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Decision
on future of Arkansas basketball coach still pending
By
HARRY KING
Associated Press
LITTLE ROCK,
Ark. Nolan Richardsons bid to keep his job as Arkansas
coach will be decided by the middle of the week.
Richardson and
university President B. Alan Sugg met for more than three hours
Monday, and Sugg said he would decide in a day or two whether to
overturn Chancellor John Whites decision to buy out the last
six years of Richardsons contract for $500,000 a year, about
half its face value.
Im
still in the process of reviewing Dr. Whites decision to terminate,
Sugg said. I have a great deal of personal and professional
respect for Coach Richardson. This is a tough issue, and Ill
do my best to make the very best decision that I can.
Richardson,
who wants to remain as the Razorbacks coach, said the session
was a good meeting.
We presented
our side. When you have a lot to talk about, it takes time,
he said.
At a news conference
after the meeting, Richardson released university documents that
he said showed that, less than two weeks before his contract was
terminated, Sugg and White held him in good standing.
Richardson said
he believed Sugg was unaware of the ... evidence that would
discount the recommendation of White to buy out Richardsons
pact.
Richardson said
he was certain that Sugg was under tremendous pressure to
uphold this earlier decision to terminate me.
John Walker,
Richardsons lawyer, said he was hopeful Sugg would be fair
in the face of a very strong athletic director with a reputation
for outlasting presidents and chancellors.
I do not
believe that it will be easy decision, Walker said.
On March 1,
White said he was buying out Richardsons contract after the
coach said publicly and privately that was what he wanted. Richardson
has said he wants to remain as coach.
Richardsons
contract gave the university the right to end the coachs employment
without giving an excuse.
The meeting
with Sugg didnt start until shortly before noon because Richardson
and his lawyer attended the funeral of U.S. District Judge Henry
Woods.
Richardson and
Woods were friends, and Walker is a lawyer in a Little Rock school
desegregation case that Woods handled for eight years.
After Woods
funeral at Christ the King Catholic Church, many of the 500 mourners
went up to the coach, patted him on the back and wished him well
during his meeting with Sugg. Two women kissed him on the cheek.
Richardson coached
Arkansas for 17 years, leading it to the NCAA tournament 13 times
and the NIT twice. His run included a national championship in 1994,
a runner-up finish the next year and another Final Four appearance.
While the university
has said it was fulfilling Richardsons request to buy out
his contract, Richardson said Friday he did not request a buyout.
I did
not resign or retire, nor did I request to be bought, and I have
not been bought out of my contract, he said in a statement
to The Associated Press.
White announced
the university was buying out Richardsons contract after the
coach said twice publicly following a Feb. 23 loss at Kentucky that,
if the school would buy him out, he would leave. Before the March
1 announcement, Richardson said he wanted to stay.
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