INDIANAPOLIS — Dusty May started his student manager career doing Indiana's dirty work.
Between wiping up sweat, filling water bottles and grabbing rebounds, he took enough mental notes to stake a coaching career on what he learned working for Bob Knight. After taking Florida Atlantic to its first Final Four in 2023, May, like Knight once was, is considered one of America's top young coaches.
The secret to May's success is using the same fundamentals he learned during a four-year apprenticeship with Knight.
No, it's not the same motion offense Knight popularized in the 1970s, but May didn't just chuck out a playbook and start over. He took the one created by the Hall of Fame coach who won three national championships and 902 games and added his own touch.
"The principles on offense of playing your man and on defense playing the ball, that's essentially our philosophy as well," the 46-year-old May said after the 2023 NCAA Tournament wrapped up. "We incorporate how to read screens, how to read defenders, a lot of the same principles. But we don't run the same motion offense."
For Knight, who died at his Bloomington, Indiana, home on Wednesday at age 83, his offense may be the most lasting piece of an indelible legacy. For decades, players and coaches tried to defeat Knight's fluid, weaving masterpiece.
When they couldn't, they copied it.
The simple notion of passing, cutting and screening was mixed with complex reads that took time to learn and perfect, and required opponents to do as much as work as Knight demanded from his own players.