Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Beard delivers for Tech

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LUBBOCK, Texas — Chris Beard spent a decade as an assistant coach at Texas Tech for the Knights, first Bobby and then Pat.

When that ended with a head coaching change by the Red Raiders after the 2010-2011 season, Beard never thought about whether he would ever get back to Lubbock — or even Division I basketball. He just loved coaching.

“The decision to take a year off, or try to do some media stuff, it never really entered my mind,” Beard said. “I just remember always being immersed in the job we had.”

First, there was a season leading a South Carolina expansion team in the semipro American Basketball Associatio­n that won its first 29 games before losing in the ABA finals. There were stops at two lower-division schools in Texas the next three years before a magical 30-victory season at the University of Arkansas at Little Rock that included an upset of Purdue in the 2016 NCAA Tournament.

“He didn’t take the easy road,” Texas Tech Athletic Director Kirby Hocutt said. “He was confident in himself and his ability and his knowledge of the game, and his work ethic and his preparatio­n. I admired his journey, followed his journey.”

And that led to Beard’s sudden and awkwardly timed reunion nearly two years ago with the No. 10 Red Raiders (18-4, 6-3 Big 12), who before last month hadn’t been ranked that high in more than two decades. They are only a game behind No. 7 and perennial Big 12 champion Kansas

halfway through the conference schedule, and already with their first victory ever at Allen Fieldhouse.

“Even when they got down, they never wilted. They showed the resolve, the resilience that he’s coached them to have,” Oklahoma State Coach Mike Boynton said after his team blew a 15-point lead after the half in a loss at Tech last week. “They’re really tough.”

After the Red Raiders lost to Butler in the 2016 NCAA Tournament, Hocutt and others in the travel party waiting to go home huddled around their phones in an airport and watched the end of UALR’s double-overtime victory over Purdue.

Hocutt didn’t know then that he would be looking for a new coach just a few weeks later, when Tubby Smith left after only three seasons to go to Memphis.

“Tubby’s situation happened quickly, and out of the blue, but we knew that there was, at the top of our list, one individual who made perfect

sense for us,” said Hocutt, who became Tech’s AD only a short time before firing Pat Knight.

Except there was one slight issue. Smith’s departure came after Beard had just accepted a five-year contract to be UNLV’s new coach.

“I wish the timing would have been different, but life gives you different opportunit­ies at different times,” Beard said. “With this job here, No. 1, I’m from the state of Texas, this is my home state. Texas Tech is a school that I have an associatio­n with, a past with. Obviously it’s the Big 12 Conference, a chance to compete for a national championsh­ip if you’re relative in your league.”

After going 18-14 in the first season of Beard’s sixyear contract, the Red Raiders matched that victory total this season on the last day of January. Keenan Evans hit a buzzer-beating jumper at the end of overtime against Texas.

Evans is one of five seniors on a unique roster that also has five freshmen who have played. Three of the freshmen have started games, including hometown standout guard Jarred Culver.

“When guys come into jobs, I think there’s really two ways to look at it. One is you immediatel­y start building for the future, and two, is you try to win immediatel­y,” said Beard, who opted for winning now. “Most coaches and successful people would tell you not to do the latter.”

Freshman guard Zhaire Smith, now a regular starter, describes Beard as a trustworth­y and caring coach who can be hard on players on the court and “really cool” off of it.

Beard is coaching hurt, with a torn ACL in his left knee that popped while he demonstrat­ed something to Smith at Iowa State the night before playing there. Beard forgot about his heavily wrapped knee in the heat of a moment during the Jan. 20 game.

For now, the Red Raiders are in the top 10 for the third time in four weeks. The only time they were ranked that high longer in a season was the final four polls in 19951996, when the Southwest Conference champs made it to the Sweet 16 and finished 30-2 under coach James Dickey, formerly an assistant at Arkansas.

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