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The Badger Herald

Independent Student Newspaper Since 1969

The Badger Herald

Independent Student Newspaper Since 1969

The Badger Herald

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UNC basketball coach resigns

(REUTERS) — Matt Doherty, who failed to make the NCAA Tournament two of his three seasons at North Carolina, resigned Tuesday as basketball coach.

He had three years left on a six-year contract that paid him $855,000 a season.

Doherty’s resignation came after athletic director Dick Baddour held a series of meetings with players and parents.

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Baddour picked the inexperienced Doherty after Roy Williams — a former assistant to Dean Smith — turned down UNC to remain at Kansas. It’s unclear whether Williams, whose team is in the Final Four, would be a candidate again.

Doherty was The Associated Press’ coach of the year in 2001 — when the team won 18 games in a row and was ranked No. 1 nationally.

But even that team fizzled down the stretch, going 4-5 over its final nine games, including a second-round loss to Penn State in the NCAA Tournament.

Off-court problems began to surface when star sophomore Joseph Forte decided to go pro. He said one reason he left was an inability to get along with Doherty.

Then came the disastrous 2001-02 season, when North Carolina went 8-20 — the worst record in the program’s history.

The team lacked the overall talent of past North Carolina clubs because of the recruiting gap that stretched from the end of the Guthridge era to the start of Doherty’s program. Still, many believe the Tar Heels should have been better.

Three transferred — Adam Boone, Brian Morrison and Neil Fingleton — and some of Doherty’s initial recruiting class also contemplated leaving.

Doherty was able to smooth things over, and this season he brought in a top recruiting class that included Raymond Felton, Sean May and Rashad McCants. The team got off to a 5-0 start and was ranked in the top 25.

May then broke his foot in late December, and the Tar Heels began to struggle as players and parents once again began to question Doherty’s intense style in practice and drastic mood swings.

Still, the team matured late in the year, beating Duke in the regular-season finale and Maryland in the Atlantic Coast Conference tournament before going three rounds in the NIT.

After the team’s final game last Wednesday night, most of the players said they would be returning and said they supported the coach. Baddour met with the players in a group meeting the next day and then individually Friday.

-compiled from staff reports

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