The 2008–09 NCAA Division I men's basketball season began on November 10, 2008, and ended with the 2009 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament's championship game on April 6, 2009, at Ford Field in Detroit, Michigan. The season saw six different teams achieve the AP #1 ranking during the year (just one shy of the NCAA record). Oklahoma sophomore Blake Griffin was the dominant individual performer, sweeping National Player of the Year honors. The season began with North Carolina becoming the first unanimous preseason #1 team, and ended with the Tar Heels dominating the NCAA tournament en route to their fifth NCAA title. UNC won its six NCAA tournament games by double digits, and by an average of 19.8 points per game. Junior Wayne Ellington was named Final Four Most Outstanding Player.
2008–09 NCAA Division I men's basketball season | |
---|---|
Preseason AP No. 1 | North Carolina Tar Heels |
Regular season | November 10, 2008– March 10, 2009 |
NCAA Tournament | 2009 |
Tournament dates | March 17 – April 6, 2009 |
National Championship | Ford Field Detroit, Michigan |
NCAA Champions | North Carolina |
Other champions | Penn State (NIT), Oregon State (CBI), Old Dominion (CIT) |
Player of the Year (Naismith, Wooden) | Blake Griffin, Oklahoma |
Season headlines
edit- The North Carolina Tar Heels became the first team in history to be the unanimous #1 team in the AP preseason poll.[1] The ranking came based on UNC returning the majority of their Final Four squad from the year before, most notably Tyler Hansbrough, who became the first reigning National player of the year to return to school since Shaquille O'Neal in the 1991–92 season.
- Blake Griffin was named the Associated Press, the John Wooden Award, the Naismith Award and the Sporting News player of the year for the 2008–2009 college basketball season.[2][3] When combined with Sam Bradford's Heisman Trophy, Oklahoma became the first school to have a top winner in both basketball and football in the same year.
- Pittsburgh achieved the #1 ranking for the first time in school history on January 5, 2009.[4]
- On December 18, Tyler Hansbrough passed Phil Ford to become North Carolina's all-time leading scorer.[5] On February 28, Hansbrough also broke Dickie Hemric's NCAA record for most free throws made in a career.[6] And on March 19, Hansbrough passed JJ Redick as the leading scorer in Atlantic Coast Conference history.[7]
- Jodie Meeks of Kentucky scored 54 points against Tennessee on January 13, 2009. Meeks was 10–15 from 3-pt range.[8] The output broke Kentucky's single-game scoring record, set by Hall of Famer Dan Issel 39 years before.
- 2009 marked the first time in history that three #1 seeds in the NCAA tournament came from the same conference – as Louisville, Pittsburgh and Connecticut of the Big East achieved the feat.[9]
- Two retired Hall of Fame coaches died during the season – UTEP's Don Haskins on September 7, 2008,[10] and California's Pete Newell on November 17, 2008.[11] Newell's Bears won the NCAA championship in 1959, while Haskins' Miners won the title in 1966 in a historic win over Kentucky.
- The preseason AP All-American team was named on November 3. Tyler Hansbrough of North Carolina was the unanimous leading vote-getter (72 of 72 votes). The rest of the team included Stephen Curry of Davidson (66 votes), Luke Harangody of Notre Dame (58), Darren Collison of UCLA (46) and Blake Griffin of Oklahoma (45).[12]
- Kenny George of UNC Asheville, the tallest player in Division I (7'7") and the nation's leader in FG% for 2007–08, had part of his right foot amputated before the start of the season, threatening to end his career.
- The New Jersey Institute of Technology broke a 51-game losing streak that stretched back to February 19, 2007, by defeating Bryant 61–51 on January 21.[13]
- Travis and Chavis Holmes of VMI became the highest-scoring twins in NCAA Division I history.[14]
- Ryan Toolson of Utah Valley had the highest single-game scoring mark of the season, netting 63 points in a 123–121 quadruple-overtime win over Chicago State on January 29, 2009.[15] Chicago State teammates David Holston and John Cantrell each scored over 40 points in the loss.
