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'This is a great university'

Knight 'gracious' as he bids farewell to Indiana students

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Latest: Thursday September 14, 2000 07:35 AM

  Bobby and Karen Knight Bob Knight and his wife, Karen, give a tearful farewell to the Indiana faithful. AP

BLOOMINGTON, Ind. (AP) -- Bob Knight bid farewell to Indiana University, saluting cheering students and urging them to forget about the freshman who played a part in the coach's firing.

"Let that kid be a student and let him get on with life," Knight said Wednesday night. "This thing, believe me, had happened to me long before that situation took place. That kid is not responsible for my not coaching at Indiana, and make sure you understand that."

The peaceful crowd at Dunn Meadow was estimated by police at about 6,000. Some students watched from the roof of a fraternity house across the street. Others climbed trees that ringed the meadow, the site of many campus protests in the 1960s and '70s. Many hoisted signs of support for Knight, who was fired Sunday for violating a zero-tolerance behavior policy imposed by university president Myles Brand.

Knight never mentioned Brand by name, and he took only a few brief jabs at the administration in his 20-minute talk.

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Bob Knight thanks students for their support of Indiana basketball, and takes a few jabs at the administration. Start
Knight's speech
Read the full text of Knight's speech Tuesday evening to Indiana University students in Bloomington. 
 
 

"This is a great university," he said. "Trustees, administrations, faculties change ... but this university has really stood the test of time, because the really good people that take care of you in the classroom and in every other way far outnumber the people that have agendas that don't involve the students first of all."

Knight was fired three days after he grabbed and berated freshman Kent Harvey, who had called out, "Hey, what's up, Knight?" a greeting Knight regarded as disrespectful.

Several players threatened to transfer after Knight was fired, but all of them decided to remain when assistant Mike Davis, who had recruited many of them, was selected interim coach by athletic director Clarence Doninger on Tuesday.

Knight urged the students to continue supporting the team and the new coach.

"When you go into Assembly Hall for the first game this year, I want you to remember what your moms and dads, your brothers and sisters, your aunts and uncles and friends that have been in those seats before you have meant to our basketball team. And I want you to mean the same thing to this basketball team," he said.

"People change over the years, and that changes situations, for good and for bad, but don't let the student body, the energy, the enthusiasm the student body has had for basketball, please don't let that change. If you want to do something to remember me by, do that. Continue the same energy, the same enthusiasm the students before you have given to basketball. I'll be very proud of you for doing that."

A university spokesman called it "an awfully gracious speech."

"Students have always been important to him, and I'm glad they got to see him tonight," IU vice president Christopher Simpson said. "Twenty-nine years is a long time. There were some highs and lows, but I certainly didn't take offense at anything he said."

Neither did the students, who greeted Knight with applause and cheers as he approached the platform at the edge of Dunn Meadow and then kissed his wife, Karen, as she dabbed her eyes with tissue.

"I hope that's not inappropriate physical contact," Karen Knight said, drawing laughter.

Forward Tom Geyer called the kiss "the most touching part" of Knight's appearance.

"People don't see that side of coach. It's just sad that they had to wait until now," Geyer said.

One banner in the crowd read "Free 29 years of IU junk," but most signs supported Knight:

"Politics + a punk + cowards = railroading of a great man" ... "Career victories, Knight: 763, Brand/Doninger: 0" ... "Bring back Bobby" ... "My degree is from Knight school."

Colin Banta, 19, a freshman from Griffith, said Knight made his point with the administration "in a subtle way. ... To most people here, they would have been on his side no matter what."

David Smuckler, 18, a freshman from St. Louis, said Knight conducted himself "better than he normally does. ... It was a good way to say goodbye to Indiana."

Meghan Felicelli, 20, a junior from St. Paul, Minn., said she was pleased Knight didn't use the speech to justify his actions. "He wished us the best of luck and asked us to do the same for him."

Julia Gilham, 18, a freshman from Indianapolis, said she was not a fan of Knight but came to the rally "because it's like history in the making ... because IU basketball is such a huge tradition."


 
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