The Des Moines Register

Branching out

McDermott, 3 former assistants’ teams earn bids

- Travis Hines

OMAHA — Even by the standards of the small world that is college basketball coaching, this week at the CHI Health Center has something of a family reunion feel.

The limbs of Greg McDermott’s coaching tree entwine here at the NCAA Tournament’s first and second rounds with three of his former assistants leading their own programs in the sport’s premier event.

“I’m just thrilled for each and every one of them,” the Creighton coach told the Register as he prepared his own team to take on Akron in the NCAA Tournament in Pittsburgh. “They certainly helped me whether they played for me or coached for me or some of them both.

“They were instrument­al to my success, and I’m not surprised to see them have their own success now.”

McDermott may be the focal point for T.J. Otzelberge­r (Iowa State), Eric Henderson (South Dakota State) and Darien DeVries (Drake), but the coaching tree quickly turns into something closer to a web, with the threads all meeting this week in the place Creighton and McDermott call home.

Otzelberge­r worked as an assistant for McDermott during his time with the Cyclones, and Henderson, who played for McDermott at Wayne State, was a graduate assistant. Henderson went on to be an assistant for Otzelberge­r at South Dakota State, and when Otzelberge­r left Brookings for UNLV, Henderson was promoted to head coach.

The Cyclones and Jackrabbit­s meet Thursday in the first round (6:35 p.m.; truTV).

“I’m a pretty lucky dude,” Henderson said Wednesday. “I pinch myself all the time for how much coach McDermott and T.J. have done for me. And now I’m playing where coach McDermott plays every one of his home games, and I get to coach against T.J.

“I mean, really? Life doesn’t get any better than this.”

It does create a unique profession­al dynamic, however.

Coaching careers are made and broken by the NCAA Tournament. And in this situation, it could be a friend doing the making or breaking.

If South Dakota State upsets Iowa State, it’s national news that rocks the tournament and opens a world of possibilit­y for Henderson. But it also puts

Otzelberge­r in the unenviable position of being the coach whose No. 2 seed got ousted by a 15.

If Iowa State wins, Otzelberge­r was the one standing in front of his friend and colleague while keeping his own star rising.

“We’ve talked and texted a few times,” Henderson said. “Once you get the emotions out of it, we’re both competitiv­e dudes. We both want to win.

“The respect is certainly at a high level.”

Awaiting the winner of that matchup could be Drake, which is helmed by DeVries, a former McDermott assistant at Creighton.

“He is one of those guys that I feel very fortunate to have been able to work for,” DeVries, whose team plays Washington State on Thursday night, said, “and really happy for him and all of their success that he’s had here.”

It’s not just the head coaches that are all part of the same coaching family, though. Looking further down the bench gives one an idea of how much this really is a close-knit pocket of the coaching fraternity.

South Dakota State assistant Bryan Petersen played for McDermott at Iowa State (where he was recruited by Otzelberge­r), and fellow assistant Rob Klinkefus was on Otzelberge­r’s staff in Brookings. Jackrabbit­s staffer Tyler Glidden was a manager at Iowa State under McDermott and later joined his Bluejays staff before heading to South Dakota State.

Iowa State assistant Kyle Green coached for McDermott at Northern Iowa while Cyclone staffer Erik Crawford played for McDermott at UNI and later coached for him at Iowa State and Creighton (before returning to Cedar Falls to work for another McDermott assistant, Ben Jacobson, and alongside Green).

“It’s wild to have all three of our teams here for the same opening weekend,” Crawford said. “I think it says a lot about the type of people he chooses to bring in to work underneath him, and also some of the stuff those guys learned working for him.

“A lot of coaches have assistants that work for them, but not a lot of them have so many move on to become head coaches.”

It’s certainly a testament to McDermott’s ability to evaluate and develop coaches.

“He’s somebody, as a head coach, he’s not a micromanag­er or control freak,” Otzelberge­r said. “He lets you learn and grow, make mistakes. Gives you responsibi­lity. That’s what I always appreciate­d working for Greg, just having that ability to learn and to be hands-on.”

While respect and admiration are a constant, like any family, so is the ribbing.

“Greg is getting up there in age,” Otzelberge­r said, “and he’s had a lot of great assistant coaches over the time.

“It’s a testament to how old he is, and the fact that he’s hired great assistant coaches.”

 ?? USA TODAY PHOTOS/TRENT JOHNSON ILLUSTRATI­ON - USA TODAY NETWORK ?? Creighton men’s basketball head coach Greg McDermott, far right, and three of his former assistants have led their respective teams to the NCAA Tournament this week: clockwise from left, Eric Henderson (South Dakota State), T.J. Otzelberge­r (Iowa State) and Darien DeVries (Drake).
USA TODAY PHOTOS/TRENT JOHNSON ILLUSTRATI­ON - USA TODAY NETWORK Creighton men’s basketball head coach Greg McDermott, far right, and three of his former assistants have led their respective teams to the NCAA Tournament this week: clockwise from left, Eric Henderson (South Dakota State), T.J. Otzelberge­r (Iowa State) and Darien DeVries (Drake).
 ?? SAM GREENE/THE ENQUIRER ?? Creighton head coach Greg McDermott talks with an official during a Big East game on Feb. 10 against Xavier in Cincinnati.
SAM GREENE/THE ENQUIRER Creighton head coach Greg McDermott talks with an official during a Big East game on Feb. 10 against Xavier in Cincinnati.

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