University of Minnesota administrators said they would move quickly on a decision about men's basketball coach Tubby Smith once the season was over, and they were true to their word.
Less than 24 hours after the Gophers were eliminated from the NCAA tournament with a loss to Florida, Gophers athletic director Norwood Teague held a news conference Monday to announce Smith's firing — a decision, Teague said, that came as the result of months of evaluation.
The 61-year-old Smith, who led Kentucky to a national championship in 1998, was coming off his first NCAA victory in six seasons here when the 11th-seeded Gophers topped sixth-seeded UCLA on Friday in Austin, Texas. That was not enough, however, to dissuade Teague from what he called a necessary fresh start for the program.
"Obviously, we want to play for our coach and we feel bad because his career was in our hands, we controlled it," outgoing Gophers senior forward Trevor Mbakwe said. "We let him down, and I guess we [caused] him to get fired."
Teague gave the impression, however, that the decision was not based on one victory or loss.
"Our goal is to secure the best candidate to build a Big Ten and NCAA men's basketball program that is a consistent winner," Teague said. "We expect the new coach to manage and build the program. Expect him to recruit high-quality student athletes and develop them on and off the floor."
Those were things that Teague — who took over as AD less than a year ago — and his top assistants hadn't found in Smith. The feeling around the program was that Smith's sometimes-questionable coaching decisions and strategies were not ideal and that his staff, which was also let go, didn't provide the complementary pieces he needed to best succeed.
The Gophers staff didn't have an ace recruiter, nor does Smith have that reputation, and the program continually has missed out on major targets in recent years. The coaching change comes at a time when the state of Minnesota has an unusually strong junior class of top national recruits, led by point guard Tyus Jones of Apple Valley, who led his team to the Class 4A championship on Saturday.