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For Oregon’s Dana Altman, it’s old home week at KC regional

- By Eric Olson Associated Press Sports Writer

KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Dana Altman is back in his old stomping grounds for the NCAA Midwest Regional.

Until he left for Oregon in 2010, the 58-year-old Nebraska native had spent his entire childhood and all but one of his first 26 years as a head coach at schools no more than a three-hour drive from Kansas City.

“It’s always great to come back,” he said Wednesday. “A lot of friends and family are coming, so it’ll be a lot of fun.”

The third-seeded Ducks (31-5) play No. 7 seed Michigan (26-11) on Thursday night, aiming to reach the Elite Eight for a second straight year.

Altman headed west after spending 16 years at Creighton in Omaha, Nebraska. He had grown restless and was looking for a new challenge. When Oregon called, he couldn’t resist, especially with benefactor Phil Knight providing all the accoutreme­nts a coach could want to build and sustain a successful program.

“It was a little bit of an adjustment the first couple years,” Altman said. “First eight or nine months my wife and daughter weren’t there, so it was a lot tougher. But it’s been really good. I’ve been very fortunate.”

No doubt, there have been challenges. Altman was criticized for recruiting unsavory characters after Oregon head coach Dana Altman yells from the sideline during a home game.

three players were accused of gang-raping a student in 2014. No charges were filed but the players were dismissed.

The alleged victim sued the university, which paid her an $800,000 settlement in 2015.

There were calls for Altman’s firing, but the administra­tion stood by him. Last week, two of the three accused players filed a lawsuit against the university, claiming their reputation­s were ruined by the allegation­s. The other accused player filed a similar lawsuit four months ago.

Altman has Oregon in the NCAA Tournament for a school-record fifth straight year, and the Ducks are one win from setting the program record for victories in a season.

He started his head coaching career with a one-year stay at Southeast Community College in Fairbury, Nebraska — not far from his tiny hometown of Wilber. From there it was on to Moberly CC, about 2 ½ hours east of Kansas City, for three seasons.

He was an assistant for one year at Kansas State, took his first Division File / The Associated Press

I head coaching job at Marshall, in West Virginia, and left there after one season to take over at Kansas State.

After four years he was off to Creighton, where he became the Bluejays’ career wins leader with a 327-176 record and seven NCAA appearance­s.

“I’ve worked at great schools that are very serious about having good basketball programs,” Altman said. “I’ve worked with (athletic directors) that have been very supportive, especially at Creighton and now at Oregon.”

Altman has been Pac-12 coach of the year three times and has won more games (185) in his first seven seasons than any coach in Oregon history. The Ducks have never won fewer than 21 games under Altman.

“It was a little bit of an adjustment early,” he said, “but now with the great support that we’re receiving, we hope to continue to build and have a consistent basketball program, one that challenges year-in and year-out for the Pac-12 and has a chance to play in the tournament.”

BATON ROUGE, La. — Newly named LSU men’s basketball coach Will Wade left little doubt about his intention to wear his players out.

It also sounded like the fresh-faced 34-year-old, who has known only winning in his four seasons as a head coach at Chattanoog­a and at VCU, knew better than to make immediate promises about turning the Tigers into champions before he’d truly discovered what he’s gotten himself into down on the bayou.

“You may beat us, but you’re going to know you’re in for a fight,” Wade asserted as he spoke of going “all out, all the time,” and defending “every floor board for 94 feet.”

“That’s going to be our identity,” Wade said.

At LSU, basketball has long been a sport that lags behind football and even baseball in popularity. The program’s history is one of inconsiste­nt results and wavering fan support — despite considerab­le resources spent on upgrading practice and training facilities in recent years.

There are larger than life bronze statues of Hall-of-Famers Bob Pettit and Shaquille O’Neal in front of the basketball practice gym, and the Tigers’ home stadium is named for the legendary Pete Maravich. But LSU has been to a total of four Final Fours in program history. Its last Final Four in 2006 is the only one in the past three decades.

The top overall NBA draft choice in 2016 — Ben Simmons — played at LSU two seasons ago, but the team he led failed to make the NCAA Tournament. One season later, the man who recruited Simmons, Johnny Jones, found himself at the helm of a team mired in a school-record 15-game losing streak.

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