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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Bobby Hurley quickly becomes popular hire at Arizona State

Hurley
John Marshall Associated Press

TEMPE, Ariz. – The theater inside Arizona State’s athletic complex was packed, television cameras everywhere. Even football coach Todd Graham and his staff showed up.

Bobby Hurley can draw a crowd. Arizona State wanted to make a splash with its next basketball coach, and so far it’s done just that.

“Our charge was to go out and find the best and the right fit for this program,” Arizona State athletic director Ray Anderson said Friday. “We believe very, very strongly and very confidently that we have accomplished that mission.”

The 43-year-old coach inherits a team playing in a major conference and stuck in mediocrity.

“This is a destination job for me,” said Hurley, who sat at the news conference between Anderson and Arizona State President Michael Crow. “A place that I want to spend a lot of time and be a fixture in the community and be a big part of the success of this entire athletic department.”

He will have his work cut out for him.

Arizona State has enjoyed stretches of success, yet has not been able to sustain it. The Sun Devils have not won a conference regular-season title since the WAC in 1974-75 under coach Ned Wulk and have been to the NCAA tournament in consecutive seasons just twice, the last time in 1980 and ’81.

Hurley succeeds Herb Sendek, who was respected at Arizona State and across the sport but couldn’t win consistently. Arizona State reached the NCAA tournament twice before he was fired in March after nine seasons as coach.

Hurley paid his coaching dues after his playing career was cut short by a horrific car accident, working as a scout for the Philadelphia 76ers before joining brother Dan Hurley at Wagner and Rhode Island.

Once he became a head coach, Hurley won immediately. He led Buffalo to its first conference title and first NCAA tournament in his second season as a coach.

His next task is to change the basketball culture at Arizona State and win over recruits.

“I think that I have a national name, have a name that people recognize,” Hurley said. “My career as a player in college athletics and winning championships opens the doors for me.”

Once Hurley gets in the door, he will try to bust it all the way open.