subscribesubscriber servicescontact usabout ussite mapBuy a Classified
Mon, May 12 2008 

Published: April 29, 2008 04:18 pm    print this story   email this story   comment on this story  

Ex-Cats moving up the coaching ranks

By Jamie H.Vaught Cats Up Close Columnist
Wayne County Outlook

Monticello It is definitely uplifting to see Kentucky guys moving up in the

coaching ranks of college basketball.

Look at ex-Cat John Pelphrey, who moved from South Alabama to Arkansas

last year.

Look at Lexington Tates Creek High School product and ex-Western

Kentucky boss Darrin Horn, who just got the job at South Carolina.

And now look at former Wildcat Travis Ford, the new $9 million man. He

just got hired at Oklahoma State just days after he turned down an offer

from Providence College. Ford was also a candidate for the LSU job.

The Cowboys are hoping that Ford, now 38, will bring his magic wand to

boost their program just like Rick Pitino did at UK and Billy Donovan at

Florida.

OSU athletics director Mike Holder talked with many peers, including

ex-UK sports department boss C. M. Newton, and enthusiastically picked Ford

for the post.

Said Holder of Newton in April 20 Web edition of The Oklahoman, ³He was

right about Pitino. He was right about Billy Donovan. I think he might be

3-for-3.²

It wasnıt too long ago that Ford wasnıt sure if he was ready for a head

coaching career even though his parents were high school coaches at Cuba and

Webster County in western Kentucky.

Despite his lack of coaching experience at any level, he decided to give

it a try in 1997 when Campbellsville University hired the former All-SEC

guard to be its new hoops boss.

Just weeks after performing in a Hollywood movie titled, The 6th Man, as

a short Irish player, Ford, who was 27 at the time, didnıt anticipate

coaching a college basketball team.

³It took me several days to finally to agree if this is what I wanted to

do,² Ford told this columnist in an exclusive book interview in 1997.

Many people also questioned Campbellsvilleıs gamble in hiring a new

coach with no previous experience.

But Ford didnıt worry about what people thought. A true basketball

junkie, he worked hard at his new job and took advantage of his expansive

hoops knowledge gained from his coaches when he was a player, ranging from

Don Parson (one of the stateıs all-time boysı career coaching leaders) at

Madisonville North Hopkins High School to Norm Stewart at Missouri to Rick

Pitino at Kentucky.

At Campbellsville, Ford had the confidence to get the job done.

³I always knew that I learned under some great people,² said Ford in

1997. ³I used my knowledge of the game to help me be successful and

hopefully that will make me a good basketball coach. There are no promises.

I was the type of player who always studied the game and somebody who just

loved the game of basketball. I wasnıt an athletic player. I was a coach on

the floor.²

After three years at the small private Christian school, Ford moved on

to Eastern Kentucky, where he guided the Colonels to the Big Dance in 2005,

and then Massachusetts, leading the Minutemen to a NIT runner-up spot

several weeks ago.

Holder believes Ford, who agreed to a seven-year contract that pays $1.3

million annually, is a good fit for the Cowboys.

Sports columnist Berry Tramel of The Oklahoman in Oklahoma City says

Ford already has the OSU faithful excited.

³I would say that Ford has been very well received by OSU fans,² Tramel

wrote in an e-mail. ³Itıs the first true new blood in OSU basketball since

Eddie Suttonıs arrival in 1990, and I think that generally brings some

excitement no matter who is hired.

³But Ford added to the excitement with his personality and his

pedigree‹young, sharp, enthusiastic, promising an uptempo style and a

play-hard attitude. Then add in the Kentucky ties, point guard on a Final

Four team, and I think heıs got everyone excited.²

Interestingly, Ford is now the fourth straight Cowboy mentor with strong

connections with UK.

Wildcat assistant Leonard Hamilton (now the head coach at Florida State)

became the OSU boss in 1986. Then ex-UK boss Eddie Sutton took over the

Cowboy helm.

After Suttonıs retirement in 2006, his son, Sean Sutton, a former point

guard at Kentucky, guided the Cowboys for two years.

Thatıs not all. Ex-Wildcat player Guy Strong, a member of UKıs 1951

national championship squad who also served as the head coach at EKU,

coached at OSU for four years in the mid-1970s.

And by the way, Fordıs wife, the former Heather Brooks, was a swimming

standout at UK during the late 1980s and early 1990s.

So, as it turns out, the Cowboys are still getting lots of Wildcat

flavor with Ford leading the way in Stillwater.

Jamie H. Vaught, a longtime sports columnist in Kentucky, is the author

of four books about UK basketball. He is currently a professor at Southeast

Kentucky Community and Technical College in Middlesboro and can be reached

by e-mail at CatsUpClose@yahoo.com.

print this story   email this story   comment on this story  

Click to discuss this story with other readers on our forums.



wheels
Premier Guide
Find a business

Walking Fingers
Maps, Menus, Store hours, Coupons, and more...
Premier Guide

 

Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc.CNHI Classified Advertising NetworkCNHI News Service
Associated Press content © 2008. All rights reserved. AP content may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Our site is powered by Zope and our Internet Yellow Pages site is powered by PremierGuide.
Some parts of our site may require you to download the Flash Player Plugin.
View our Privacy Policy
Advertiser index

rc