- On January 31, Texas's A. J. Abrams hit his 339th 3-point shot, breaking the previous Big 12 record of 338 held by Jeff Boschee of Kansas.[16] In the same game, Kansas State's Denis Clemente tied his former teammate Michael Beasley's Big 12 single-game scoring record, netting 44 points in an 85–81 overtime win for the Wildcats.
- North Dakota State became the first men's team in Division I or its predecessors to reach the NCAA Tournament in its first year of postseason eligibility since 1972, when Southwestern Louisiana, now Louisiana-Lafayette, accomplished this feat. The Bison reached the "Big Dance" by defeating Oakland in the final of the 2009 Summit League tournament on March 10.[17]
- Syracuse upset Connecticut, 127–117, in a six-overtime game in the Big East Conference tournament Quarterfinals that started on March 12 and ended after midnight on March 13. It was the longest game in Big East history, and second longest in NCAA Division I history, at 70 total playing minutes.[18]
- Davidson guard Stephen Curry, Boston College guard Tyrese Rice, Miami (FL) guard Jack McClinton, Florida State guard Toney Douglas, Temple guard Dionte Christmas, UAB guard Robert Vaden, Wyoming guard Brandon Ewing, Chicago State guard David Holston, UTEP guard Stefon Jackson, Central Florida guard Jermaine Taylor, North Dakota State guard Ben Woodside, VMI guard Chavis Holmes, East Tennessee State guard Courtney Pigram and Coppin State guard Tywain McKee each eclipsed the career 2000-point mark during the season.
- Arkansas State changed its nickname from the "Indians" to the "Red Wolves", effective this season.
- Bryant University and Southern Illinois University Edwardsville competed at the Division I level for the first time, while Houston Baptist returned to Division I play after a 20-year absence and Seattle after 28 years.
- Conference realignments: Gardner-Webb moved from the Atlantic Sun Conference to the Big South Conference, while Presbyterian competes in the Big South as well after playing as an independent in 2007–08. Samford moved from the Ohio Valley Conference to the Southern Conference.
- Don Meyer passed Bob Knight as the winningest coach in NCAA history, breaking Knight's record of 902 victories.[19]
- Syracuse coach Jim Boeheim led the Orange to 20 wins for the 31st time in his career, a new record. Boeheim had previously been tied with Dean Smith at 30 20-win seasons.[20]
- Connecticut coach Jim Calhoun won his 800th career game, beating Marquette on February 25, 2009.[21]
- After the season, Northeastern's basketball program was placed on probation until 2011 due to recruiting and extra-benefits violations.[22]
- Centenary became the first men's basketball to receive a postseason ban due to their poor showing against Academic Progress Rate (APR) standards.[23] The Gentlemen will not be eligible for postseason play for the 2009–10 season.
- 27,767,111 fans attended Division I games during the season, the second-highest all-time for the division.
- Larry Bird, Magic Johnson, Jud Heathcote, Wayman Tisdale, Gene Bartow, Travis Grant, Walter Byers and Bill Wall were inducted into the National Collegiate Basketball Hall of Fame.[24]
- During the 2008–09 Big Ten season, Evan Turner and Manny Harris became the 4th and 5th players to finish in the top ten in the Big Ten Conference in average points rebounds and assists in the same season since assists became a statistic in 1983–84. Harris is the first to finish in the top six in each one.[25] Turner would finish in the top two the following year.[26]
- Harvard beats Boston College for its first-ever win against a ranked opponent.[27] During the 2008–09 Ivy League season, Harvard's Jeremy Lin was the only NCAA Division I men's college basketball player who ranked in the top ten in his conference for scoring (17.8), rebounding (5.5), assists (4.3), steals (2.4), blocked shots (0.6), field goal percentage (0.502), free throw percentage (0.744), and 3-point shot percentage (0.400).[28]
- Bradley played in the 2009 CollegeInsider.com Postseason Tournament, becoming the first school to play in four different postseaon tournaments in four consecutive years. The Braves previously had played in the 2006 NCAA tournament, the 2007 National Invitation Tournament, and the 2008 College Basketball Invitational.[29]
Major rule changes
editBeginning in 2008–2009, the following rules changes were implemented:
- The three-point line moved from 19 feet, 9 inches to 20 feet, 9 inches.[30]
- If the entire ball is above the rim when it comes into contact with the backboard and is subsequently touched by a player, it is goaltending. Previously only a ball moving downward after hitting the backboard could be subject to goaltending.[31]
Season outlook
editPre-season polls
editThe top 25 from the AP and ESPN/USA Today Coaches Polls, October 31, 2008.[32]
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Conference membership changes
editThese schools joined new conferences for the 2008–09 season.
