Todd Bozeman believes it's about time that his name be in the mix for high-profile coaching jobs around the country. Yet the basketball coach at mid-major Morgan State realizes some people might never forgive his tumultuous tenure at the University of California in the 1990s that included serious recruiting violations -- even if he's having notable success now following an eight-year ban by the NCAA. Bozeman got his second chance at Morgan State, and he has transformed the program at the tiny, Balitmore-based school. He just led the Bears to their second straight NCAA tournament appearance in his fourth season. The 15th-seeded Morgan State squad, winners of three straight Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference regular-season crowns, lost 77-50 in the first round to West Virginia. "If you take a blind resume and took the name off the top of it and just put down the resume, then it'd be something I think people would jump at," he said of his credentials. While Bozeman insists he's not necessarily looking to immediately leave Morgan State -- "I have a good team coming back" -- he does want to be considered for top positions. "I'm not looking, but in the profession you always want opportunities to move. I've said this before that I apologized in the past and don't feel I need to apologize anymore," Bozeman said in a phone interview with The Associated Press. "I've paid my dues. I think more people have moved on from it than the general population thinks. But obviously not everybody has moved on from it, and I've accepted that. "Not everyone voted for the president. Not everybody thinks Michael Jordan is the best player ever." The Bears won at Arkansas this season for the program's first victory over a Southeastern Conference team in school history. The preseason also featured games with Baylor, Louisville and Minnesota. Bozeman also has beaten DePaul, Marshall and Maryland during his time. In his first season, the Bears went 13-18 after finishing 4-26 the previous year. "People can say you're winning in a league that's a lower-rated league. I can only play the teams we're scheduled to play in our league," he said. "We've had wins in our non-conference schedule." While Bozeman's strides at Morgan State are significant, there are still plenty who remember him for his problems while he was Cal's coach for 3 1/2 years, starting in the middle of the 1993 campaign. Most notable was his paying $30,000 to the family of recruit Jelani Gardner to persuade him to come to Cal. Bozeman also was criticized for undermining the authority of then-head coach Lou Campanelli, the man he replaced. Bozeman, who recruited the likes of future NBA stars Jason Kidd and Shareef Abdur-Rahim to Cal, was pushed out in August 1996 at age 32 and with a 63-35 record at the school. After serving the eight-year "show cause" probation period for NCAA violations, Bozeman landed the job at Morgan State 10 years after his rocky departure from Cal. "Some people say Campanelli's situation is a factor from when I took over at Cal in '92-'93. This is 2010," Bozeman said. "Nothing has ever been proven from that. I took responsibility for the NCAA deal, the violation. You'd think you pay your dues and move on. I talk about it even now, I don't dodge any questions. I don't preface any interview that I won't talk about this, that or the other. I don't have anything to hide. I've been pretty direct about it." With the 46-year-old Bozeman under contract at Morgan State, he can't apply for jobs but other schools can contact Morgan State for permission to interview him. So far, that hasn't happened. Some athletic directors at bigger programs may fear the scrutiny that would come with hiring Bozeman. "That's hard for me to take. I've paid my dues for the years I sat out," he said, comparing his own comeback to that of domestic diva Martha Stewart in some ways. "This is supposed to be the country of second chances. Being able to show people you can make a mistake, you have to pay the consequences for it, but you can come back. It's a unique situation because it's the harshest penalty any coach has ever received and lot of people didn't think I'd come back." Bozeman said it was just him and his late father, Ira, who truly thought he would get another college coaching job. "The only two I knew of," he said. Even friends "tried to encourage me to do something different." When he told them repeatedly he planned to coach again "they would change the subject." Bozeman said he has received tremendous support from strangers who have contacted him and wished him well in his comeback. After his dismissal at Cal, he returned to his native Washington, D.C., where he coached in the AAU ranks, ran camps and volunteered. When he was hired at Morgan State, Bozeman promised the school's president he would take the team to its first NCAA tournament. After a NIT berth in his second season, Bozeman delivered last March. The Bears lost in the first round to Oklahoma. "That was coming through on my part of the deal. Some people realize how difficult that is at this level, but I don't think everyone realizes it," Bozeman said. "It's really been changing the attitude, just changing the culture, taking a grab your lunch pail type of view."
Former Cal coach simply wants another chance
- The Associated Press
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