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Kruger wraps coaching career OU men’s basketball head coach announces retirement after decade of leading Sooners, 35 years of rebuilding collegiate programs
MASON YOUNG @Mason_Young_0
CHANDLER ENGELBRECHT @ctengelbrecht
AUSTIN CURTRIGHT @AustinCurtright
Lon Kruger knew Oklahoma would be the final stop of his coaching career. In 2011, Kruger was coming off his fifth consecutive season with 20 or more wins at UNLV — the fifth school he left in a better position than he found it. Pleased with his present position, he twice denied athletics director Joe Castiglione’s offer to come to Norman. Castiglione needed a coach to return the Sooners to basketball prominence after the firing of Jeff Capel and a finding that put OU on probation for three years due to recruiting violations. In the two seasons before his arrival, OU had gone 27-36. Kruger, known for rebuilding basketball programs and for his positivity on and off the court, was uniquely qualified for the job and what it would require. Castiglione was determined to get him. Fast forward through 10 years, seven NCAA Tournament appearances and a Final Four , and Kruger — who retired March 25 — ultimately delivered for OU. Back then, the opportunity for Kruger and his wife, Barb, both Kansas natives, to return to the Midwest was too much to pass up when he finally took Castiglione’s offer. Kruger’s return to the region gave him an opportunity to recruit the players to compete for one last Final Four, which he did during the 2015-16 season. “He’s made us feel like he was never anywhere else,” OU President Joseph Harroz said Friday. “And he’s made us better. And I’m honored to know Lon as a friend (and) as a person.” Now, after 45 years of coaching,
OU coach Lon Kruger waits for the senior day ceremony before a game against West Virginia on March 2, 2019.
Kruger, who’d been rumored to be contemplating retirement for the past few years, has walked away from the game he navigated like few others. Kruger said after former OU assistant Lew Hill’s death Feb. 7, he started to think more seriously about hanging it up. Oklahoma’s season ended Monday, news broke Thursday and Friday morning the Sooners held a Zoom press conference — eight days after seeing women’s coach Sherri Coale also retire — where Kruger, accompanied by Castiglione and Harroz, discussed his decision. Kruger’s contract, worth over $3
million, runs through June 2024, making him the athletic department’s highest paid figure besides football coach Lincoln Riley. Next, he’ll return to Las Vegas to spend more time around his grandkids after his son, Kevin, was promoted to head coach at UNLV on Sunday, March 21. “Once his son took the job he took, I was dreading the phone call from (Castiglione),” Harroz said. “That indicated that Coach Kruger was going to be retiring and then (Kruger) called me and I felt like not taking the phone call, but decided I probably should.” Kruger is among college
basketball’s elite in many eyes not just for what he did, but how he did it. He goes out with a 674-432 career record, including a 195128 mark at OU, the fourth-best in program history. He was the first coach to take five different teams to the NCAA Tournament and the only coach to win a tournament game with all five. He’s also the only person to take four teams to the Sweet 16 or beyond since the NCAA Tournament expanded to 64 teams in 1985. His teams made 20 combined tournaments in his 35 years as a college head coach. After playing point guard at Kansas State from 1971-74, Kruger
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entered coaching as an assistant at Pittsburg State and subsequently returned to Kansas State. He became head coach at Texas Pan American, now Texas Rio Grande Valley, in 1982 before a head coaching return to Kansas State and then stops at Florida, Illinois and the NBA’s Atlanta Hawks. Following one season as a New York Knicks assistant, he returned to the college ranks where he resurrected UNLV before jumping to OU. Before Kruger’s first season at each of the six colleges he see RETIRE page 4
Norman rallies against anti-Asian hate OU community, city leaders denounce racist violence ALEXIA ASTON @alexiaaston
CALEB MCCOURRY @CalebMac21
Norman and OU community members responded to the March 16 Atlanta, Georgia shooting with demonstrations and discussions this weekend, focusing on the increase in anti-Asian violence and discrimination, along with ways to further support their community. The Atlanta shooting occurred outside the Gold Spa, where eight individuals were killed. Six of the victims were Asian and the other two were white, according to The New York Times. While FBI Director Christopher Wray has expressed doubt that the Atlanta shooting was racially motivated, anti-Asian hate crimes in the United States increased by nearly 150 percent in 2020 according to NBC News. A trio of OU students organized a rally on the evening of March 27, sharing their experiences with race as Asian Americans. The group held a demonstration along Main Street in support of Asian and Pacific Islander communities. Despite the relentless wind, about one hundred participants attended the rally, creating a chant that overpowered the sound of oncoming traffic and forced drivers
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An attendee holds up a sign during a moment of silence at the Stop Asian Hate Rally at Legacy Trail Park on March 27.
