I had hoped to talk to Vanderbilt head coach Kevin Stallings for my preview story that ran in today’s Diamondback on Terrapin men’s basketball coach Mark Turgeon’s relationship with North Carolina coach Roy Williams.
While it did not make the print edition, I was able to talk to Stallings, who gave some insight on the Kansas basketball staff in the early 1990’s. Stallings was an assistant under Williams during his first five years as a head coach in Lawrence, Kan. At that time, Turgeon was making the transition from player to assistant coach.
“It was a great staff,” Stallings said yesterday. “It was a staff that when you put us all together we didn’t have many weaknesses. We all had weaknesses individually but they were covered up by someone else on the staff.”
More than two decades later, Stallings is the head coach at Vanderbilt, Williams is at North Carolina and Turgeon is at Maryland.
“The opportunities that we got, and the experiences we had,” Stallings said. “I was not surprised that all of those guys went on to do well with their own programs. Roy gave us the blueprint and foundation. We would all put the little twists on it. But he was the one that gave us the blueprint for us.”
Turgeon was the youngest member of the staff, and obviously, the most inexperienced. But he quickly picked up the trade and wound up leaving his alma mater to become the top assistant at Oregon with Jerry Green (former KU assistant as well).
But Stallings always saw Turgeon’s potential as a future head coach.
“It was very apparent early, early on that Mark really knew the game and really knew how to coach the game and would be and outstanding coach,” Stallings said. “That was completely obvious to me when he was a young guy on the staff and the little guy on the totem poll.”
Chris Eckard is the Diamondback’s Terrapin men’s basketball beat reporter. Reach him at ceckard@umdbk.com and follow him on Twitter at twitter.com/ceckard.
