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‘Knight, Bobby

February 14, 2008

        Ole’ Bob Knight has decided to ride off into the sunset.   You probably know this already, but I thought somebody should warn the sunset.  

        Bob Knight could never quite figure out why you didn’t get the death penalty for failing to recognize a zone defense.   In Bob Knight’s camp if you were five minutes late for practice that wasn’t the end of the world, but it was certainly the end of your college basketball career.  

        He had standards.  If you played for Bob Knight you went to class, you turned in every assignment, you graduated, and you kept your nose clean.   And you kept your shoes shined and your teeth flossed and your buttons buttoned and your desk drawer organized.   He once threw a three-sectional couch at a player who failed to control his paper clips. Missed him with the second section.

        Intimidation; that was what he did really well.  Bob Knight could scare the sap out of a maple tree.   When Bob Knight went bear hunting, the only reason he took a gun was in case a reporter tried to follow him.  His temper tantrums were listed by Al Gore as the fourth-leading threat to the polar ice caps.

        Referees regarded Bob Knight the way a chicken regards a vat of boiling grease.  They used to burn witches because the milk would curdle when they passed the house.  When Knight walked by the milk would curdle, but it would ask permission first. 

        He chain-smoked reporters.   You asked a stupid question of Coach Knight, you’d want to check the local gun regulations in advance.   There was a time when people appreciated a man like Bob Knight, but then, you know, somebody had to go and invent the concept of mutual respect.   Bobby Knight represented the values of a bygone era, and he made you glad they were gone. 

        He wouldn’t try to intimidate just anybody.  Just players, referees, reporters, opposing coaches, and school officials.   And policemen.  And students.   And foreigners.  And Americans.   You had to be over three years old and breathing.  If you weren’t afraid of Bob Knight, there was something wrong with you.    Of course, you could say the same thing about John Gotti.

        He made Dr. House look like a casino greeter.  He frightened players so that they were afraid to make a mistake.   I guess it worked, at one time.   At one time that was how a lot of people coached, leadership by abuse.   He was a relic of an era when powerful executives screamed at their secretaries, and fired them if they didn’t put out.  As long as everybody was doing that, he was a great coach because he was better at it than anybody else. 

        His efforts to intimidate anybody and everybody were a transparent cover for his own self-loathing—and he’d have known that, except that he had rejected pop psychology along with the rest of the twentieth century   He was a fantasy general, the Napoleon of the hardwoods, pretending to be Patton slapping around some worthless soldier and roaring defiance at a press corps that dared to question him about it.   He was Idi Amin with a plastic whistle in his mouth.

        He admired Ted Williams, because Ted Williams embodied for him the uncompromising pursuit of absolute excellence, and in turn he was admired by Tony LaRussa because LaRussa is losing his grip on reality.  

        He screamed at reporters for asking stupid questions, when very often they weren’t stupid questions at all; they were just questions he didn’t feel like answering.  He screamed at players for making stupid plays, when very often they weren’t stupid plays at all; they were just ordinary human mistakes.   He screamed at officials who made stupid calls, when very often they weren’t stupid calls, at all, they were just calls that went against Bobby Knight’s team. 

        The term “martinet” doesn’t begin to do him justice; he was a full-fledged Martin. 

        He thought that by screaming at everybody else he was proving how stupid they were, when in reality all he was proving was that he was a screamer.   He was a bully and a braggart, self-righteous at the top of his lungs.  

        The fact is, Knight was a petty, insecure man whose time had come and gone before he put on his first garish sports coat.  He deeply resented the fact that he had to share this planet with dipwads like you and me.   He was the biggest winner in the history of college basketball, and the biggest Loser in Texas.  He could never quite grasp what was wrong with treating his college President with undisguised contempt. 

        He won 900 games and, before long, somebody will win a thousand.   That’s the wrong thing to say; I don’t mean to diminish his accomplishments.   It might be a long time before somebody wins four NCAA titles.   We will miss him, not in the way that you miss grandfather, but more in the way you miss your cranky old neighbor who poisoned your cat.  Time marches on.   Bob Knight has abandoned his efforts to stop it. 

