Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Legendary Boeheim was a bit cranky

- JOE STARKEY

He wasn’t going to step away without another verbal boxing match. That was my initial thought upon watching fabled Syracuse Coach Jim Boeheim sort of say goodbye Wednesday — and I knew from personal experience that Boeheim loves to mix it up (more on that later).

Was he fired or did he retire? It sure seemed like the former after Boeheim’s cryptic back-and-forth with reporters. A man famed for his arrogance and directness couldn’t give a straight answer to a yes-orno question: Is he retiring?

“This is up to the university,” Boeheim told reporters.

Really? I always thought it was up to Boeheim. He sure behaved as if it was, like when he told ESPN’s Pete Thamel on Feb. 4 that he’d “probably” return for a 48th season and that he’d be the one making that decision. Now it was “up to the university?”

Were we supposed to believe he’d coach if “the university” forced him to coach but otherwise would retire? Really?

Anyway, a torrent of thoughts flood to mind as I meditate on a man who I’m pretty sure has been active in my sports consciousn­ess for as long as any living person. Are there any other prominent sports figures who were working the same job Wednesday as they were in 1976?

Thoughts …

■ Boeheim could be a condescend­ing jerk, but he was never dull. In a strange way, I’m going to miss his presence. I’m going to miss the possibilit­y of an interestin­g quote, as compared to the cliche-ridden trash we hear from most coaches.

■ I’m old enough to be a grandfathe­r. I was 10 when Boeheim was hired at Syracuse, a year before the Big East was born. I grew up in Buffalo, N.Y., watching Pearl Washington and all those awesome Syracuse teams light up the Carrier Dome. Boeheim’s horn-rimmed glasses and perpetual smirk were as ever-present as his 2-3 zone defense. There is no denying his coaching greatness. In 47 seasons, his teams made 35 NCAA Tournament appearance­s, advanced to five Final Fours and won a national title. I’ll remember how he advanced in tournament­s with less-talented teams, too, using that 2-3 zone, and how he was content to stay at Syracuse instead of hopping from job to job.

■ Nobody gets the benefit of the doubt like a beloved college basketball coach. With Boeheim, people can’t even bring themselves to say he might have been fired. The university tweeted that his tenure “comes to an end.” One story phrased it like this: “The university announced the men’s basketball coaching transition.”

■ I encountere­d the full contradict­ion of Boeheim back in 2015, when I was doing a radio show at a downtown sports bar. This was a few days after I had asked him at a postgame news conference about perception­s of his program in the wake of the second postseason ban of his tenure. That story had just broken.

“I don’t [care] about what those people think,” he said. “I know what I’ve done. I know what we do, and I’m proud of it.”

I then wrote a piece comparing Boeheim to Bill Belichick and even wondered (tongue-in-cheek, of course) if he’d deflated basketball­s. I don’t think Boeheim appreciate­d it. The Syracuse Post-Standard picked up on the piece and put it under the headline, “Syracuse’s Jim Boeheim arrogant, unprofessi­onal and just like Bill Belichick, Pittsburgh writer says.”

So I’m sitting there a few days later, doing the show, when a “315” area code pops up on my phone. I figured it was an angry Syracuse rep calling — and I guess it kind of was.

“Hi Joe, it’s Jim Boeheim.” I expected him to unleash, but he apologized for what he labeled poor behavior at the news conference and then told his side of the violations story. He was perfectly cordial. It was a little odd and yet charmingly old school and humanizing.

Boeheim wouldn’t know me if I walked into his house, but like I said before, in a strange kind of way, I’m going to miss him.

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