logo
Big fish, different pond: March Madness is Nova SE's time thanks to a coaching giant in Division II

Big fish, different pond: March Madness is Nova SE's time thanks to a coaching giant in Division II

Yahoo26-03-2025

The coach with the best winning percentage in college basketball history won't be anywhere near San Antonio when the Final Four rolls around next week.
By then, Jim Crutchfield might be on a pickleball court. Or maybe playing tennis, the sport that launched one of the NCAA's most colorful and successful coaching careers before it moved into basketball, where the 69-year-old coaching lifer is two wins away from his second Division II title at Nova Southeastern.
Though he operates at a different level than the Izzos, Pitinos and Caliparis who dominate headlines this time of year, Crutchfield — based in South Florida at a school with around 7,000 undergrad students — finds himself playing the same game as all those guys, just smaller, and maybe better.
It involves every-growing piles of NIL money, promises that are sometimes kept, and players coming and going.
What Crutchfield refuses to budge on is that it also involves teaching, learning and, mostly, doing things differently in a profession full of copycats who are navigating a changing industry that none have truly mastered.
'We never won a warm-up in tennis,' Crutchfield, a one-time math teacher, explains about his first big job.
It was a posting he took in the early 1990s at West Liberty University in West Virginia, mainly because nobody else would, and because it gave him a chance to work as an assistant for a not-very-good hoops team that he would eventually take over.
'They were the kind of tennis players nobody wanted to play against," he says of a team that wasn't good when he got there, but went on to win 11 league titles. "They didn't look good, but they're hard to beat. When I got over to the basketball team, I thought, 'We need to have a little of that here, too.''
By breaking the mold, Crutchfield found the key to winning
Crutchfield is a walking embodiment of the old Frank Sinatra classic, 'My Way.'
'Everything I like to do is sort of home grown, even the drills we do,' the coach says. 'But, you know, I didn't invent the game.'
He did invent a version of the full-court press. Not the ones you see on ESPN but one that beats people down for 40 straight minutes — off misses and makes, off inbounds passes and steals. From every direction. All the time.
Teaching it, preaching it, then recruiting the kind of players who are willing to commit to it, is what has led to a 561-86 record over 20 seasons as a head coach. That's an .867 winning percentage. Of every basketball coach with 10 or more years in college, there is no better record.
'It's a rural, podunk D-2 school and he ran with it,' says Jordan Fee, now an assistant at FAU who played for Crutchfield at West Liberty and coached on his staff there and at Nova. "Part of the beauty is, he said 'We're gonna play this way.' Everybody else would say 'You can't do that. You can't sustain that for 40 minutes.' And his thing is 'Why not?' There's a naivete to him that is, like, so beautiful.'
Crutchfield's quintessential drill speaks as much to his time as a coach as a math teacher: He deduced that it's possible for a player trapping in the backcourt with his back turned at the baseline to pivot and sprint to halfcourt in 2.5 seconds. It takes another second to get to the opposite free throw line.
By not hesitating, or taking time to assess and catch their breath, most players can cover those 75 feet in 3.5 seconds. If they do that, Crutchfield knows more times than not, there will be no easy layups on the other end even if the offense breaks the press.
It took about five minutes Tuesday night for Nova's first Elite Eight opponent, Assumption, to buckle. Nova had built a 10-point lead early, stretched it to as many as 25 and coasted in to a 102-93 victory. Next is a semifinal Thursday against Washburn.
