In the end, Norwood Teague made the right call. The only call, truthfully.
He had to swallow hard and pay Tubby Smith his $2.5 million buyout. He had to fire his first coach as Gophers athletic director. The men's basketball program couldn't move forward with status quo.
If the buyout provision wasn't a hang-up, the basketball component made for an easy decision because the program had grown stale under Smith with no signs of improvement on the horizon. If Smith couldn't finish better than ninth in the Big Ten with his best team in six seasons, what does that say about his coaching?
We could recite a laundry list of reasons why a change is necessary, but Teague's decision came down to two truths: Smith suffered a crisis of confidence within his fan base and the school was concerned about the program's future, particularly as it relates to the recruitment of three highly ranked juniors in the Twin Cities — Tyus Jones, Rashad Vaughn and Reid Travis.
Smith brought respectability and national recognition to the school in wake of the Dan Monson mess. But his tenure, as a whole, didn't measure up to those grand expectations that pulsated throughout Dinkytown on the day of his arrival.
Smith failed to finish above .500 in any Big Ten season. His players displayed little improvement over their careers. His teams nose-dived in February. He routinely criticized players publicly without taking accountability. His half-court offense, substitution patterns and in-game coaching were confounding.
This simply couldn't go on any longer. Teague had to realize that, too, as he evaluated the program the past few months.
The Big Ten is a basketball powerhouse right now. The league is ridiculously competitive and anchored by some top-tier coaches. Teague is a savvy basketball man who doesn't want to settle for a mediocre program.