to turn their attention to the colorful signs reading “Stop anti-Asian violence” and “Empower Asian voices.” Rally organizer and sociology graduate student Haifan Xiao said she decided to host the rally because she was “deeply affected” by the Atlanta shooting. “We know that the Atlanta shooting is not an isolated incident,” Xiao said. “Since the pandemic, there were 3,800 anti-Asian incidents that were reported last year. We cannot live in fear.” Xiao said she and two other graduate sociology students, Tiffanie Vo and Sally Wiser, created the rally with support from the OU Department of Sociology, with faculty members assisting in
the organization of the event and providing disposable masks and microphones. The rally began with a brief introduction by Vo followed by an 80-second moment of silence — 10 seconds dedicated to each victim of the Atlanta shooting. During the rally, Xiao said she felt overwhelmed with sorrow and helplessness when she first heard the news of the shooting the following morning. “I sat on the floor and continued to ask myself, with tears, ‘Can’t this world be better,’” Xiao said. “I know that my friends and I have been living in fear since (the) pandemic. We are so fearful of the potential attacks that might happen to us. The Atlanta shooting makes me think
that we Asians really cannot keep living this kind of life.” Xiao said she felt obligated to stand up for the Asian community and to speak out despite having no experience organizing a rally in the United States as an international student. “Being Asian is not a virus. We are good people,” Xiao said. “Racism is a virus.” OU law student Myong McClintock said although she was born in Oklahoma and raised in Norman, she feels like a foreigner. She said during her childhood, she was afraid of standing out and even went by the name “Michelle.” “For lunch, instead of taking rice and kimchi or whatever other Korean food my mom had prepared, I would take sandwiches and bags of chips,” McClintock said. “English is my first language. I do speak Korean, but as an adolescent, no one would have ever known that because I hid that.” Despite efforts to hide her Asian identity in her youth, McClintock said she was still victim to anti-Asian sentiment in middle school. “A group of students thought it would be really funny to throw handfuls of dried rice at me and yell, ‘Eat rice bitch,’” McClintock said. “When I was upset my peers looked at me and said, ‘Why are you upset? You have no reason to be crying.’” There has long been a lack of understanding from other communities on the specific issues that “plague” the Asian American and Pacific Islander community,
McClintock said — like fetishization and objectification. OU administrators attended the rally in support of students, including Vice President for Student Affairs and Dean of Students David Surratt and Dean of the College of International Studies Scott Fritzen. As the initial feelings following such instances of hate fade, Surratt said, more sustainable, positive ideals will push affected communities forward to facilitate healing and lasting change. “Once that idea of anger and fear goes away, recognize that love and duty and honor will sustain us and continue to push us forward and allow us to make the changes that we want to continue to make changes with,” Surratt said. OU Dean of International Studies Scott Fritzen said it’s important for everyone, but especially white people in positions of authority, to use their power to do something different. “We can’t just be outraged, (and) we can’t be passive bystanders. We have to do something, and that starts with speaking,” Fritzen said. “It starts with respecting each other in the communities we live in.” With targeted hate crimes rising exponentially since the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic and a longer history of discrimination in the United States, now is a vital time for Asian Americans to fight against the injustices against their community, Vo said. “Don’t tell me it’s not (the) Asian American community’s time to see AAPI page 2