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Harrick hasn't turned his back on UCLA

 

It would make a great trivia question: Who are the only two basketball coaches to win a national championship in UCLA history?

'I still wear my ring, and I still go to the games,' former UCLA coach Jim Harrick said. (US Presswire)  
'I still wear my ring, and I still go to the games,' former UCLA coach Jim Harrick said. (US Presswire)  
One is the greatest name in college basketball; the other is all but forgotten.

John R. Wooden, of course, won 10 titles for the Bruins; Jim Harrick won the other one.

"I still wear my ring, and I still go to the games," said Harrick, who won the national championship in 1995 and was last seen coaching the Developmental League's Bakersfield Jam until January, when he resigned to spend more time with his wife and nine grandchildren. "I'm very connected to the program; I think Kevin Love should be the No. 1 pick of the draft."

Harrick's story is equal parts glory and humiliation. At UCLA, he was let go for lying about his expense report, and at Georgia, where he coached for five years, he left in 2003 after being accused of academic fraud. Now 69, he's retired in Southern California, but his ties with UCLA coach Ben Howland run deep.

In the spring of 2003, when Howland was hired, one of his first calls was to Harrick.

"Ben was in a hotel in Los Angeles," Harrick said. "I drove up from Orange County and talked to him for six hours. He still has me speak to the team once a year."

Harrick has always been an excellent coach. Twenty-five years ago, he led Pepperdine to the NCAA tournament where the Waves lost to eventual champion N.C. State in the first round in double-overtime. Harrick led the University of Rhode Island to a regional final and went to the tournament consecutive years with the Georgia Bulldogs.

What he sees in freshman Love, Harrick has only seen twice before in a UCLA uniform.

"I say to myself, 'Be careful, Coach Harrick,'" he said, "but I've seen every UCLA game this year and I've coached for 30 years. Only Lew Alcindor and Bill Walton had Kevin Love's tenacity and talent. This guy is a force."

Harrick has known the Love family for 30 years (yes, including Mr. California Girls himself, Beach Boy Mike Love, Kevin's uncle). Harrick said that Love was ready for the NBA, but when David Stern raised the age limit, "there was only one place for him to go -- UCLA," where Ben Howland "is the perfect coach for him."

Harrick said no one, except for the great John Wooden himself, has Howland's combination of stubbornness, knowledge and complete lack of interest in becoming a celebrity.

"Ben and I meet once a week and we talk about everything," Harrick said. "There isn't one thing phony about Ben, he's all basketball. And he has those kids playing crushing defense, just cutting the heart out an opponent. He reminds me of Coach Wooden."

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