Adam Zagoria covers basketball at all levels. He is the author of two books and an award-winning journalist whose articles have appeared in ESPN The Magazine, SLAM, Sheridan Hoops, Sports Illustrated, Basketball Times and in newspapers nationwide.
NEW YORK — When St. John’s meets Arizona Thursday in the 2K Sports Classic at Madison Square Garden, one man will have a unique perspective on the East-West matchup.
St. John’s assistant Mike Dunlap once served as the associate head coach at Arizona — and in fact turned down the interim head coaching job there when it was offered to him.
“My experience there from the periphery, it appeared difficult, but I focused on helping that organization then and the report card at the end was surprisingly good,” Dunlap said Wednesday.
“We surprised the fan base and we surprised the administration. So I left on great terms and so it always resonated that when I see people from Arizona they are very kind.”
Dunlap helped the Wildcats reach the Sweet 16 of the NCAA Tournament during the 2008-09 season, in one of the most bizarre coaching tenures in recent memory.
After legendary Arizona coach Lute Olson retired in October 2008, the school offered Dunlap the job on an interim basis. Known as a master strategist and tactician, Dunlap won two national titles at Division II Metro State in Denver and also served two years as an assistant under Denver Nuggets coach George Karl.
But because Dunlap didn’t feel that the commitment was serious enough, he turned it down.
The school then turned to Russ Pennell, a former Arizona State radio commentator, who took the job.
Dunlap stayed on as associate head coach and was frequently seen advising Pennell on the sidelines, even apparently calling substitutions on his own.
An awkward situation for sure, but the team thrived and reached the Sweet 16 before eventually losing to Louisville.
“It helped that the team did as well as it did because, of the teams that ended up matriculating to the 16, we were the surprise team,” Dunlap said.
“The only regret I had was that I was away from my family for nine months. That was uncomfortable every day because I am tight with the family . . . and I didn’t enjoy that.”
A year later, Dunlap moved on to become the associate head coach at Oregon, while Arizona hired Sean Miller.Miller went about reviving Arizona’s tradition and after a 16-15 campaign in his first season, took the Wildcats to the Elite 8 last season where they lost to Kemba Walker and UConn.
“At every stop in his career, Sean Miller’s teams have had a propensity for aggressive man-to-man defense and a tough-minded approach to winning basketball games,” St. John’s coach Steve Lavin said. “I don’t think this team will be any different. They are a reflection of their head coach and he was a great competitor himself and we’ve seen how quickly he restored that program at Arizona back into a national power.”
Dunlap joined Lavin’s staff before the 2010-11 season, and helped the Johnnies make the Big Dance for the first time since 2002.
“I don’t think Coach Lavin could have done better in selecting Mike Dunlap as an assistant coach,” Olson said when Dunlap was hired. “He is one of the outstanding minds in the game. His strengths are in organization and on-the-floor coaching, and he is a great addition to the staff at St. John’s.”
When Lavin was sidelined at the start of this season after undergoing prostate cancer surgery Oct. 6, Dunlap took over the team and coached during its two exhibitions and season-opening win against William & Mary.
“I’m a little bit hardened to it in terms of knowing what coach would want,” Dunlap said last month, referring to the Arizona situation.
“Day by day, obviously Mike is the head honcho as far as the older guy,” St. John’s assistant Rico Hines said then.
Lavin returned to practice Nov. 8, and a day later it was Dunlap who helped prod Lavin to return to the sideline.
“It feels right, come on back,” Dunlap texted Lavin, who was at his home in Manhattan’s SoHo the afternoon of the game.
After trailing by 14 points in the second half, St. John’s churned out a 78-73 victory over Lehigh in this event.
“It was good to be back, but when we’re down 16, I was thinking maybe I should have waited until Sunday,” Lavin said. “Coach Dunlap is the one that kind of nudged me to come back one game earlier than I was originally thinking. He just felt that tonight it would be important to be here and coach this game, and I trust his instincts and his feel – he’s got a good pulse for the team and he’s done an outstanding job as well as the rest of the staff in preparing our players for the rigors ahead. It was good to be back.”
Lavin’s return to the Coaches vs. Cancer event seems especially appropriate, given his own intimate connections to the disease.
“I’ve always had an amplified awareness of how important it is to champion the cause of finding a cure for cancer, and that’s because my grandmother passed of pancreatic cancer, my father had prostate cancer and is a survivor for 21 years now and has also had skin cancer, and my niece, Sophia, lost her right eye to cancer,” Lavin said. “So, before I was even diagnosed with prostate cancer, I had a very personal awareness of how vital and critical it is that we continue to support the fight against cancer.”
So now Lavin and Miller will face off head-to-head, while Dunlap will serve in an advisory capacity.
The one that has suited him so well in recent years.
Adam Zagoria is a Basketball Insider who covers basketball at all levels. A contributor to The New York Times and SportsNet New York (SNY), he is also the author of two books and is an award-winning journalist and filmmaker. His articles have appeared in ESPN The Magazine, SLAM, Sheridan Hoops, Basketball Times and in newspapers nationwide. He also won an Emmy award for his work on the SNY mini-documentary on Syracuse guard Tyus Battle.
A veteran Ultimate Frisbee player, he has competed in numerous National and World Championships and, perhaps more importantly, his teams won the Westchester Summer League (WSL) championships in 2011 and 2013.
He lives in Manhattan with his wife and children.