On the eve of Andy Landers entering the women’s basketball Hall of Fame later
this month, his staff is facing some serious turnover. Assistant Brenda Hill
resigned to take a local high school job which would keep her off the recruiting
trail and at home with her daughters. Now we learn of another departure.
The ABH today confirms a rumor that I had heard about assistant coach Katie
Gilbert not returning next season. The report claims that her contract was not
renewed, and we all know what that means.
Though I don’t claim to have any day-to-day insights on the program, this move
really stinks on the surface. It’s one thing for a coach to move on as Hill
did, but it’s another for one to be let go. Gilbert had two primary responsibilities:
scouting/preparation and guard play. From what I had seen in pregame scouting
reports and shootarounds, she was more than competent at scouting and preparing
the team for each opponent. Guard play has carried the team for the past several
years; this most recent backcourt produced a WNBA draft pick and the SEC Freshman
of the Year. Not bad.
Again, there might have been something behind the scenes that led the athletic
department not to renew her contract, but from the stands it didn’t seem to
be performance-related. Was the change “suggested” to Landers by Carla
Green Williams or Damon Evans? It’s true that the program has stagnated recently
and slipped to “only” a Sweet 16 program. It’s now been eight seasons
since the last Final Four appearance. Recruiting was also getting scrutiny. In such situations, assistants are often leaned on and asked to do more. Gilbert might have had other priorities and resisted additional responsibilities or demands on her time. That’s her right, but it can also create an incompatibility with the objectives of the program.
Perhaps such a drastic shakeup of the staff was necessary to give the program the kick it needs.
The reaction from the boosters will be interesting. They are the fans closest
to the program and provide its strongest support both financially and in the
stands. Through her pregame chalk talks, Katie was the staff to many of the
boosters. She’ll be missed. As a devoted mother married to a local dairy farmer,
she’s not the traditional job-hopping assistant. I believe she’s exploring other
options in the Athens area.
With the Hall of Fame induction coming up, it should be a relatively light
and celebratory time not only for Landers but for Georgia women’s basketball.
This news casts a bit of a shadow on things for me. Let’s face it – the recent
track record on the bench hasn’t been great. Gilbert was in my eyes the strongest
assistant. Brenda Hill wasn’t a standout. The loss of Michael Shafer was inevitable,
but his replacement didn’t last the summer. Now only the relatively inexperienced
La’Keisha Frett remains, and even she might have her eyes set on the next rung
of the coaching ladder. Heading into his first season as a “Hall of Fame
coach”, Landers will have a short time to synthesize a new staff that must
come together quickly as the window of opportunity in the Tasha Humphrey era
gets smaller and smaller.