Pat Knight

Pat Knight

Pat Knight (right) with his father Bob Knight (center)
Sport(s) Basketball
Biographical details
Born (1970-09-21) September 21, 1970
Playing career
1991–1995 Indiana
Coaching career (HC unless noted)
1998 Wisconsin Blast
1998 Columbus Cagerz
1999–2000 Indiana (asst.)
2001–2003 Texas Tech (asst.)
2004–2008 Texas Tech (assoc. HC)
2008–2011 Texas Tech
2011–2014 Lamar
2014–present Indiana Pacers (scout)
Head coaching record
Overall 79–123

Patrick "Pat" Knight (born September 21, 1970) is a scout for the Indiana Pacers professional basketball team in the National Basketball Association. Knight assumed his current position on July 1, 2014, and is the Pacers' college scout for the West Coast Region.[1]

Formerly, he was an American college basketball coach. He became the coach of the Lamar Cardinals basketball team on April 5, 2011,[2] but was fired on February 16, 2014. He was previously the head coach of the Texas Tech Red Raiders men's basketball team until March 7, 2011.[3] Prior to that, he served in other coaching, administrative and scouting capacities with United States Basketball League, International Basketball Association, NCAA, NBA, and CBA teams. Knight is the son of Basketball Hall of Fame member Bob Knight, and replaced his father as Texas Tech's 13th head coach on February 4, 2008.[4]

Biography

Playing career

Knight played basketball at Bloomington High School North and then went on to play college basketball for the Indiana University Hoosiers from 1991 to 1995 under his father, lettering during four seasons. From 1991-93, the Hoosiers posted 87 victories, the most by any Big Ten team in a three-year span, breaking the mark of 86 set by Bob Knight's Indiana teams of 1974-76. During the 1991-92 season they reached the Final Four. During the 1992-93 season, the 31-4 Hoosiers won the Big Ten and finished the season at the top of the AP Poll, but were defeated by Kansas in the Elite Eight. Knight scored 138 points in 112 games played, a 1.2 points-per-game average.[5] Knight graduated in 1995 with a degree in sports management.[6]

Coaching career

Knight was head coach of the Wisconsin Blast of the International Basketball Association and the Columbus Cagerz of the United States Basketball League before taking assistant coaching positions at Indiana, Akron and Texas Tech. He was also an administrative assistant and scout with the NBA's Phoenix Suns and an assistant coach with the Connecticut Pride of the Continental Basketball Association.[6][7]

Texas Tech

In 2005, Pat Knight was designated to succeed his father as head coach of the Texas Tech Red Raiders, assuming that role on February 4, 2008 when Bob Knight abruptly retired.[8] Pat Knight has used the motion offense and man-to-man defense, both of which he learned from his father as a player at Indiana and as an assistant coach.[9]

After taking the head coaching job midseason, his initial two games were defeats on the road. The first was an 80–74 loss to Baylor on February 6, 2008. The second came three days later at Nebraska. Knight's first head coaching win came at home when the Red Raiders upset #18 Kansas State, 84–75, at United Spirit Arena. Going into the game, KSU was in sole possession of first place in the Big 12.[10] The win came on what had earlier been declared Pat Knight Day by Lubbock mayor David Miller.[11] On March 1, 2008, the Red Raiders again defeated the top team in the conference by beating #5 Texas, 83–80, ending a month-long, eight-game winning streak for the Longhorns.[12][13]

The Red Raiders finished the regular season with back-to-back losses, first at Kansas and then to Baylor. At the 2008 Big 12 Men's Basketball Tournament, they added another loss, to Oklahoma State, in the first round. The team did not receive an invitation to play at either the NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Championship or at the National Invitation Tournament. Texas Tech did get an invitation to the inaugural College Basketball Invitational, but declined the offer.[14]

In the third game of the 2008–09 season, Tech defeated Division II opponent East Central University 167–115, setting a new school record for most points scored in a game. The previous record of 128 was set in the double overtime victory over Texas on February 20, 1994. The combined total of 282 points also became a new record.[15][16]

During the 2008–09 season, Knight was reprimanded twice for altercations with officials. In a home game against Nebraska, Knight ran onto the court to argue with officials after Texas Tech player Alan Voskuil was called for a foul. After receiving two technical fouls, Knight was ejected from the game. Once in the tunnel, Knight ran back onto the court to continue arguing.[17] Knight was not suspended, rather receiving a public reprimand from the Big 12 Conference.[18]

Knight was then suspended one game for his criticism of officiating in a game against Texas A&M.[19][20]

On March 7, 2011, Texas Tech fired Pat Knight.[3]

Lamar

On April 5, 2011, Lamar University hired Pat Knight as head coach.[21]

On February 23, 2012 during a post-game press conference following a 62-52 loss to Stephen F. Austin State University, Knight berated his team's seniors, saying that, in his opinion, they were the worst group of seniors he'd ever coached.[22] The Lamar squad went on to win the final three games of the season and the Southland Conference East Division Championship. Though Knight never apologized for his comments, he said he was proud of the way his seniors responded after the criticism. "They're the ones that deserve the credit," he said.[23] Knight led Lamar to its first 20-win season since 1988 and a third-place finish in the conference. Lamar would go on to win the Southland Conference Tournament and earn their first NCAA appearance since 2000. Lamar qualified to play one of the "First Four" opening round games, but lost to Vermont. In a post-game interview, Knight tearfully complimented his seniors, calling them the "under-the-bus-gang," referring to his earlier criticism of them.

