Commentary: Sutton makes USF debut tonight

Coach to pursue all-time victory No. 799 at Weber State; Pump brothers had much to do with hiring

? Eddie Sutton will coach his first game for the University of San Francisco tonight at Weber State, but he has yet to set foot on campus and met his team for the first time Thursday.

“I have seen pictures of the campus,” said Sutton, 71, the former Oklahoma State coach who has come out of retirement to try to satisfy his urge to coach and get the two wins standing between him and 800. “I’m looking forward to getting a tour.”

The odd coaching transition at San Francisco unfolded rapidly after Jessie Evans, the coach of the struggling 4-8 team, took what the school termed “a leave of absence” in a decision it said was reached Wednesday.

Sutton, who hadn’t coached since resigning from Oklahoma State in 2006, was named San Francisco’s interim coach the same day Evans left. But Sutton said he already had discussed the job with his family on Christmas Day after an earlier overture from San Francisco AD Debra Gore-Mann.

“I certainly didn’t want to end my coaching career in the way it did (at Oklahoma State),” Sutton said, calling himself a recovering alcoholic who still attends meetings. “I was in a lot of pain at that time and I did succumb to temptation. I’ve had back surgery since then, and I’m in good health and I think I’m physically able to coach a team.”

The chance to win his 800th game is important from a “selfish standpoint,” Sutton said, adding that his son, Scott, the coach at Oral Roberts, urged him to pursue it, saying, “Dad, you ought to take a job and get your 800.”

The seemingly rapid arrangement between San Francisco and Sutton had been in the works for some time, facilitated by Dana and David Pump. The brothers from the San Fernando (Calif.) Valley got their start as small-time basketball entrepreneurs who were also involved in buying and reselling tickets, but have become behind-the-scenes power brokers.

Since founding the search firm ChampSearch in 2004, the brothers say they have used their connections to serve as advisors and go-betweens to help more than a dozen schools hire basketball coaches, among them Tennessee – earning a fee of $25,000 for helping the Vols hire Bruce Pearl.

Gore-Mann called the Pump brothers mutual friends of hers and Sutton’s and said she had been “just talking to them about different coaches,” in relation to ChampSearch, in anticipation of the next time she hired a coach.

Sutton already had told the Pumps of his interest in returning to the bench.

“I think Dana and David talked to Debi and she talked to some other coaches,” Sutton said. “They said, ‘If that job ever came open, would you be interested?’ I said I certainly would.”

On Dec. 18, Sutton was in Southern California and watched Evans coach San Francisco in a loss at Long Beach State. Eight days later, he had the job. The school and Evans may negotiate a settlement.

Coaching a 4-8 team with little opportunity to put his own mark on it, at least to start, Sutton knows No. 800 probably will be harder to come by than some of the first 798.

“I look at that schedule – it’s pretty precarious here for a while,” he said.