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"I've never really looked at the downside. I'm not going to be one of those guys on reality TV or in rehab because my parents were famous. I hate to see that on TV. I am Bob Knight's son," he said defiantly at his introductory news conference. "I'm proud of it."
But behind the bravado was plenty of soul-searching, too.
"You take stock of everything when you get fired. I had that spring and all summer to think things over, and the two things at Tech that were mistakes is putting up with too much BS and coaching scared," Knight recalled. "What I promised myself was that in the new job, I was going to do things my way, whether that meant using the things I learned from my dad and all those other coaches or not. That's why I got into this business in the first place -- to start my own program, to run my own program, and build a program that I and all the people around me will be proud of."
If a winning record was all that required, Knight could have ridden the senior leadership he inherited and made few waves. As a first-year coach, especially one with a famous name, he was sure to enjoy a grace period even if the Cardinals couldn't manage a .500 mark. Instead, Knight was good as his word and made them play and behave his way right away, suspending three players during the season and when the moment called for it, calling out the seniors whose trust he needed most.
In short order, Mike James, the guard Knight dismissed from the podium before last month's tirade, went on to lock down MVP honors in the conference tourney and fellow seniors Devon Lamb and Anthony Miles started rebounding and handing out assists exactly the way Knight drew up the plays. For all the ways in which he was portrayed as being different from Bob, it wasn't until the moment he felt far enough away that he could be himself.
"When I told my dad I wanted to be a coach, he told me a story about going to see Coach (Joe) Lapchick before he took his first job at West Point," Pat said. "Coach Lapchick asked him, `Is it important for you to be liked?' My dad thought about it a second and said, `No.' So coach Lapchick looked at him and says, `Right. And if you have plans to be a coach for long, don't ever forget this: It's more important to be respected than liked.'"
[Associated Press;
Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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