
Alvin's a good guy. I hope he gets the gig of his choice. He's just 59, so he's good to go for several more years. He learned about coaching longevity from the best--Larry Brown.

When did you start taking a joking comment so seriously? My comment was made in jest. But since you brought it up, that would probably be last May when he interviewed for the Charlotte Bobcats' job in Charlotte and out at a Lake Norman estate. And in the last five years when he returned home to Shelby for the funerals of both his Dad and his Mom. He maintains close ties to his WNC family and his WNC roots. He speaks of his early roots often. His years at ASU are part of who he is as a person. He goes where the work is; and in recent years that's been in San Antonio, Phoenix and LA.asu66 wrote:IGgreer wrote:When is the last time that Gentry even acknowledged App State's existence?
How did this post get posted twice simultaneously? The same thing happened to me a few weeks ago.asu66 wrote:When did you start taking a joking comment so seriously? My comment was made in jest. But since you brought it up, that would probably be last May when he interviewed for the Charlotte Bobcats' job in Charlotte and out at a Lake Norman estate. And in the last five years when he returned home to Shelby for the funerals of both his Dad and his Mom. He maintains close ties to his WNC family and his WNC roots. He speaks of his early roots often. His years at ASU are part of who he is as a person. He goes where the work is; and in recent years that's been in San Antonio, Phoenix and LA.asu66 wrote:IGgreer wrote:When is the last time that Gentry even acknowledged App State's existence?
BTW, this is a direct quotation from Alvin. Maybe there's a lesson in here somewhere for all of us. "My dad passed away about three years ago,'' Gentry says, "But I clearly remember something he liked to say: 'It's hard work to be a jerk.'" "Grant Hill and I were talking about this," he says. "I wonder if there's a gene in some people that makes them become jerks. It's so much easier to be nice to people. Isn't it innate in all of us, anyway, to be nice to everyone?"