Heads turned when Minneapolis Public Schools announced Trent Tucker would become the district's new athletic director.
Paired with the excitement of hiring a former Gophers basketball star and NBA champion were questions.
What are his qualifications, especially given the challenges of nurturing sports in a big and difficult urban environment? Where is his administrative experience? Can he turn around what many consider a lost cause?
Overcoming doubt and distraction isn't new to the 11-year NBA veteran, who landed the job with confident answers, experience raising money and an unwavering message focused on kids.
He is a product of the inner city. He is a Flint, Mich., native who aspires to create for Minneapolis youth the kind of hope that he was introduced to by community leaders when he was their age. These days, he says, "negativity doesn't enter into my process.
"You do the best you can and with what you have," Tucker said. "Someone that has been here longer than me may understand things more. … But I'm coachable. I'm fully invested. Willing to learn."
It's this mentality he believes will help him address serious issues bedeviling Minneapolis athletics. The city's student-athletes are leaving for suburban schools. Negative influences are a daily battle in the urban environment. Facilities are old. Participation numbers are down.
The retirement last fall of then-athletic director John Washington prompted Tucker to pursue a more official title for helping inner-city youth. Up until then he had done so through his foundation, All 4 Kids, which helps underprivileged youth find direction and build a successful future.