Regular season
editEarly-season tournaments
editName | Dates | Num. teams | Championship |
---|---|---|---|
Coaches vs. Cancer Classic | Nov. 10–21 | 16 | Duke 71 vs. Michigan 57 |
Charleston Classic | Nov. 14–16 | 8 | Clemson 76 vs. Temple 72 |
CBE Classic | Nov. 14–25 | 4* | Syracuse 89 vs. Kansas 81 |
NIT Season Tip-Off | Nov. 17–28 | 16 | Oklahoma 87 vs. Purdue 82 |
Puerto Rico Tip-Off | Nov. 20–23 | 8 | Xavier 63 vs. Memphis 58 |
Paradise Jam Tournament | Nov. 21–24 | 8 | Connecticut 76 vs. Wisconsin 57 |
Maui Invitational Tournament | Nov. 24–26 | 8 | UNC 102 vs. Notre Dame 87 |
Great Alaska Shootout | Nov. 26–29 | 8 | San Diego State 76 vs. Hampton 47 |
76 Classic | Nov. 27–30 | 8 | Wake Forest 87 vs. Baylor 74 |
Old Spice Classic | Nov. 27–30 | 8 | Gonzaga 83 vs. Tennessee 74 |
Las Vegas Invitational | Nov. 28–29 | 4* | Kentucky 54 vs. West Virginia 43 |
Legends Classic | Nov. 28–29 | 4* | Pittsburgh 57 vs. Washington State 43 |
Cancún Challenge | Nov. 29–30 | 4* | Vanderbilt 71 vs. VCU 66 |
- Although these tournaments technically had more teams involved, only four play for the championship.
Conferences
editConference winners and tournaments
editThirty conference seasons concluded with a single-elimination tournament. The teams in each conference that won their regular-season conference title received the number one seed in each tournament. Conference tournament winners received an automatic bid to the 2009 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament. The Ivy League was the only NCAA Division I conference that did not hold a conference tournament, instead sending its regular-season champion, Cornell, to the NCAA tournament.
Conference standings
edit
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Division I independents
editFifteen schools played as Division I independents.[99] However, only Chicago State, Longwood, Savannah State, and Texas–Pan American were considered full NCAA Division I schools, as the rest were still in a transition phase from NCAA Division II.[99] David Holston of Chicago State was named Independent Player of the Year.[100]
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Informal championships
editConference | Regular season winner |
Most Valuable Player |
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Philadelphia Big 5 | Villanova | Ahmad Nivins, Saint Joseph's |
Villanova finished with a 4–0 record in head-to-head competition among the Philadelphia Big 5.
Statistical leaders
editSource for additional stats categories
Points per game |
Rebounds per game |
Assists per game |
Steals per game
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Player | School | PPG | Player | School | RPG | Player | School | APG | Player | School | SPG | |||
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Stephen Curry | Davidson | 28.6 | Blake Griffin | Oklahoma | 14.4 | Johnathon Jones | Oakland | 8.1 | Chavis Holmes | VMI | 3.4 | |||
Lester Hudson | Tenn.-Martin | 27.5 | John Bryant | Santa Clara | 14.2 | Brock Young | East Carolina | 7.6 | Travis Holmes | VMI | 3.2 | |||
Jermaine Taylor | Central Florida | 26.2 | Kenneth Faried | Morehead St. | 13.0 | Levance Fields | Pittsburgh | 7.5 | Devin Gibson | TX-San Antonio | 3.0 | |||
David Holston | Chicago St. | 25.9 | DeJuan Blair | Pittsburgh | 12.3 | DiJuan Harris | Charlotte | 7.2 | David Holston | Chicago St. | 3.0 | |||
Stefon Jackson | UTEP | 24.5 | Ahmad Nivins | St. Joseph's | 11.8 | Ashton Mitchell | Sam Houston St. | 6.8 | Cedric Jackson | Cleveland St. | 3.0 |
