Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Auburn’s Pearl back in tourney despite an uncertain fate

- By John Zenor

AUBURN, ALA. » Bruce Pearl opened this college basketball season with a renewed confidence that he insists didn’t falter even after his top assistant coach was indicted as part of a federal investigat­ion that cost two of Auburn’s best players their eligibilit­y.

Even with his success on the court, his job security remains an open question.

He has led the 19th-ranked Tigers to their first Southeaste­rn Conference regular season title since 1999 and ended a 15-year NCAA Tournament drought despite the troubling backdrop.

But even with his outsized personalit­y, the coach who had almost annual forays to the NCAA Tournament started to waver about this time last year on whether he was the person to get the Tigers to that coveted destinatio­n.

“I thought that this team was hard-working enough, talented enough, experience­d enough and by golly they did it,” Pearl said.

And the 2,000-mile journey that No. 4 seed Auburn (25-7) will make to play College of Charleston (26-7) Friday night in the Midwest Region in San Diego seems fitting considerin­g the odyssey Pearl and this team have been through.

While it is Auburn’s second-highest NCAA seed behind the top-seeded 1999 team that reached the Sweet Sixteen, a cloud of uncertaint­y still hovers over Pearl and the Auburn program. It’s lingered since the arrest of Chuck Person, a former Tigers star and NBA player who was charged in the widespread federal probe into college basketball corruption. Person allegedly accepted bribes to steer players to a financial advisor once they turned pro and funneled money to the families of Austin Wiley and Danjel Purifoy. Neither played this season.

Two support staffers were also placed on leave.

Pearl has yet to submit to a formal interview with a law firm conducting an internal review of his program. That will presumably come after the season. At that time, President Steven Leath and new athletic director Allen Greene could possibly determine his fate.

Leath issued a statement to the AP, calling it “an incredible season for Auburn basketball,” but declining to discuss a timetable.

“Athletics director Allen Greene and I are working through the NCAA process, and it’s not appropriat­e that we comment further at this time on that process,” Leath said.

Pearl has been down this road before.

The coach’s history with the NCAA could make his Auburn situation even more precarious. He was also at the center of recruiting issue in the late 1980s, when he said then-Illinois assistant Jimmy Collins offered Deon Thomas money and a car.

Pearl, an Iowa assistant at the time, secretly taped a conversati­on he had with Thomas and handed it over to the NCAA. Collins was cleared of the charges and said years later he received an apology from Pearl .

Auburn hired Pearl four years ago when he still had several months left under the show-cause penalty from his time at Tennessee.

Pearl was cited for unethical conduct for lying to NCAA investigat­ors in June 2010 about improperly hosting recruits at his home, resulting in a three-year show-cause penalty.

Hoping for a happier ending this time, Pearl maintains that he practiced what he’s constantly preached this season to his team: Focus only on what you can control.

 ?? BRYNN ANDERSON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? Auburn head coach Bruce Pearl reacts on the sidelines during a game against South Carolina. Pearl has led Auburn to its first NCAA Tournament in 15 years but still faces questions about his job security amid an internal review of the program.
BRYNN ANDERSON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE Auburn head coach Bruce Pearl reacts on the sidelines during a game against South Carolina. Pearl has led Auburn to its first NCAA Tournament in 15 years but still faces questions about his job security amid an internal review of the program.

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