The following season, after those seniors graduated, Knight led Lamar to a 3-28 season (a .107 winning percentage) in 2012-13.[24] He experienced similar difficulty in 2013-14, coaching the Cardinals to a 3-22 record. With five games still remaining on the season schedule, he was fired on February 16, 2014.

Coaching record

Season Team Overall Conference Standing Postseason
Texas Tech Red Raiders (Big 12 Conference) (2008–2011)
2007–08 Texas Tech 4–7* 4–6 T–7th
2008–09 Texas Tech 14–19 3–13 11th
2009–10 Texas Tech 19–16 4–12 T–9th NIT Quarterfinals
2010–11 Texas Tech 13–19 5–11 T–10th
Texas Tech: 50–61 16–42

* Knight became coach mid-way through the season

Lamar Cardinals (Southland Conference) (2011–2014)
2011–12 Lamar 23–12 11–5 1st (East) NCAA First Four
2012–13 Lamar 3-28 1-17 10th
2013–14 Lamar 3-22 2-11 12th
Lamar: 29–62 14–33
Total: 79–123 (.391)

      National champion         Postseason invitational champion  
      Conference regular season champion         Conference regular season and conference tournament champion
      Division regular season champion       Division regular season and conference tournament champion
      Conference tournament champion

Source:[25]

Personal life

Knight and the former Amanda Shaw were married on May 10, 2002.[6]

References

  1. http://www.indystar.com/story/sports/nba/pacers/2014/07/05/pacers-hire-former-lamar-coach-pat-knight-as-a-scout/12252507/
  2. http://sports.espn.go.com/ncb/news/story?id=6189498
  3. 1 2 Green, James. "TTU fires basketball coach Pat Knight". KCBD, NewsChannel 11 Lubbock. Retrieved 2011-03-07.
  4. Walker, Jeff (2008-02-04). "Knight resigns effective immediately". Lubbock Avalanche-Journal. Retrieved 2008-02-04.
  5. http://www.totalbasketballstats.com/Player.asp?id=10526
  6. 1 2 3 Player Bio: Pat Knight :: Men's Basketball
  7. Groomed as Successor, Pat Knight Takes Reins - New York Times
  8. Bob Knight Resigns as Coach of Texas Tech - New York Times
  9. "Pat Knight in 1st full season at Texas Tech".
  10. Coleman, Adam (2008-02-14). "Pat Knight earns first win as head coach". The Daily Toreador. Retrieved 2008-02-14.
  11. Martin, Jeffrey (2008-02-15). "Pat Knight changing culture at Texas Tech". Fox Sports. Retrieved 2008-02-16.
  12. Fallas, Bernardo (2008-03-01). "Tech halts UT's win streak with 83-80 victory". Houston Chronicle. Retrieved 2008-03-01.
  13. Griffin, Tim (2008-06-03). "Pat Knight proving he's not quite like his father". ESPN. Retrieved 2008-06-03.
  14. Knocked Out! Texas Tech's season over after failing to get NIT bid
  15. "Men's basketball: Texas Tech 167, East Central 115".
  16. "Red Raider men's basketball knocks out East Central in record-setting victory".
  17. Walker, Jeff (2009-02-02). "Big 12 reprimands Knight". Lubbock Avalanche-Journal. Retrieved 2009-03-18.
  18. "Big 12 Conference Reprimands Texas Tech Men's Basketball Coach Pat Knight". Big12Sports.com. 2009-02-02. Retrieved 2009-03-18.
  19. "Texas Tech coach suspended after ripping refs".
  20. "Tech's Knight suspended 1 game". Associated Press. ESPN.com. Retrieved 2009-03-18.
  21. "Pat Knight hired as Lamar's coach". ESPN.com. Retrieved 6 April 2011.
  22. "Pat Knight's rant may be the news conference of the year". The Dagger: College Basketball Blog. Retrieved 24 February 2012.
  23. Chris Dabe (March 2, 2012). "Knight credits seniors for post-rant success". Beaumont Enterprise. Retrieved 3 March 2012.
  24. http://espn.go.com/mens-college-basketball/team/schedule/_/id/2320/lamar-cardinals
  25. "Big 12 Record Book" (PDF) (Press release). Big 12 Sports. Retrieved 2008-02-04.
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