'It's part of that brainwashing process," Crutchfield says, only half-kidding. "I'm just trying to convince the guys that if we're going to play this game, because we're all spread out and the basket's unprotected, then we're going to have to do some things differently. Play harder."
The rules for Crutchfield's teams
Fee tells a story about his dad, a veteran high school coach in Pennsylvania, bringing some buddies to a coaching clinic Crutchfield was part of. Their hopes were to find a new drill, a new method, a new way of thinking they could install in their own programs.
They sat there for hours watching 'Coach Crutch' with notebooks in hand. When the session was over, Fee's dad had scribbled down maybe three lines.
'If something's not working, Coach Crutch is a 'play harder' guy," Fee says. "Everybody wants there to be some secret, special sauce, but it's not really there. They don't want an answer like this.'
One way to know it's working: Fee estimates there are 5-10 other D-2 programs across the country using some version of his approach, from Chaminade in Hawaii to Gannon in Pennsylvania to Coker (South Carolina) to Bluefield State (West Virginia) and West Liberty, which lost Tuesday in the national quarterfinals.
Others try to learn from it.
Miami Heat coach Eric Spoelstra is known to drive up I-95 for an occasional visit with Crutchfield, hoping for some insight about getting 15 different people with different agendas on the same page. Miami's former coach, Jim Larrañaga, was a frequent visitor. When Michigan's Dusty May was at FAU, just a short drive away, he'd set up scrimmages against the Sharks.
'I said, 'If nothing else, we'll learn what the hardest-playing team in the country looks like,'' May says.
May says he and Crutchfield went to a coaching clinic that featured several of the game's biggest names — Matt Painter, Billy Donovan, and so on.
'I don't think he knew who 90% of those coaches were,' May says. 'I think he knows, like, who Jerry Tarkanian is, and Bobby Knight."
And Rick Pitino.
Though he mostly made things up on his own, Crutchfield said something clicked when he saw Pitino's 1987 Providence team, led by Donovan, make a Cinderella run to the Final Four on the strength of a full-court press and the then-innovative use of the newly drawn 3-point line.
'I have no idea what Pitino had in mind, but the pressure was more random,' Crutchfield said. 'There was a lot more running from behind. I thought, I like the randomness of that. People are really uncomfortable when you're running with them or behind them as opposed to to a 2-2-1 or a diamond-and-1 press. So I thought, if I ever do get a chance to coach college basketball, that's probably the route I'm going to go,.'"
A coach who likes to build things
In 13 seasons at West Liberty, Crutchfield took a program that had won four games the season before he took over and compiled a record of 359–61 with six trips to the Elite Eight.
A sucker for reclamation projects, he moved to Nova Southeastern, which was coming off a six-win season in 2017. By Crutchfield's second year there, the Sharks were in the Elite Eight. This week, they are going for their third trip to the final and second national title in three years.
Not bad for a program that lost four players to bigger programs offering better name, image and likeness compensation deals after the Sharks went undefeated in 2023. In Division II, schools can offer some scholarship help and some NIL money. They can't compete with what's happening at the next level up.
Crutchfield wonders how much longer he'll be able to keep rebuilding in today's atmosphere. He's not ready to stop trying.
'I'm kind of old school,' he said. "I like to develop players into a system. I think that's the way to win.'
___
AP March Madness bracket: https://apnews.com/hub/ncaa-mens-bracket and coverage: https://apnews.com/hub/march-madness. Get poll alerts and updates on the AP Top 25 throughout the season. Sign up here.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Rocket Classic field: Patrick Cantlay, Keegan Bradley, Min Woo Lee join PGA Tour in Detroit
Rocket Classic field: Patrick Cantlay, Keegan Bradley, Min Woo Lee join PGA Tour in Detroit

