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Jack Kvancz

In addition to today’s story on the men’s basketball program’s rebuilding process, here are a few interesting quotes that were left on the cutting room floor:

Head coach Karl Hobbs

On what he learned the past two seasons:
“That was the biggest lesson, to maintain the character first and then the player second.”

On whether he is out to prove himself this season:
“I think every year you have to prove yourself because we’re in the business of what have you done for me lately. It is what it is. People don’t want to know what you did yesterday. They want to know, what are you gonna do today? They want to know how you’re gonna bring these ships in. They don’t care how rocky the water is. They don’t care about how bad the storm is. They just want to know how you’re gonna bring those ships in today.”

On looking back at the team’s success from 2004 through 2007:
“When we went through that run, people always said, ‘Oh, can you maintain it?’ I always felt like hey, you know, clearly we were overachieving. Those were milestones… When you’re going through it, you’re working so hard, you’re exerting so much energy, and you’re so into preparing for the next game, you don’t realize what you have accomplished along the way. When you look back and you look at all those things, you go, ‘Really?’ We lost one game that year in the regular season. We went undefeated in the Atlantic 10.”

On his general goals for the program:
“Just to consistently be a team every year that puts itself to be in the position to be in the NCAA tournament every year. And that’s a hefty dream to have. That’s gonna keep you working your tail off every year. You’re gonna have to not make many mistakes in recruiting. You gotta almost do everything right and you gotta do it consistently and that’s a hard thing to do, but that doesn’t mean that every year you can’t give 100 percent effort to try to make sure that happens.”

On the outside pressure and discontent last season:
“When you’re a basketball coach, you’re in the public eye. And so you can’t go around tossing bricks back at everybody that tosses bricks at you. If someone raises an issue that’s legitimate, you listen, you take it in, and you make the change. If it isn’t, then you move on. So I don’t waste a lot of time focusing on that and tossing the bricks back and forth. That comes with the business of being a coach. That’s what we do… Everybody’s got answers. Every coach will tell you that. Everybody has coached a better game than we did, but that’s part of it and that’s what makes sports a great thing. Everybody has an opinion.”

On whether the outside pressure and discontent bothered him:
“What bothered me is not rebounding the basketball. What bothered me is us turning the ball over. What bothered me is us not finishing plays. What bothered me is us not finishing plays down the stretch when you had an opportunity to win, that’s what bothers me.”

On the goals and expectations for this year:
“It’s not where we’re picked, it’s not any of those things. Stay focused on the process. Don’t look to the left; don’t look to the right. Just stay focused on what we need to do as a team. Try to get back to developing a consistent system, that’s the key. Get back to a consistent system based on sound fundamentals.”

On the team’s perspective entering this season:
“I always joke with the players that hey man, we are a team that, once the season starts, once we get on the boat, we are taking off. Once we get to the other side of the island, we are burning the boat. That means you can’t go back. Once we start, you can’t go back. So that means at that point, it’s either we conquer or we perish. That’s it.”

Director of Athletics Jack Kvancz

On the decision to retain Hobbs:
“I have seen no change in Karl from when I hired him nine years ago and today in terms of being a person… If he was okay then, let’s get some players and see what happens.”

On the importance of players to good basketball teams:
“On a Sunday afternoon in a park, the best players stay on. Who’s coaching them?”

On the importance of building through freshmen, rather than transfers or junior college players:
“If I’m building a house, I don’t want to build it on sand. I want to build it on concrete. I want to have a nice foundation.”

On the basic solution to the problems:
“Get some players and win some games and then we’ll put this to bed.”

On how he thinks Hobbs will do in the rebuilding process:
“I’m optimistic. I do trust, because he’s done it, that he can do it again.”

Senior Vice President of Student and Academic Support Services Chernak

On Hobbs’s energy and demeanor entering this season:
“I think that he realizes that it’s time to turn over a new leaf.”

On comparing this current situation to that inherited by Hobbs in 2001:
“It was a similar situation I guess, but not quite as bad. This one with Karl is, so to speak, a little more self-imposed. It wasn’t another coach that left the cupboard bare; he left the cupboard bare.”

On the new hot dogs at the Smith Center concession stands:
“I had a tasting. Mo, you know, from Sodexo, the manager? He’s been researching on hot dogs. You know, what kind of hot dogs to have at the games, and he wanted it to be a great hot dog. He said to me, ‘Look, even if it’s a terrible game and you lose, I want people leaving the Smith Center saying wow, that’s one of the best hot dogs I’ve ever had.’ I go, ‘Wow, I’m glad you feel that way, Mo.’

“So he goes, he does this research and now he’s discovered this hot dog, it’s by Nathan’s – but it’s a special Nathan’s hot dog. It’s skinless, it’s all-beef, no preservatives, it’s bigger and we’re gonna grill them and then serve them, so they’re actually gonna be, you know, on the barbecue. So none of this like boiled crap that’s sitting in water for like five hours. Fresh, from the grill, into the package, and then he does research on the package to make sure that it can have the condiments in it and all that so you just get it and everything’s there.

“It was delicious… Really good – I mean, this is like a great hot dog. So the moral of the story is every single aspect of what we want to do is have a better experience at the games. That’s part of the change.”

On why John Kuester wasn’t fired after going 1-27 in 1988-89:
“We weren’t just going to make a termination unless we knew we were going end up with an improved situation. Just to make a change to make a change, unless you end up with someone that you feel has the competency to correct what the problems were that got you to the losing state, then it doesn’t make sense. You’ve got to actually know those solutions before you make a decision.”

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The GW men’s basketball team will host its first major-conference guests in nine years this upcoming season when Providence and Oregon State visit Smith Center, Director of Athletics Jack Kvancz said this afternoon.

