual elite?

    As for Penn; the list of candidates is not extremely enticing right now. Most Ivy League coaches are groomed from within, and it can't be a good sign to be looking at two coaches with career losing records (Cornell and Brown's coaches)

    Then again, we could be NC State...
     

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