Yahoo

time2 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Rocket Classic field: Patrick Cantlay, Keegan Bradley, Min Woo Lee join PGA Tour in Detroit

The 2025 Rocket Classic just got a jolt of star power. The PGA Tour's annual stop in Detroit announced more player commitments Monday, June 2, for the tournament June 26-29 at Detroit Golf Club, with the headliners including U.S. Ryder Cup captain Keegan Bradley, Patrick Cantlay, Max Homa, Min Woo Lee, a fan favorite last year, Tom Kim and Aaron Rai. Advertisement Cantlay, No. 16 in the Official World Golf Ranking, and Bradley, No. 17, join Collin Morikawa, No. 4 in the world and a two-time major winner, to form a more robust 2025 field. Last year's tournament field did not have a player ranked among the world's top 20 for the first time in its six-year history, with Cameron Young the top player at No. 23. (Dustin Johnson at the 2019 Rocket was ranked No. 2 in the world, the highest-ranked golfer to ever play the tournament. He missed the cut.) Morikawa, the top-ranked player in this year's field, lost in heartbreaking fashion in his only appearance in Detroit in 2023 to Rickie Fowler in a three-man playoff. Patrick Cantlay putts on the 5th green during Round 1 of the Rocket Mortgage Classic at the Detroit Golf Club in Detroit on Thurs., July 28, 2022. Cantlay finished tied for second in 2022, his lone appearance in Detroit, five strokes behind winner Tony Finau. Bradley tied for 21st in 2023 and tied for 14th in 2021. Lee and Rai finished tied for second last year. Advertisement Australia's Cam Davis is the defending champion, rallying to win last year on Akshay Bhatia's shocking three-putt. Davis is the only two-time Rocket winner in Detroit. Cam Davis lifts up the trophy to celebrate winning Rocket Mortgage Classic at Detroit Golf Club in Detroit on Sunday, June 30, 2024. Others in the field include past Rocket champions Davis (2024, 2021), Fowler (2023), Finau (2022) and Nate Lashley (2019), along with veterans Zach Johnson and Brandt Snedeker. Bryson DeChambeau, the tournament's 2020 winner, remains barred from playing on the PGA Tour after defecting to rival LIV Golf in 2022. Also in this year's field is NCAA Division 1 individual champion Michael La Sasso, an Ole Miss junior. More commitments will take place up until a week before the tournament, when the 150-plus-man field begins to finalize, including the winner of The John Shippen on June 21-22 at Detroit Golf Club. Sixteen Black golfers will compete over 36 holes for one spot into the Rocket Classic. Advertisement The Tour's seventh playing of the tournament at the Donald Ross-designed Detroit Golf Club has a $9.6 million purse. Right after this year's tournament, Detroit Golf Club will undergo a $16 million renovation under the direction of architect Tyler Rae. More than 100 trees will be removed, native grasses and ditches will be added, greens will be moved and enlarged and bunkers will be added. The changes, the first major transformation of the club's North Course since it opened more than a century ago, will be revealed at the 2026 Rocket Classic. Follow the Detroit Free Press on Instagram (@detroitfreepress), TikTok (@detroitfreepress), YouTube (@DetroitFreePress), X (@freep), and LinkedIn, and like us on Facebook (@detroitfreepress). Stay connected and stay informed. Become a Detroit Free Press subscriber. Advertisement Submit a letter to the editor at and we may publish it online or in print. This article originally appeared on Detroit Free Press: Rocket Classic field 2025: Patrick Cantlay, Keegan Bradley commit

Mavericks' Cooper Flagg 'Mistake' Turns Heads on Friday
Mavericks' Cooper Flagg 'Mistake' Turns Heads on Friday

Yahoo

time2 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Mavericks' Cooper Flagg 'Mistake' Turns Heads on Friday

Mavericks' Cooper Flagg 'Mistake' Turns Heads on Friday originally appeared on Athlon Sports. Even before he committed to the Duke Blue Devils, Cooper Flagg had been touted as a possible first overall pick in the 2025 NBA Draft. Nothing Flagg did at Duke – picking up ACC Player of the Year, leading the Blue Devils to the Final Four, or earning consensus All-American honors – dissuaded fans, analysts or scouts of that opinion. Advertisement Less than two weeks remain until commissioner Adam Silver begins the draft, in which the Dallas Mavericks hold the top pick after a stunning draft lottery result. However, 12 days before they can officially select Flagg, it appears as if the Mavericks have already telegraphed their choice. DLLS Mavericks reporter Kevin Gray posted on X a screenshot from Mavs' official website that displayed Flagg in Dallas' white home jersey – part of a premature "Welcome to Dallas" graphic that was quickly removed from the team's site. Gray later deleted the screenshot, as well as a screen-recorded iPhone video that "proved" he had navigated to the Mavericks' draft night portal on the team website, where he encountered the Flagg graphic. It is not uncommon for social media teams to prepare graphics well in advance for a major announcement, such as the Mavericks selecting Flagg. Advertisement When one fan on X asked if the Mavericks could get into trouble for posting the graphic erroneously, @KevinTroyGA wrote "they'll just say it was a publishing error, that they created several graphics & have them ready to go for whoever is drafted (which, when you're not picking first, you indeed will do)." As @Michael_Aranda pointed out on X, the section of the website where the Flagg announcement was published was supposed to be a landing page for the Mavericks' draft party. "This is clearly just a publishing mistake on the website," Aranda said. Still, other fans bashed the Mavericks for the mistake. Advertisement "The Mavs stay embarrassing themselves," wrote @blondie101317, criticizing the franchise for the error. "Announcing it 12 days early is wild," wrote @timthebim123. Although it won't be a surprise if Dallas picks Flagg first overall on June 25, some fans see a "silver lining" in such an early announcement of the Mavericks' intentions. "Looks like Nico (Harrison) got tired of the 'Nico is going to trade Cooper Flagg' that he figured let's just get out there to stop that talk," wrote @theGOATsPR, about Dallas' general manager, Nico Harrison. The @MavsFilmRoom even mentioned that if Flagg were to wear the #32 as the graphic suggested, then he would be the first Mavericks player to wear the jersey number since Marquese Chriss during the 2021-22 NBA season. Advertisement Related: Dwight Howard Urges Cooper Flagg to Return to Duke Amid $28 Million News This story was originally reported by Athlon Sports on Jun 13, 2025, where it first appeared.