The Oregon State game, which Kvancz said had been in the works for at least two years, comes after continued rumors that the Beavers would make the trip to D.C. Some of this speculation was attributed to the election of President Barack Obama, whose brother-in-law, Craig Robinson, is entering his second year at the helm of Oregon State’s program.

Providence, which the Colonials visited in the 2006-07 season, comes to GW to honor its outstanding contract to complete the home-and-home series. The Friars were also the last team from one of college basketball’s six power conferences to play at Smith Center when they did so in the 2000-01 season.

Kvancz acknowledged that the ongoing Smith Center renovations – which include the replacement of bleachers with fully-backed seats, a new glass-walled club for program donors and revamped locker room areas – may have played a part in securing GW’s opponents.

“It didn’t hurt us, and that’s a plus,” he said. “It’s going to be beautiful.”

Also visiting Smith Center, Kvancz said, will be Princeton and UMBC, in addition to the previously confirmed George Mason. According to Kvancz, the Colonials will open the season at the University of North Carolina-Wilmington, whom GW beat in their last NCAA tournament victory in 2006, and travel to East Carolina.

Kvancz said that no tournaments are in the works and that although the remainder of the schedule is not ready to be etched in stone, it is nearing completion.

“For practical senses we’re done,” Kvancz said. “We just don’t have the signed contracts.”

He added that ideally GW would play a full non-conference slate of 13 games, but that he is unsure if they will be able to do so. In a perfect world, Kvancz said, the Colonials would be able to schedule 13 home-and-home series, but that he may need to schedule one or two “buy games” with opponents of much higher or lower quality that will not extend in commitments beyond this season.

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Update, 6:24 p.m.

The GW men’s basketball program failed to meet NCAA benchmarks for eligibility and retention and had one scholarship withheld as a penalty, according to yesterday’s NCAA Academic Progress Rate report.

The penalty was applied to this past season, according to Director of Athletics Jack Kvancz. A University news release said the team’s low score was “due largely to attrition,” referring to the number of players who have left the men’s basketball team. In the four years included in the APR, seven scholarship members left the program.

“We’re fine academically,” Kvancz said. “We have a problem with retention.”

The APR is intended to assess a team’s academic performance in “near real-time” by awarding a point for each student-athlete that remains academically eligible and another point for each that stays enrolled in the school, according to the NCAA Web site. It is evaluated on a per-semester basis and based on the four most recently completed academic years (2004-2005, 2005-2006, 2006-2007, 2007-2008).

Teams receive scores up to 1000, with 925 being the minimum to guarantee avoiding sanctions. GW’s men’s basketball team was one of 43 in the country to score less than 925, receiving a score of 917. The team’s score ranked in the 20th-30th percentile of men’s basketball teams nationwide.

Kvancz said he decided to withhold one scholarship from the program last year because his “best guess was that we were gonna be close” to the 925 mark and that because of that decision, the penalty won’t be assessed for the 2009-2010 season.

Since the spring of 2004, 11 scholarship players have left the men’s team. In a 2008 article regarding the departures of former Colonials Cheyenne Moore and Miles Beatty, Director of Sports Information Brad Bower said the number of players leaving the team in recent years was not uncommon compared to other schools. Bower declined to comment Thursday evening.

Chandra Bierwirth, assistant director of athletics for compliance, declined to comment on this story. Senior Vice President for Student and Academic Support Services Robert Chernak and representatives of the NCAA could not be reached for comment.

Four GW squads received honors last month for earning APR scores in the top 10 percent of their respective sports.

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Wednesday, April 22, 2009 5:30 p.m.

George Mason to play at GW

To update on previous inklings and provide some info previously (and unintentionally) omitted from the last scheduling post, Director of Athletics Jack Kvancz confirmed Monday that George Mason’s men’s basketball team will play at GW this upcoming season.

The pairing seems to many to be a natural fit, with the schools not only located close to one another, but also playing in two of college basketball’s best leagues outside of the BCS power conferences. It will be the first time the teams have met since GW bested the Patriots in the 1998 Red Auerbach Colonial Classic at Smith Center.

It will also continue an effort to play more local schools, something Kvancz has said he is emphasizing when scheduling. This past season GW played local rivals Maryland and American, playing the former in the BB&T Classic and hosting the latter. The Colonials will not return the game at American this upcoming season, Kvancz said, but may be able to do so at a future date.

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Monday, April 20, 2009 5:02 p.m.

Oregon State game not official

Despite reports by the Oregonian that Oregon State will travel to D.C. to play GW this fall, no contract has been signed for such a contest, Director of Athletics Jack Kvancz said this afternoon.

“I don’t have a contract, so I don’t have a game,” Kvancz said after acknowledging that the Beavers were one of several teams to which he has sent contracts. “Nothing is official.”

The speculation surrounding the contest carries extra significance given the connection between Oregon State’s head coach, Craig Robinson, and the White House: he is the brother-in-law of President Barack Obama. The Beavers traveled to D.C. this past season to play at Howard, though Obama and his family did not attend.

Should Oregon State play GW at Smith Center, it would mark the first time a team from one of the NCAA’s “power conferences” did so since Providence in the 2000-2001 season. GW was promised an additional home date against the Friars as a return game for playing at Providence in 2006, but that has yet to be honored.

Most of the Colonials’ games against such teams in D.C. come at the annual BB&T Classic. As for the venue of a possible GW-Oregon State clash, Kvancz said he would like to get the game to be played on campus.

“If they sign it for here, we’ll play here,” Kvancz said. He also said BB&T games are largely arranged by the event’s coordinators.

Should Obama and his family attend such a game would not be the first time a first family came to see GW basketball. President Clinton and his daughter, Chelsea, attended the Colonials’ upset of then-No. 1 UMass at Smith Center in 1996.

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