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Bruce Weber Fired

March 9, 2012 by · Comments Off on Bruce Weber Fired 

Bruce Weber Fired, A person familiar with the decision tells The Associated Press that Illinois basketball coach Bruce Weber has been fired after nine seasons. The person spoke Friday on condition of anonymity because the move hasn’t been announced. A news conference was scheduled for late morning in Champaign.

The firing caps a surprising fall for Weber, who led the Illini to the 2005 NCAA title game, losing to North Carolina. He finished 210-101at Illinois, trailing only Lou Henson and Harry Combes in wins at the school.

But his teams were 55-66 in the Big Ten over the last six seasons and the struggles were magnified the last three years.

The Illini lost in the first round of the Big Ten tournament on Thursday, beaten by Iowa 64-61 in a disappointing end to a disappointing season that in early January had the Illini in the Top 25 and atop the Big Ten. Illinois lost 12 of their last 14 and less than a month ago, Weber sounded like he had lost his team.

“You have to develop a culture and I think maybe the last three years all I did was worry about winning instead of developing a culture and a toughness,” Weber told reporters after a 67-62 home loss to Purdue on Feb. 15. “That’s my fault.”

Illinois won once after that game, and never again looked like the team that upset then-No.5 Ohio State in early January.

Aside from the 1915 national title that’s distant history, Weber’s nine years in Champaign included the program’s absolute peak, the 2005 title game. A tough, dynamic team led by Deron Williams, Luther Head and Dee Brown fought back from a 15-point deficit to tie North Carolina in the final five minutes before losing 75-70.

The Big Ten title the team won on its way to the championship game was the program’s first outright conference championship since 1952.

Still, Weber faced criticism from some fans from virtually the moment he was hired in 2003. Some saw the coach from Southern Illinois – where he took the Salukis to two NCAA Sweet 16s – as a downgrade from Bill Self, who left for Kansas. In his first season, a black-clad Weber held a mock funeral for Self after hearing the comparisons too often.

And, after the championship game, his teams never again quite reached that kind of high. Many fans never gave him credit for the title game, dismissing it as a product of superior players recruited by his predecessor.

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