Blocked shots per game |
Field-goal percentage |
Three-Point FG percentage |
Free-throw percentage
| |||||||||||
Player | School | BPG | Player | School | FG% | Player | School | 3FG% | Player | School | FT% | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Jarvis Varnado | Miss. St. | 4.7 | Jeff Pendergraph | Arizona St. | 66.0 | Mike Rose | Eastern Kentucky | 48.1 | Brett Harvey | Loyola (MD) | 91.0 | |||
Hasheem Thabeet | UConn | 4.2 | Blake Griffin | Oklahoma | 65.4 | Booker Woodfox | Creighton | 47.6 | Josh White | North Texas | 90.6 | |||
Tony Gaffney | UMass | 3.8 | Joey Henley | Sacred Heart | 62.6 | Jared Stohl | Portland | 45.6 | Jodie Meeks | Kentucky | 90.2 | |||
Kleon Penn | McNeese St. | 3.5 | Keith Benson | Oakland | 62.2 | Ryan Tillema | Green Bay | 45.4 | Darren Collison | UCLA | 89.7 | |||
Taj Gibson | USC | 2.9 | Ahmad Nivins | St. Joseph's | 61.2 | Jimmy Baron | Rhode Island | 45.4 | Alan Voskuil | Texas Tech | 89.6 |
Post-season tournaments
editNCAA tournament
editThe NCAA Tournament tipped off on March 18, 2009, with the opening round game in Dayton, Ohio, and concluded on April 6 at the Ford Field in Detroit, Michigan. Of the 65 teams that were invited to participate, 31 were automatic bids while 34 were at-large bids. The 34 at-large teams came from 8 conferences, with the Big East, ACC and Big Ten each receiving seven bids. The Big 12 and Pac-10 each received six bids. The SEC and Atlantic 10 each received three bids. This season also marked the first time that three teams from the same conference were selected as #1 seeds (Louisville, Pittsburgh and Connecticut). North Carolina tore through the tournament, winning each game by 12 or more points and beating Michigan State in the Final 89–72 behind an NCAA-record 55 first-half points to win its fifth National championship. Ty Lawson recorded a record 8 steals, while Wayne Ellington was named tournament Most Outstanding Player.[101]
Final Four – Ford Field, Detroit, Michigan
editNational semifinals April 4 6:07 p.m.; 40 min. after first game | National championship game April 6 9:21 p.m. | ||||||||
M2 | Michigan State | 82 | |||||||
W1 | Connecticut | 73 | |||||||
2 | Michigan State | 72 | |||||||
1 | North Carolina | 89 | |||||||
S1 | North Carolina | 83 | |||||||
E3 | Villanova | 69 |
National Invitation tournament
editAfter the NCAA Tournament field was announced, the National Invitation Tournament invited 32 teams to participate. Five teams were automatic qualifiers for winning their conference regular-season championships, while the remaining 27 bids were named from an at-large pool. Notable entrants included Kentucky, who broke a 17-year NCAA tournament appearance streak by missing the field, as well as preseason top ten team Notre Dame and 2008 Regional Finalist Davidson. Penn State defeated Baylor 69–63 in the Final on April 2. The Nittany Lions' Jamelle Cornley was named tournament Most Outstanding Player.
NIT Semifinals and Final
editPlayed at Madison Square Garden in New York City on March 31 and April 2
Semifinals | Final | ||||||||
1 | San Diego State | 62 | |||||||
3 | Baylor | 76 | |||||||
3 | Baylor | 63 | |||||||
2 | Penn State | 69 | |||||||
2 | Notre Dame | 59 | |||||||
2 | Penn State | 67 |
College Basketball Invitational
editThe second College Basketball Invitational (CBI) Tournament was held beginning March 17 and ended with a best-of-three final, ending March 30. Oregon State defeated UTEP 2–1 in the final series to win the title.[102] Oregon State's Roeland Schaftenaar was named tournament MVP.
