Come on...you're suggesting that the one-time chair throwing incident, or the profanity he was heard using in a game against Lou Henson's Illini was equivalent to player abuse?
But in reality, you are making my point for me. Knight's abusive, self-destructive behavior issues date back to the 1970's. I think he is still wanted by police in Puerto Rico for assaulting a cop in 1979. Here are just some of his incidents of abusive behavior-
Yet, despite all those well-known abusive and threatening incidents dating back to the early 1970's, and many more that were kept behind closed doors by the Indiana administration, Knight was never admonished or disciplined one single time until 2000, just a few months before he was fired.
Everyone knew for decades that Knight was abusive, and he had numerous run-ins with fans, media, players, opposingr coaches, team personnel, and others. But everyone at Indiana looked the other way or made excuses, because "he won games and graduated his players".
It was never an issue until the end of the final season (1999-2000) he was at Indiana. He had failed to advance past the second round of the NCAA Tournament for his last 6 seasons, and failed to advance past the 1st round in 4 of those 6 seasons. Indiana was used to winning championships, and when Knight was no longer winning or competing for championships, his behavior suddenly was no longer tolerable and became a national embarassment.
The "zero tolerance" policy happened in April, 2000. After several well-publicized embarrassing public incidents, allegations arose that he had choked a former player. This had been alleged for a couple years, but Knight denied it. Then in April, 2000, after Knight had coached what turned out to be his final game at IU, a video surfaced that showed the choking incident. Even then, the IU president only suspended him for 3 games and issued the "zero tolerance" policy, when any other coach in college basketball history would have been fired.
Then, just a few months later there was another incident on campus where he physically abused a student, and because he was under the "zero tolerance" policy, Knight was fired. So the warnings and the "zero tolerance" were not a longstanding policy as you seem to be trying to suggest. In fact, Indiana looked the other way for decades regarding Knight's well-known bad behavior, before they finally were forced to act due to the embarrassing bad publicity in April, 2000. And even then, if he had just kept winning championships, I doubt he would have been fired.
But in reality, you are making my point for me. Knight's abusive, self-destructive behavior issues date back to the 1970's. I think he is still wanted by police in Puerto Rico for assaulting a cop in 1979. Here are just some of his incidents of abusive behavior-
Yet, despite all those well-known abusive and threatening incidents dating back to the early 1970's, and many more that were kept behind closed doors by the Indiana administration, Knight was never admonished or disciplined one single time until 2000, just a few months before he was fired.
Everyone knew for decades that Knight was abusive, and he had numerous run-ins with fans, media, players, opposingr coaches, team personnel, and others. But everyone at Indiana looked the other way or made excuses, because "he won games and graduated his players".
It was never an issue until the end of the final season (1999-2000) he was at Indiana. He had failed to advance past the second round of the NCAA Tournament for his last 6 seasons, and failed to advance past the 1st round in 4 of those 6 seasons. Indiana was used to winning championships, and when Knight was no longer winning or competing for championships, his behavior suddenly was no longer tolerable and became a national embarassment.
The "zero tolerance" policy happened in April, 2000. After several well-publicized embarrassing public incidents, allegations arose that he had choked a former player. This had been alleged for a couple years, but Knight denied it. Then in April, 2000, after Knight had coached what turned out to be his final game at IU, a video surfaced that showed the choking incident. Even then, the IU president only suspended him for 3 games and issued the "zero tolerance" policy, when any other coach in college basketball history would have been fired.
Then, just a few months later there was another incident on campus where he physically abused a student, and because he was under the "zero tolerance" policy, Knight was fired. So the warnings and the "zero tolerance" were not a longstanding policy as you seem to be trying to suggest. In fact, Indiana looked the other way for decades regarding Knight's well-known bad behavior, before they finally were forced to act due to the embarrassing bad publicity in April, 2000. And even then, if he had just kept winning championships, I doubt he would have been fired.
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