The Commercial Appeal

Coaching at your college alma mater is a challenge

If Hardaway is finished at East, he’s leaving memorable legacy

- John Varlas Memphis Commercial Appeal USA TODAY NETWORK - TENNESSEE Mark Giannotto Memphis Commercial Appeal USA TODAY NETWORK - TENNESSEE

MURFREESBO­RO — If Saturday is indeed Penny Hardaway‘s final game at East before moving on to the University of Memphis, he plans on making sure his players go out with something he never got as a player: A state championsh­ip.

Despite some shaky moments Friday at Murphy Center, the Mustangs pulled away in the final moments and defeated Bearden, 72-60. In Saturday’s 1 p.m. Class AAA final, they’ll take on district rival Whitehaven for the fifth time this season.

A fifth victory would give East its third consecutiv­e championsh­ip but would technicall­y be Hardaway’s first as head coach.

Although he still did the bulk of the in-game coaching, he was listed as an assistant the past two years due to TSSAA rules.

“Actually, I’m a little jealous because I never got a chance to win a ring in high school,” said Hardaway, who starred at now-closed Treadwell High.

“I wanted to win a championsh­ip so bad and I still think about it to this day because we lost to a team that year (1989) that beat us three times, Bolton High School .... that’s what drives me to want to get these guys rings (and) championsh­ips.”

On Thursday, The Commercial Appeal reported that Hardaway’s move to his alma mater would be announced early next week, according to sources with direct knowledge of the situation. The 46-year-old would replace Tubby

Chicago Bulls coach Fred Hoiberg stood outside the visitor’s locker room at FedExForum Thursday night and thought back to the beginning of this decade, when he returned to Iowa State and became the head coach at his alma mater with no previous coaching experience.

He mentioned how crucial it was to have a former college head coach such as Bobby Lutz by his side.

Nonetheles­s, he remembered how overwhelmi­ng it all still seemed initially. Connor Vanover announced on Twitter he had requested and received a release from the national letter of intent he signed with Memphis.

“The biggest thing that I felt is there’s so much to learn,” Hoiberg said. “You’ve got the compliance. You got to make sure your guys are going to class. Basketball really is a small part of what you’re doing.”

These are the sort of challenges Penny Hardaway will encounter now

Smith, who was fired on Wednesday after two seasons on the job and a 40-24 record.

Hardaway declined to discuss the Memphis job on Wednesday and Friday again put the spotlight on his players, who trailed Bearden 38-30 but used a 14-1 run in the third quarter to take a lead they never relinquish­ed.

Although the Mustangs are tournament-tested, the speculatio­n surroundin­g their coach has to have been a distractio­n at least on some level. But with one game remaining in the season, everything appears to be on track.

“You read it, but you don’t let it get into the locker room,” Hardaway said. “We have a goal and that goal is to win the third gold ball in a row. And if you can’t focus enough for that, you shouldn’t be here.”

A state title in high school was one of the few things that escaped Hardaway the player.

Since turning to coaching — first at Lester Middle School and then at East — that success has carried forward. That track record, along with his status as a local icon, are two of the reasons he’d make a nice fit at Memphis.

But if Saturday’s game is his swan song, he’ll certainly be missed. Both in the way that he molded them as players and as solid citizens.

“Everything I do positive and good, he taught me,” said Wichita State signee Alex Lomax, who led East with 18 points on Friday.

“He helped me with my ball-handling, my passing (just) helped me to be the best PG I could be. He taught me the ins-and-outs, the angles ... I just try to do it to the best of my ability.”

Added junior Chandler Lawson, who finished with 17 points and 11 rebounds, “He’s just like another father to me. He’s helped many of us out with our lives ... if we’re down, he’ll help us out.”

James Wiseman, the nation’s top junior in the class of 2019, missed all but two minutes of the first half after picking up two quick fouls but ended with 16 points on 7-of-9 shooting.

All in all then, it was a good performanc­e against a determined but ultimately outmanned opponent. East fans are asking for just one more Saturday.

“I think he’ll do great (at Memphis),” said fan Cheryl Garner. “But we’ll always have his back.”

Reach John Varlas at john.varlas@commercial­appeal.com or on Twitter @johnvarlas

 ??  ?? East coach Penny Hardaway has some words for Dee Merriweath­er during Friday's Class AAA semifinals at the Murphy Center. The Mustangs play Whitehaven on Saturday in what is expected to be his last game before taking over at the University of Memphis. CALVIN MATTHEIS/NEWS SENTINEL
East coach Penny Hardaway has some words for Dee Merriweath­er during Friday's Class AAA semifinals at the Murphy Center. The Mustangs play Whitehaven on Saturday in what is expected to be his last game before taking over at the University of Memphis. CALVIN MATTHEIS/NEWS SENTINEL

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