UWGB officially introduces Doug Gottlieb as men’s basketball coach | Green Bay Press Gazette
Additional news about UWGB’s hiring of Doug Gottlieb can be found here:
Green Bay names radio personality Doug Gottlieb as next men’s basketball coach, WFRV, May 14
Gottlieb introduced as UWGB basketball coach, Fox 11, May 15
As Doug Gottlieb era tips off for UWGB men’s basketball, here’s what we learned from his introduction
GREEN BAY – The Doug Gottlieb era officially has begun for the University of Wisconsin-Green Bay men’s basketball team.
The Milwaukee native was introduced as the 10th coach in program history during a news conference Wednesday at the Kress Center, sharing his vision of how to continue the momentum created duringSundance Wicks’ one season at the helm.
There will be plenty of work between now and the season, including completing a roster that needs several additions and an assistant coaching staff that will play a big role in helping Gottlieb as he navigates being a college head coach for the first time.
Here are five takeaways from the introductory news conference:
Doug Gottlieb is prepared to do two jobs at once
Gottlieb is used to several different jobs, whether it’s hosting his Fox Sports radio show during the week, doing his podcast or helping call college basketball games as a commentator.
He’s now down to two jobs: Radio and being a Division I college basketball coach. He will stop doing everything else.
Gottlieb is confident he can do both well despite the time commitment of running an entire basketball program. Other college coaches have had media obligations, but nobody has really seen it at the level of Gottlieb with a national show that will take time away from basketball but also give the program attention it otherwise would not receive in more than 200 markets.
Gottlieb plans on building relationships with his players and people in the community. He will be at Green Bay Packers practices. He will attend Milwaukee Brewers games. He plans to buy a house in the Green Bay area.
He wants people to give him a chance and get to know him. They might find something different than any perceptions they have of him.
“I’m going to be up here, and we are going to go do stuff together,” said Gottlieb, who signed a five-year contract with UWGB. “We will go for a walk on campus, we will go down to the beach. Maybe we will go hit golf balls, hit baseballs. I like playing a little pickleball. I know it’s a little bit of an old man sport for kids, but it’s fun.”
Doug Gottlieb might not do radio forever
Gottlieb laughed when he said there was one coaching job he would have given up his radio gig for, although he didn’t say which one. He has had conversations with several schools over the years and was a legitimate candidate multiple times at Oklahoma State, where he played three seasons and remains the team’s all-time assists leader.
He isn’t ruling out dropping his radio responsibilities at some point, but he also believes it’s an excellent opportunity to try both.
“I think it works together great,” Gottlieb said. “This campus is beautiful. Do you think most people know how beautiful this campus is? …. Do you think that people know how pristine this campus is, that it has a view of the lake, how it’s set aside from the city and it’s clean?
“Of course not. That’s what the radio show works for. I’m not going to be able to do local Green Bay talk, but I am going to be able to talk about the Packers and I am going to be able to display how enjoyable it is to live in a special place.”
Gottlieb will get busy putting together a coaching staff
There is one spot filled on Gottlieb’s coaching staff with former Kaukauna standout Jordan McCabe.
McCabe recently was hired at UWGB after being brought in by Wicks, and although there was an opportunity to join Wicks at Wyoming, he was considered a valuable piece by Gottlieb.
It’s been an interesting ride for McCabe since he became a coach last season after a playing career at West Virginia and UNLV.
He went to West Virginia to work under Bob Huggins only for Huggins to step down last June.
McCabe stayed at the school when assistant Josh Eilert was named interim coach. He found his second job after this season at UWGB, only for Wicks to leave a short time later.
“With my first two years of experience as an assistant coach at the college level, I really had to figure out how to do my job to the best of my ability even throughout adversity and chaos,” McCabe said. “It’s been a lot of that. That’s part of it. That’s why you sign up for this job. It’s not very stable and there is always going to be movement, but the best coaches that I have been able to play for, they show up every day as if nothing else is going on outside.
“As a young guy, that’s what I’m trying to do. Is make sure that I am the steady, the rock, the guy our players can call and maybe get a little peace of mind about the situation. They got how many friends texting them and calling them like, ‘What are you going to do? Are you moving? What do you think about the new coach?’ Right now, you have got to have a little grace for coaches coming in.”
