On the day last week when his successor was introduced as the new head coach of the Nebraska men's basketball team, Tim Miles hopped in his car and started driving north.
It was nothing personal against Fred Hoiberg, a coach he hopes succeeds. But it was personal in the sense that Miles thought to himself: I don't want to be around for this. The end of his tenure with the Cornhuskers had been staring at him for months like a flat stretch of prairie.
So he left Lincoln, Neb., and drove up to Sioux Falls, S.D., to see his parents. And from there, instead of heading back to Lincoln and getting on a plane, he continued on some familiar stretches of highway to Minneapolis for the Final Four. College basketball coaches all congregate at the culmination of the tournament every year. Miles is still a college basketball coach, but as of a couple of weeks ago he's one without a job.
What's it like to be at the Final Four when you've just been fired for the first time in your life?
"Yeah, even my Red Owl job in Doland, South Dakota — which I was not great at," Miles said of his previously spotless employment history as we talked Monday in a Minneapolis hotel lobby, a few hours before Virginia defeated Texas Tech in the NCAA title game. "It's hurtful in a manner that I feel like I let people down — my wife, my children, my brothers and sisters, those people. I feel like I let my players down. The people closest to you who are in the battle all the time. Other than that, I look at it like, 'OK, what should I have done differently?' Like a reflective state."
He had plenty of time to think about it on the long drive, before being reunited with his family members (who flew from Nebraska) in Minneapolis. Truth be told, though, he's been thinking about it for a while.
Miles said he knew he was on the hot seat after getting just a one-year extension after winning 22 games in 2017-18 and narrowly missing the NCAA field despite a 13-5 Big Ten record. Reports about his eventual successor surfaced long before word became official. Miles was a fan favorite in Nebraska, but his record was lukewarm. He finished 116-114 in seven years there, making one NCAA tournament.
"The Big Ten is so demanding. When we were not good enough, we never had enough shooting. So you think about what you'd do this or the other way, and it's a smidgen of a decision here or there. You go back to that margin of error," Miles said. "I grew up a Big Ten fan. I grew up a Minnesota Gopher fan. I am proud of what Richard [Pitino] has done, and I think he's done a heck of a job. I'm disappointed most that I won't be in the Big Ten."