Friday, July 13, 2007

And then there were ... four?

Hey folks... Just working on the latest in the BU saga and trying to track down the short list of candidates who will be interviewed next week for the vacant men's basketball position. I have a lock on a few of them but, as I'm sure you can understand, can't post here until I've done it for my newspaper. Let's just say there appear to be no big-time names in the mix with respect to CIS experience.

In a follow up to the last post, the university did in fact make it a one-year term post (as I disagreed with) but the director of athletics said they received more applications than past years. That move tells me in my heart of hearts that they're going to allow assistant coach Mike Raimbault to take the reins for a year and see how it goes. That's just my gut feeling but let's be honest here, I am rarely right.

Here's the last story that appeared in the Sun:

Brandon University is wasting little time in trying to fill its vacant men’s head coaching position.

Less than a week after posting the job, the university closed the application process on Monday and began short-listing candidates on Tuesday for the position that was left open when Barnaby Craddock resigned on June 27 to take the University College of Fraser Valley head coaching position.

A handful of people with past connections to BU were among the applicants but none were short-listed, the Brandon Sun has learned.

Multiple sources requesting anonymity told the Sun that former all-Canadian Bobcats Keith Vassell and Joey Vickery were among the applicants and Vickery confirmed he applied but was not among the candidates BU officials are going to interview.

“I know what I’m capable of and I’ll take my services to Europe,” Vickery, a veteran in the Euro pro leagues, said in a telephone interview from Winnipeg. “They take people that are no doubt qualified and they don’t go through a lot of the steps that Canada goes through. ... (In Europe) they see the very good possibility of me being a good coach because they see what I do as a player.”

Reached via email, former Bobcat Gil Cheung — a five-year team member and former assistant coach at BU — also confirmed he was not short-listed and said he was disappointed by the school’s decision.

Former BU men’s and women’s assistant coach Steve Baur — now the assistant men’s coach at Acadia — applied for the job but was also not short-listed, Baur confirmed.
Mike Raimbault, who served as Craddock’s assistant the past two seasons, has been short-listed, according to sources. A message for Raimbault was not immediately returned Tuesday.

Craddock made no secret of the fact that Raimbault would be his pick to succeed him, but BU athletics director Rick Nickelchok said any recommendations are taken with a grain of salt.

“These decisions are committee decisions, so I certainly respect his opinion but a committee will decide who the best replacement is,” Nickelchok said. “I’m not taking anything away from Barnaby. That’s just the way the process is.”

Nickelchok did not divulge an exact number, but said the quantity of resumes submitted was more than in past years. When Craddock was hired two years ago, Nickelchok told the Brandon Sun at the time that there were 20 applications received.

“It was a very healthy number of applications,” Nickelchok said. “More so than past years.”

This time around, the job was posted as a one-year term position, meaning the school will have to re-post the job nationally again next year. After Craddock quit, the school was rushed into a hiring process and Nickelchok said that was the reason BU decided to be non-committal past this coming season. The school is now looking for its fourth head coach in five years.

“The one-year term is based on the timing of the process, the lateness in the year,” Nickelchok said. “A lot of the candidates that could be interested are already committed for the upcoming year. So, recognizing that, we want to make sure that we do have the opportunity to reach as many candidates as possible and that would not happen at this time of year. ...

“We’re looking for the best person to take the program. We’ve got an excellent team that’s in place for next year and my thought is we should be challenging for a championship again.

"Next year is as important as subsequent years to the program. We want to do well on the court as well as off the court, so we’re going to find the best individual that will lead the program on the interim basis and see how things fall out beyond that.”

Another source said none of the final four from the process two years ago — which were Lakeland College coach Phil Allen, former St. Francis Xavier X-Women coach Doc Ryan and Concordia University College Thunder coach Todd Warnick — were among the applicants. Warnick, for one, confirmed to the Sun that he did not apply.

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