HawkeyeHypnosis
Well-Known Member
Dayton Daily News : Former Butler coach finds a home with the RedHawks
Came across this. From article:
But Lickliter inherited a Hawkeyes program that had been down the year before and had lost two stars. His first two teams went a combined 28-36 and then, after four players transferred, the Hawkeyes — starting two freshmen and two sophomores — went 10-22.
Although Lickliter had a good recruiting class coming in, Iowa officials — further swayed by a dip in attendance — gave him a $2.4 million buyout over three years and fired him.
Sitting in his Millett Hall office — decorated with a newspaper clipping from the Butler glory days, an Iowa sticker on the wall behind his phone, a photo of his son John, a Hawkeyes walk-on, scoring against Purdue and a big poster of a triumphant Cassius Clay after flattening Sonny Liston — Lickliter refused to fire back after his own KO.
“I’ve said almost nothing on the Iowa situation because I don’t want it to sound like excuses,†he said.
The only thing he would say — and he said it with conviction — was that “it was gonna work. It just wasn’t going to work in three years and not without some bumps in the road. But we had a really good class coming in and I believed we had finally gotten it turned.â€
Came across this. From article:
But Lickliter inherited a Hawkeyes program that had been down the year before and had lost two stars. His first two teams went a combined 28-36 and then, after four players transferred, the Hawkeyes — starting two freshmen and two sophomores — went 10-22.
Although Lickliter had a good recruiting class coming in, Iowa officials — further swayed by a dip in attendance — gave him a $2.4 million buyout over three years and fired him.
Sitting in his Millett Hall office — decorated with a newspaper clipping from the Butler glory days, an Iowa sticker on the wall behind his phone, a photo of his son John, a Hawkeyes walk-on, scoring against Purdue and a big poster of a triumphant Cassius Clay after flattening Sonny Liston — Lickliter refused to fire back after his own KO.
“I’ve said almost nothing on the Iowa situation because I don’t want it to sound like excuses,†he said.
The only thing he would say — and he said it with conviction — was that “it was gonna work. It just wasn’t going to work in three years and not without some bumps in the road. But we had a really good class coming in and I believed we had finally gotten it turned.â€