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SportsApril 5, 2011

The Miami coach will follow Mike Anderson as leader of Missouri's basketball program

By ALAN SCHER ZAGIER ~ The Associated Press
Frank Haith has agreed to take over as coach at Missouri, leaving the Miami basketball program after seven seasons. (Associated Press file)
Frank Haith has agreed to take over as coach at Missouri, leaving the Miami basketball program after seven seasons. (Associated Press file)

~ The Miami coach will follow Mike Anderson as leader of Missouri's basketball program

COLUMBIA, Mo. -- Miami coach Frank Haith resigned Monday to take the Missouri job, Hurricanes officials said.

Missouri officials hadn't confirmed the hiring. University curators were scheduled to meet Monday night in a closed session to consider Haith's contract, and an official announcement could come as early as today.

Haith will replace Mike Anderson, who left the Tigers late last month to take over at Arkansas. Haith went 129-101 in seven seasons with the Hurricanes, including 21-15 this season, when they played in the NIT.

The Hurricanes went 43-69 in the Atlantic Coast Conference under Haith and made the NCAA tournament once, losing in the second round in 2008.

"Frank Haith has been a steady leader and made a positive impact on the University of Miami men's basketball program," said Tony Hernandez, Miami's acting athletic director. "We want to wish him well at Missouri and will begin a national search for a new head coach immediately."

Haith's departure means the three most prominent positions in the Miami athletic department will have turned over in a matter of months. Randy Shannon was fired as football coach in November and replaced by Al Golden, and Kirby Hocutt resigned as athletic director in February to take the same job at Texas Tech.

Haith met with Miami's players Monday afternoon to tell them about his decision, and Hernandez said the group was "disappointed." Hernandez, who received word Sunday from Missouri athletic director Mike Alden that the Tigers were talking to Haith, said he doesn't have a timetable to find Haith's replacement.

"My goal would be for it not to last a month, but we're not going to give a definite timeline on that," Hernandez said. "Our goal and our priority is to find the best coach possible in however long that takes."

Hernandez acknowledged the move caught Miami off guard. By midday Monday, he said he had a list of 20 possible candidates.

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Missouri's hiring of Haith comes after the school tried unsuccessfully to lure Purdue's Matt Painter, who wound up staying with the Boilermakers and accepting an eight-year extension. The Tigers have made three consecutive NCAA tournaments, and their 77 wins over the past three seasons is the best such total in school history.

Haith's imminent hiring has surprised and disappointed many Missouri faithful still reeling from the departure of Anderson, who turned down a contract extension and healthy raise to return to Arkansas, where he spent 17 years as a Nolan Richardson assistant.

After Painter's decision, fans, boosters and alumni remained hopeful that Missouri could lure a rising star such as Virginia Commonwealth's Shaka Smart, who agreed to a new contract that was announced Monday; or a proven commodity such as Minnesota's Tubby Smith, who reportedly passed on Missouri's overtures over the weekend.

Also Monday, a pair of junior Missouri starters declared for the NBA draft in a move the school said was not related to the coaching change. Both Laurence Bowers and Kim English have not hired agents, meaning they can return to school next year if their NBA plans don't work out.

A return to the Big 12 may have been part of the lure for Haith. He was an assistant at Texas A&M from 1992 to 1995, then returned to the Aggies as an associate head coach for the 1996-97 season. After leaving for Wake Forest, Haith spent three years on Rick Barnes' staff at Texas before taking the Miami job in 2004.

Even before Haith's hiring became official, some Missouri students spoke Monday afternoon of an organized protest outside the curators' meeting. Others encouraged those upset with the choice to urge curators by email to think twice.

Board member David Wasinger told the St. Louis Post-Dispatch he expects his colleagues to "have a lot of questions" about the surprise hire.

The potential tumult surrounding Monday night's closed-door meeting brings to mind the rancor surrounding Alden's last hire of a men's basketball coach five years ago.

That was when Alden was summoned by curators to explain his handling of Quin Snyder's botched firing -- a task Alden delegated to a team broadcaster -- and fight for his job.

Alden survived that skirmish, and left the meeting to introduce Anderson as Snyder's replacement at a Mizzou Arena ceremony.

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