Maddox and Pritchard: KU players shouldn’t overreact

By Richard Brack     Apr 15, 2003

Mike Maddox was a freshman forward when basketball coach Larry Brown left Kansas University in the summer of 1988 for the big bucks of the NBA.

It was a difficult time for the Jayhawks, who had won a national championship just a few months earlier.

“You’re young; it’s a big transition,” said Maddox, now president of Intrust Bank in Lawrence. “You’re away from home. The unknown is the worst part of it. You don’t know what’s going to happen.”

What happened next turned out well for Maddox and the Jayhawks. Then KU athletic director Bob Frederick hired a little-known assistant coach from North Carolina to replace Brown. The Jayhawks won nine league titles and made four Final Four appearances in the next 15 years.

So what words of wisdom would Maddox have for current KU players following Williams’ resignation Monday?

“My advice would be not to overreact,” said Maddox, who was a senior when Williams guided KU to the national title game in 1991. “They came here to play basketball for the University of Kansas. They’re still at the University of Kansas. They need to have confidence that the University of Kansas will find a quality coach. This program has been around 105 years, and it’s always been good. It will continue to be good.”

Williams’ resignation came exactly one week after KU lost to Syracuse in the national title game in New Orleans.

“When coach Brown left it was a hard situation,” said Kevin Pritchard, who was a sophomore point guard on Brown’s national title team. “We had just won the championship — very similar to this year. We were at a pinnacle and wanted to make a run at it the next year. I know that’s how (the current players) feel. They want to know who their leader will be. I remember when we hired coach Williams. I thought ‘I’ve never heard of him.’ But after I met him I knew we were going to work our tails off for him.”

Pritchard said the Jayhawks should approach their offseason workouts as if nothing had changed.

“Get your butt ready for next year,” said Pritchard, coach of the Kansas City Knights. “Kansas basketball is going to be back, and it’s going to be better.”

KU dipped to 19-12 in Williams’ first season in 1988-89, but his teams averaged 28.5 victories during the next 14 years.

“My heart hurts,” Pritchard said. “This is a dark day in Kansas basketball. I’m very sad and very upset. I don’t know exactly why this happened. I wish we had a chance to make our case again.”

Fans and players pleaded for Williams not to return to his alma mater. The same tactic had worked three years earlier when the coach rejected an offer from UNC.

Count Pritchard among those who left long messages for the coach in the last week, asking him to stay.

“I wish there is more I could have done,” he said. “That’s the part that’s upsetting. Sometimes we get lulled to sleep and don’t tell the important people in our life how important they are.”

Pritchard also was among the KU fans disappointed that former KU player and UNC coach Dean Smith would lure Williams away from Kansas.

“Last time I looked Dean Smith was a Kansas graduate on a championship team,” Pritchard said of Smith, who was a reserve on KU’s 1952 squad. “I don’t understand it.”

Pritchard also was had a hard time understanding Williams’ decision, saying UNC wasn’t any better than KU in terms of fans, arena, players or tradition.

“I was stunned,” he said. “I didn’t think that would happen. Why would you leave this place? He built it up to be a top-five program every year. Not only that, he did it the right way.

“I can’t think of a single reason, and that’s the frustrating part. We’ve lost Kansas’ best treasure in coach Williams. It doesn’t get better than that.”

There won’t be much time to bemoan Williams’ departure. Maddox and Pritchard both said KU needed to move quickly in naming a successor.

“We have to make a good decision,” Pritchard said. “We have to make a prompt decision to keep our current players and our recruits.”

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