Semifinals (Reseeded) | Finals (Best of three) | ||||||||||
1 | Richmond | 69 | |||||||||
4 | UTEP | 81 | |||||||||
4 | UTEP | 69 | 70 | 73 | |||||||
2 | Oregon State | 75 | 63 | 81 | |||||||
2 | Oregon State | 65OT | |||||||||
3 | Stanford | 62 |
CollegeInsider.com tournament
editThe inaugural CollegeInsider.com Postseason Tournament was held beginning March 17 and ended with a championship game on March 30. This tournament places an emphasis on selecting successful teams from "mid-major" conferences who were left out of the NCAA Tournament and NIT. Old Dominion defeated Bradley 66–62 to win the first CIT championship in Peoria, Illinois.[103] The Monarchs' Frank Hassell was named tournament MVP.
Semi-Finals | Finals | ||||||||
James Madison | 43 | ||||||||
Old Dominion | 81 | ||||||||
Old Dominion | 66 | ||||||||
Bradley | 62 | ||||||||
Pacific | 49 | ||||||||
Bradley | 59 |
Award winners
editConsensus All-American teams
editPlayer | Position | Class | Team |
---|---|---|---|
DeJuan Blair | C | Sophomore | Pittsburgh |
Stephen Curry | PG | Junior | Davidson |
Blake Griffin | PF | Sophomore | Oklahoma |
Tyler Hansbrough | C | Senior | North Carolina |
James Harden | SG | Sophomore | Arizona State |
Player | Position | Class | Team |
---|---|---|---|
Sherron Collins | PG | Junior | Kansas |
Luke Harangody | PF | Junior | Notre Dame |
Ty Lawson | PG | Junior | North Carolina |
Jodie Meeks | SG | Junior | Kentucky |
Jeff Teague | PG | Sophomore | Wake Forest |
Hasheem Thabeet | C | Junior | Connecticut |
Major player of the year awards
edit- Wooden Award: Blake Griffin, Oklahoma[104]
- Naismith Award: Blake Griffin, Oklahoma
- Associated Press Player of the Year: Blake Griffin, Oklahoma[105]
- NABC Player of the Year: Blake Griffin, Oklahoma
- Oscar Robertson Trophy (USBWA): Blake Griffin, Oklahoma[106]
- Adolph Rupp Trophy: Blake Griffin, Oklahoma[107]
- CBS/Chevrolet Player of the Year: Blake Griffin, Oklahoma
- Sporting News Player of the Year: Blake Griffin, Oklahoma[108]
Major freshman of the year awards
edit- USBWA Freshman of the Year: Tyreke Evans, Memphis[109]
- Sporting News Freshman of the Year: Tyreke Evans, Memphis[110]
Major coach of the year awards
edit- Associated Press Coach of the Year: Bill Self, Kansas[111]
- Henry Iba Award (USBWA): Bill Self, Kansas[112]
- NABC Coach of the Year: Mike Anderson, Missouri & John Calipari, Memphis[113]
- Naismith College Coach of the Year: Jamie Dixon, Pittsburgh
- CBS/Chevrolet Coach of the Year: Bill Self, Kansas
- Adolph Rupp Cup: Rick Pitino, Louisville[114]
- Sporting News Coach of the Year: Bill Self, Kansas[115]
Other major awards
edit- Bob Cousy Award (Best point guard): Ty Lawson, North Carolina[116]
- Pete Newell Big Man Award (Best big man): Blake Griffin, Oklahoma
- NABC Defensive Player of the Year: Hasheem Thabeet, Connecticut[117]
- Frances Pomeroy Naismith Award (Best player 6'0"/1.83 m or shorter): Darren Collison, UCLA[118]
- Lowe's Senior CLASS Award (top senior): Tyler Hansbrough, North Carolina[119]
- Robert V. Geasey Trophy (Top player in Philadelphia Big 5): Ahmad Nivins, St. Joseph's[120]
- NIT/Haggerty Award (Top player in New York City metro area): Charles Jenkins, Hofstra[121]
- Chip Hilton Player of the Year Award (Strong personal character): Jon Brockman, Washington
Coaching changes
editA number of teams changed coaches throughout the season and after the season ended.[122]
Team | Former Coach |
Interim Coach |
New Coach |
Reason |
---|---|---|---|---|
Alabama | Mark Gottfried | Philip Pearson | Anthony Grant | Gottfried resigned mid-season and was replaced by VCU's Grant after the season[123] |
Appalachian State | Houston Fancher | Buzz Peterson | Fancher resigned,[124] the Mountaineers re-hired former head coach Peterson.[125] | |