Tennessee softball coach Karen Weekly calls out tampering in NCAA transfer portal
Tennessee softball coach Karen Weekly calls out tampering in NCAA transfer portal

USA Today

time2 hours ago

  • USA Today

Tennessee softball coach Karen Weekly calls out tampering in NCAA transfer portal

Tennessee softball coach Karen Weekly calls out tampering in NCAA transfer portal Show Caption Hide Caption Texas Tech softball coach Gerry Glasco addresses fans back in Lubbock Texas Tech softball finished 54-14 and runner-up at the Women's College World Series. It was Gerry Glasco's first season as Red Raiders' head coach. Tennessee softball coach Karen Weekly on June 13 voiced her opinion against tampering in the NCAA transfer portal — and how teams have used NIL to land players. "I think we can all agree on 2 things: 1) women making money in sports is awesome and long overdue; 2) contacting players (directly or indirectly) before their season ends and signing them to NIL deals before they enter the portal is wrong," Weekly wrote on X (formerly Twitter). REQUIRED READING: NiJaree Canady NIL deal: Texas Tech ace signs new deal during WCWS championship series run Weekly's post on X (formerly Twitter) made a point that players in women's sports making money isn't the problem: Tampering is. "Money isn't the issue — tampering is!" I think we can all agree on 2 things: 1) women making money in sports is awesome and long overdue; 2) contacting players (directly or indirectly) before their season ends and signing them to NIL deals before they enter the portal is wrong. Money isn't the issue - tampering is! — Karen Weekly (@KarenWeekly) June 13, 2025 Weekly did not call out any specific team or reference any specific player, though her post did come less than 24 hours after Texas Tech softball and Gerry Glasco landed a commitment Lady Vols third baseman Taylor Pannell. The All-American announced she was transferring to Texas Tech after entering the portal that same day. Pannell had a career season in 64 games this season for Tennessee. Named to the All-SEC First Team selection, she finished with a career-best .398 batting average with 74 hits, 65 RBIs and 16 home runs. Weekly's comments also come at a time that Texas Tech has been active in the transfer portal since losing to No. 6 Texas in Game 3 of the WCWS championship series on June 6. Texas Tech has landed Ohio State starting catcher Jasmyn Burns, UCLA pitcher Kaitlyn Terry, Florida All-American Mia Williams and former Southern Illinois standout infielder Jackie Lis. Texas Tech officially announced the additions of Williams, Terry and Lis on June 13. In total, Texas Tech has added three All-Americans and three of On3's top 10 players in the transfer portal to its 2026 roster to pair with star ace NiJaree Canady. As noted by Knox News, part of the USA TODAY Network, Texas Tech will reportedly pay its players $55 million among all its programs next year between revenue sharing and NIL. The Red Raiders' NIL collective, The Matador Club, has not been shy about committing money to softball in the last year, which is considered by many to be a non-revenue sport. The first notable financial commitment The Matador Club made to softball was Canady, the former Stanford star pitcher who transferred to Texas Tech ahead of the 2025 season and signed an NIL deal worth over $1 million with the Red Raiders. Canady single-handedly pitched Texas Tech to its first-ever WCWS and WCWS finals appearances this year. She re-signed with the Red Raiders ahead of Game 3 vs. Texas on another lucrative, record-breaking NIL deal. According to ESPN, Canady's new NIL deal is another seven-figure NIL deal for the upcoming 2026 season, while On3's Pete Nakos reported it is worth at least $1.2 million. Tennessee finished 47-17 overall on the season and advanced to the WCWS semifinals in Weekly's 24th season at the helm of the program.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store