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In the interest of speed and timeliness, this story is fed directly from the Associated Press newswire and may contain spelling or grammatical errors.
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Pitt's Howland nearing move to UCLA
Tuesday April 01, 2003
By ALAN ROBINSON AP Sports Writer
PITTSBURGH (AP) The arena isn't as nice, the money would be
about the same, and the players at least now wouldn't be as
good. All those disadvantages apparently won't prevent Pittsburgh
coach Ben Howland from leaving for UCLA.
Howland, who met with UCLA officials Sunday, was talking about a
contract Tuesday, and it wasn't with Pitt. Sources close to Howland
said his representatives were finalizing the details that would
make him the Bruins' next coach UCLA's eighth since John Wooden
coached them to 10 national championships from 1964-75.
Pitt was willing to improve the $5.9 million, seven-year
contract Howland signed only last year, but the sources, speaking
on condition of anonymity, said there were no discussions between
Howland and the school Tuesday.
The Los Angeles Times reported on its Web site Tuesday that
Howland would be introduced as UCLA's coach as early as Wednesday,
following a meeting with chancellor Albert Carnesale. UCLA sports
information director Marc Dellins declined to comment on the
report.
That would follow the timeline Howland spelled out Monday when
he met with his Pitt players and told them he wanted the issue
resolved by Thursday, when he's leaving for the Final Four in New
Orleans.
Howland was an avowed UCLA fan while growing up in Southern
California he played at Cerritos High and only last week he
called the position with the Bruins his ``dream job.''
Howland is nearing the upper echelon of Division I coaching
salaries. Pitt is willing to guarantee him about $1.1 million per
year, and UCLA cannot substantially improve on that. However, it
can offer the prestige of one of the most storied coaching jobs in
any sport, a more fertile recruiting base than Pittsburgh and a
greater opportunity for ancillary income, such as commercial
endorsements.
Howland's biggest concern about UCLA appeared to be the arena
issue. While Pitt just opened a $96 million, luxury-laden arena
that is one of the best in college basketball, UCLA has spent
decades in Pauley Pavilion, which is filled with history but
lacking in amenities.
Howland said last week that Pauley needs substantial upgrades
that might force the Bruins to play one season off-campus. However,
lining up the money for an upgraded arena at a state-supported
university might prove difficult in the immediate future,
especially given the current economic climate.
Howland also wants to take his assistant coaches to UCLA, two of
whom Jamie Dixon and Chris Carlson are native Southern
Californians. Dixon, however, is under consideration for the Wright
State and Illinois State jobs, and he might be a top candidate at
Pitt should Howland leave.
Dixon is Howland's top recruiter Pitt's incoming class of four
recruits is by far its best under Howland and also handled some
of the coaching in practice.
While Howland weighed his tough decision, Pitt also faces one
with his impending departure. The school would have to decide
whether it can afford to hand over the job to a promising but
untested assistant coach such as Dixon, an on-the-rise Division I
coach like Howland was 1999, or an established winner who's already
a head coach.
Howland's departure would be Pitt's second major personnel loss
in only four months. Athletic director Steve Pederson left for alma
mater Nebraska in December after overhauling Pitt's athletic
program. He made numerous personnel changes, built the new
basketball arena and football practice facility, and tore down Pitt
Stadium, moving the Panthers' home football games to Heinz Field.
(Copyright 2003 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)
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