Arizona | Lute Olson | Russ Pennell | Sean Miller | Olson retired after learning from his doctor that he had a stroke. |
Army | Jim Crews | Zach Spiker[126] | Crews was fired only weeks before the start of practice[127] | |
Boston University | Dennis Wolff | Pat Chambers[128] | Wolff was fired after 15 seasons at BU.[129] | |
Cal Poly | Kevin Bromley | Joe Callero | Bromley was fired following a 3-win season.[130] | |
Elon | Ernie Nestor | Matt Matheny | Nestor resigned,[131] Davidson assistant Matt Matheny was hired as head coach after the season[132] | |
Fairleigh Dickinson | Tom Green | Greg Vetrone | Green was fired after 26 years at the helm.[133] | |
Florida International | Sergio Rouco | Isiah Thomas[134] | Rouco was fired after five losing seasons in his five years at FIU.[135] | |
Georgia | Dennis Felton | Pete Herrman | Mark Fox | Felton is fired after seven straight losses[136] |
Georgia Southern | Jeff Price | Charlton Young | Price resigned after an 8-win season[137] | |
Grambling | Rick Duckett | Bobby Washington | Duckett left under uncertain circumstances following the death of Grambling player Henry White[138] | |
Hampton | Kevin Nickelberry | Edward Joyner | Nickelberry resigned after three seasons.[139] | |
High Point | Bart Lundy | Scott Cherry | Lundy was fired after a 21-loss season and last-place Big South finish[140] | |
Holy Cross | Ralph Willard | Sean Kearney[141] | Willard returns to Rick Pitino's Louisville staff as an assistant[142] | |
Kentucky | Billy Gillispie | John Calipari | Gillispie was fired after two years and missing the NCAA tournament[143] | |
Liberty | Ritchie McKay | Dale Layer | McKay left Liberty after the transfer of Seth Curry to become Associate head coach for new Virginia coach Tony Bennett.[144] | |
Loyola Marymount | Bill Bayno | Max Good | Bayno resigned for medical reasons.[145] | |
Memphis | John Calipari | Josh Pastner | Calipari left to take the Kentucky job.[146] | |
Nevada | Mark Fox | David Carter | Fox left to take the Georgia job.[147] Nevada elevated assistant Carter to replace him.[148] | |
NC Central | Henry Dickerson | LeVelle Moton | ||
North Florida | Matt Kilcullen | Matthew Driscoll | ||
Portland State | Ken Bone | Tyler Geving | Portland State promoted assistant Geving after Bone left for Washington State[149] | |
Seattle | Joe Callero | Cameron Dollar[150] | Callero left for the Cal Poly job.[151] | |
Southern California | Tim Floyd | Kevin O'Neill[152] | Floyd resigned following allegations that player O. J. Mayo was paid during his time at USC.[153] | |
Southeast Missouri State | Scott Edgar | Zac Roman | Dickey Nutt[154] | Edgar was fired while on administrative leave over possible major NCAA violations.[155] |
Tennessee-Martin | Bret Campbell | Jason James | Campbell resigned after an audit turned up check-cashing irregularities.[156] UTM then hired James, who became the second-youngest coach in Division I.[157] | |
Tennessee State | Cy Alexander | Mark Pittman | John Cooper | Alexander was fired after starting 6–16, TSU hired Auburn associate head coach Cooper.[158] |
Texas-Pan American | Tom Schuberth | Ryan Marks[159] | ||
Virginia | Dave Leitao | Tony Bennett[160] | Leitao resigned just two years removed from an ACC regular-season title.[161] | |
Virginia Commonwealth | Anthony Grant | Shaka Smart | Popular Grant left for Alabama.[162] VCU hired Florida assistant Smart as his replacement.[163] | |
Xavier | Sean Miller | Chris Mack[164] | Miller left Xavier to fill the vacancy at Arizona. He had reportedly turned down the job only to change his mind less than 24 hours later. | |
Washington State | Tony Bennett | Ken Bone[165] | Bennett left for the Virginia job. |
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