Life after NCAA show cause orders in men's hoops

A look at life after NCAA show cause orders in men's basketball

The Associated Press identified 25 former men's college basketball coaches who remain involved in the sport despite being hit with NCAA show-cause orders since 2000. Coaches are identified by the schools where they worked when penalized; the date and lengths of show cause orders (in parentheses); and their subsequent basketball-related jobs.

—Brad Greenberg, Radford (five years, February 2012). Head coach, Maccabi Haifa, Israel. Former assistant, Venezuelan national team.

—Rick Hall, Radford assistant (two years). Head coach, Eastern Montgomery High, Elliston, Va. Resigned after one year.

—Cedric Smith, Radford assistant (two years). Head coach, Freedom High, Tampa, Fla.

—Chad Myers, Radford director of basketball operations (two years). Head coach, Massanutten Military Academy, Woodstock, Va.

—Orlando Taliaferro, Oklahoma assistant (two years, July 2011). Youth coach, Adidas Nations, Atlanta.

—Bruce Pearl, Tennessee (three years, August 2011). ESPN analyst.

—Steve Forbes, Tennessee assistant (one year). Head coach, Northwest Florida State College, Niceville.

—Jason Shay, Tennessee assistant (one year). Assistant coach, Northwest Florida State College.

—Tony Jones, Tennessee assistant (one year). Head coach, Alcoa (Tenn.) High.

—Beau Archibald, Connecticut, director of basketball operations (one year, February 2011). Assistant coach, Florida Atlantic.

—Nolan Myrick, Georgia Southern assistant (five years, January 2010). Mid-State Magic AAU, Burlington, N.C.

—Scott Edgar, Southeast Missouri State (three years, August 2009). Head coach, Eastern Oklahoma State College, Willburton, Okla.

—Al Grushkin, Incarnate Word (two years, February 2009). Head coach, Indiana Tech. Previously NBA scout, Marty Blake and Associates.

—Kelvin Sampson, Indiana (five years, November 2008). Assistant coach, Houston Rockets. Previously, Milwaukee Bucks assistant, San Antonio Spurs consultant.

—Rob Senderoff, Indiana assistant (three years). Head coach, Kent State.

—Brent Bargen, Long Beach State assistant (four years, March 2008). Head coach, Chadron State.

—Reggie Howard, Long Beach State assistant (five years). Head coach, Barstow (Calif.) Community College.

—Jim O'Brien, Ohio State (two years, March 2006). Head coach, Emerson College.

—Paul Biancardi, Ohio State assistant (18 months). ESPN, director of basketball recruiting. Previously, Saint Louis University assistant coach.

—Ray Lopes, Fresno State (three years, 2006). Assistant coach, Washington State. Previously, associate head coach, Idaho; San Antonio Spurs scout; associate coach, Idaho Stampede, NBA D-League.

—Dave Bliss, Baylor (10 years, June 2005). Dean of students, athletic director and head basketball coach, Allen Academy, Bryan, Texas. Previously head coach, Dakota Wizards, CBA.

—Rodney Belcher, Baylor assistant (seven years). Head coach, Texas Celtics (Plano), 6th grade AAU.

—Doug Ash, Baylor assistant (five years). Scouting director, Detroit Pistons.

—Tommy Wade, South Alabama assistant (two years, December 2001). Director of player development, Oklahoma State. Previously head coach at Oklahoma City University, Kentucky Wesleyan assistant.

—Tim Cohane, Buffalo (three years, December 2001). Associate head coach, Roger Williams University.

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