 
 

COMMENTS (9 Comments, most recent shown first)

DerekHiemforth
It's hard to disagree with Castleman's description of Knight's warts. I could never have played any sport for a coach who behaved like Knight did, and I would discourage anyone I cared about from doing so. But having sait that, the part Castleman doesn't mention is that Knight *is* very knowledgeable about basketball, and many of those who played for him see that as more important. In other words, when you read between the lines, most people -- even staunch Knight supporters -- don't try to claim that Knight wasn't an SOB. It's more like (again, reading between the lines), "Yeah, he was an SOB, but what I learned from him was worth tolerating that." A lot of his former players respect -- or even like -- Knight on the whole, and I think it would pretty arrogant to assume that they're all just ignorant or brainwashed. The man clearly has positive traits as well as negative ones; he'd have no supporters otherwise.
1:10 AM Jun 13th
 
rnotr2
Pure tripe from someone who couldn't sniff Knight's jockstrap. With all the one liners, at first I thought this was a roast of Bobby Knight. But then it turned into a pointless diatribe. The purveyor of this poison (I don't want to call him a writer) is definitely not a person with any of BK's better qualities. If Knight had a problem with you, he would let you know to your face. He didn't snipe from behind a keyboard. The slinger of this slop displays the very personality deficiencies that he attributes to Knight. The overwhelming majority of BK's players would play for him again.
2:36 AM Apr 12th
 
vansloot
Taken out and shot? No. Maybe just point the gun at him and let him think you were going to. He was a horse's ass that won a lot of games, has earned the respect of some that have played for him, and earned the hatred of many more. That we allow someone like him to get away with it simply because he won games says more about us than it does about him.
4:13 PM Apr 9th
 
tswensen
I think Bobby Knight must have poisoned Milos' cat. Most writers are smart enough to try to disguise their contempt for their subject by throwing a few positives in at the end of the piece. Not Milos. Look at it this way, Milos, you don't have to watch Bobby coach anymore. And I don't have to read any more of your petty tripe. Jeez, who crapped in your oatmeal this morning?
10:28 AM Mar 31st
 
hammer2525
As many detractors as he has, and rightly so, Knight has as many who will defend him and his methods, including former players and reporters.

May have been a sorry excuse for a human being (probably not)
May have been an SOB (probably)
"Taken out and shot" should refer to a murderer or the like, not for a basketball coach who had his pros and cons.
8:18 PM Mar 23rd
 
cleavelin
Knight was the sorriest excuse for a human being who ever lived. The only problem with his retiring is that he's now on TV poisoning the airwaves.

That SOB shouldn't have been allowed to retire; he should have been taken out and shot.
6:06 AM Mar 18th
 
shaneyfelt
I would like to think that we are better off while all the Bobby Knights and John Waynes move one or die off. I would like to think our education systems and schools are better off since things are turning over changed. I would like to think our society will be a better and safer place to live in over then next fifty years. But I don't see it. No respect, no discipline, no sacrifice, no work and all entitlement are the traits I see now - everything thing a guy like Knight hates. I won't be wagering that as time marches on the it is better without the Knights and Waynes. But that is just my opinion clearly in the minority.
4:23 PM Feb 28th
 
keving18
I have often thought about what I would have done and how I would have reacted had I had the misfortune of attending Indiana University on a basketball scholarship during the Knight era. Would I have just grinned and bore it when this man would have gotten in my grill and profanely berated me in front of 10,000 of my peers for missing a defensive assignment or throwing an ill-conceived pass? Or would I have rebelled, and called him what I thought he was to his face? Or perhaps a little of both.

I supposed it would have been a little of both, but most of all of accepting the fact that my ego was being ground to a nub by a 55 year old child and that I would be spending the rest of my life repairing the damage, as opposed to living the normal, happy, well-adjusted life that I hoped and imagined the course of my life would take as a high school senior.
9:59 AM Feb 23rd
 
LynchMob
Right On! BK was both complex and simple ... great and assaholic ... and this describes it to a tee! If you haven't see it, check out this classic ...

http://www.dallasnews.com/video/dallasnews/sports/index.html?nvid=196646

... what a mess!
5:00 PM Feb 21st
 
 
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