"Jim Haney" was the head basketball coach at University of Oregon from 1978 to 1983. Haney resigned after five years because of his uninspiring record. The University of Oregon basketball program had a record of 52-80, including 26-61 in the Pac-10 conference while Haney was the head coach. Haney also served as an assistant coach at the University of Kansas. Haney served as the commissioner for the Missouri Valley Conference for three years, and eventually, as the executive director for the National Association of Basketball Coaches.

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I think it was just a general reluctance to change. But the coaches were able to communicate with their athletic directors why this rule made sense. Then it gained more and more support.

The revelations surrounding the firings this past six months were much more than just breaking a rule.

Tivoli was a good fit because it's already monitoring and managing our internal environment, ... We know that if we get alarms that someone is trying to hack into our environment, we already have the [Tivoli Enterprise] infrastructure in place that does centralized alarming, alerting escalation, and paging.

Our plan isn't to threaten them, but we want to address raising the standards on how their programs are administered and managed so that these kinds of incidents are true to what we say -- that it is a small number of coaches involved and the vast majority of guys are doing it well.

The NABC is thrilled that the NCAA is taking a leadership role in the hurricane relief effort, ... We would expect that all other coaches associations would link arm-in-arm with the NCAA in a show of support as this very important effort moves forward.

Great for college basketball.

From the standpoint that identifies there are circumstances that are beyond control of the coach, (and) you can't hold the coach accountable, I think this is very positive.

This is the position of the board: Hands off, ... We want to help these schools get back on their feet, not hurt them.