Another one of those Friday mornings where I rub the sleep
out of my eyes while trying to process lousy news about the Hofstra athletic
department. Hofstra issued a press release at 10:09 in which it announced that
Mo Cassara will not return as head coach. That’s a nice way, of course, of
saying he got fired.
(For those of you just stopping by for the first time,
previous Friday mornings from hell include learning the news of Halil Kanacevic
announcing his plans to transfer, Tim Welsh getting arrested for DUI and four
total morons getting arrested for stealing anything at Hofstra that wasn’t
locked down)
Assistant coach Patrick Sellers has been named the interim
coach. He and athletic director Jeff Hathaway will conduct a press conference
at 1 p.m.
That Cassara has been dismissed after three seasons—the last
of which was amongst the worst in program history, on and especially off the
court—isn’t stunning, though the timing is awkward. Well, some of it anyway.
Hofstra making this announcement on the first Friday of the NCAA
Tournament—thereby ensuring its news cycle will last no longer than one of
Molly’s diapers—is the most #ThatsSoHofstra thing and a move any presidential
administration would admire.
Cassara gets the boot 13 days after the Dutchmen concluded a
7-25 season and just eight days after highly touted recruit Gabe Levin
committed to Hofstra, which appeared to put the finishing bow on an impressive
seven-player class heavy on prep schoolers. It was an aggressive approach by
Cassara, one that was the complete opposite of the recruiting philosophy that
got him into trouble in the first place.
Alas, the recruits who got Cassara in trouble weren’t done
getting him in trouble. UConn transfer Jamal Coombs-McDaniel, who never played
a second for the Flying Dutchmen due to chronic knee woes, was arrested for
marijuana possession last Friday (THERE IT IS AGAIN) following a traffic stop
in Brooklyn.
And Newsday’s Steven Marcus reported this morning that
Cassara told him Taran Buie, the Penn State transfer, was arrested earlier this
week for a traffic violation.
That’s a mind-boggling six arrests involving Hofstra players—all
Cassara recruits—in the last four months. This latest wave of bad publicity was
likely the clichéd final straw for university president Stuart Rabinowitz.
Sellers’ interim appointment indicates Hathaway and the
university are hopeful of keeping this recruiting class together, but whether
or not that happens remains to be seen. All that is certain now is the Flying
Dutchmen program, once the beacon of stability, is in transition once again.
Hard to believe that three years ago this week, the Dutchmen
had one of the longest-tenured coaches in the CAA, the reigning conference
player of the year and two members of the all-rookie team. Today, the program
is decimated and those of us who follow it are once again asking “Now what?”
Perhaps this time we’ll finally like the answer.
Email Jerry at defiantlydutch@yahoo.com
or follow Defiantly Dutch at http://twitter.com/defiantlydutch.
1 comment:
Don't blame the coach. Blame the parents (or lack thereof?). Mo is a great coach and even more importantly, a great person - will deep character, and values. Hofstra made a huge mistake today, and Mo will move on to bigger and better opportunities. He put his trust and faith into kids who never appreciated the opportunity afforded to them and he has to pay the price for their errors in judgement. Sad in the end but he will be OK. Keep your head up Mo. I have enjoyed reading you commentary for the last 3 years Jerry, but unfortunately I will be removing my 'bookmark' as of now.
Smitty.
Post a Comment