Gottlieb has an idea of the other coaches who could be joining him at UWGB, although nothing is finalized.
He likely will handle much of the offense, but he wants to get a great defensive mind. He also said he has a potential assistant coach who can do all things, including manage him.
“Those other spots, how can we handle the defense and player development and recruiting?” Gottlieb said. “That doesn’t mean you have to be Wisconsin-born, Wisconsin-bred or Chicago-born, Chicago-bred.
“But when I contact people, whether NIL agents or AAU coaches or high school coaches, they have got to have a good rep. The last thing is, you have to have loyalty. You just do. You have to have everybody who has everybody else’s back. It doesn’t work otherwise.”
One person who would have great loyalty to Gottlieb and the program would be Gottlieb’s brother, Gregg.
He was a candidate for the UWGB job in 2020 before Will Ryan was hired, and he’s a longtime coach in both men’s and women’s basketball.
Gregg has an open invite from his brother to join him in Green Bay. But with two kids in high school and one in middle school in California, and as a current assistant for the women at San Diego State, it probably won’t be this year.
“He would be amazing,” Gottlieb said. “He is an amazing coach.”
Get to know Doug Gottlieb:What to know about the national radio host and new UWGB men’s basketball coach
UWGB hopes to get remaining players back
Gottlieb wants all the players from last season to return, including David Douglas Jr. and Amari Jedkins, both of whom have entered the NCAA transfer portal.
Most of the players are still processing what has been a hectic situation in a short period, considering this time last week Wicks was here and focused on a second season at UWGB.
“It’s different than normal, but from just listening to him talking about basketball and hearing other people talk about his basketball knowledge, I think basketball-wise he will do good,” said forward Marcus Hall, who was named to the Horizon League’s all-freshman team this season. “It brings a lot of attention to the program, which is also good.”
Hall, a former D.C. Everest standout, remains undecided about whether he will enter the portal. He wants to meet with Gottlieb and get to know him.
Junior guard Preston Ruedinger said UWGB still has a nice core of players around from a team that went 18-14 and finished third in the Horizon this season.
Wicks’ departure was difficult, especially since the former Oshkosh Lourdes star transferred from Valparaiso to UWGB in part because of him.
Most players figured this late in the offseason that it was past the time when Wicks would possibly leave for another job, only for Wyoming to open.
“It’s business,” Ruedinger said. “We respect everything Sunny did for us and did for this university. We are just trying to take it off from there.”
Ruedinger hasn’t decided if he will return for a second season with the Phoenix, but he loves the school and his teammates.
He is comfortable Gottlieb can do his radio show and be there for the team.
“Absolutely,” Ruedinger said. “I’m sure there is skepticism on the outside of what it looks like, but just talking with him (Tuesday) on the phone and knowing he is a basketball mind, he played basketball. Some things coaches don’t understand is if they never played, they don’t honestly know what it’s like.
“Having him play at Notre Dame and Oklahoma State, I think it’s going to be a big benefit to us.”
Gottlieb became a Phoenix fan because of Jason Kidd
Although Gottlieb’s father coached rival UW-Milwaukee from 1975 to 1980, Gottlieb became a fan of UWGB because he despised former NBA star Jason Kidd.
The same Kidd whose California team was upset by UWGB in the NCAA Tournament in 1994.
One of Gottlieb’s best friends is Miles Simon, a former star at Arizona, whose high school team lost to Kidd in a state championship game.
It came after the previous summer when Kidd’s AAU team beat the team Gottlieb’s father was coaching.
“I hated Jason Kidd,” Gottlieb said. “Everybody I knew who played against Jason Kidd, lost against Jason Kidd.”
And then?
“I saw Jeff Nordgaard and Green Bay and the Fighting Phoenix take down Cal, and I liked it,” Gottlieb said. “A lot.
“I want that for those men. I’ve won NCAA Tournament games. I’ve won five of them. It’s awesome. Nothing like it. Those experiences of friendship and camaraderie of going to the NCAA Tournament. Of being a memorable team. Of being a team that every time you come around this arena, they can point to a banner.”
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