Bob Knight welcomed back by Hoosiers fans in first appearance at an Indiana basketball game in two decades

AP photo by Doug McSchooler / Former Indiana men's basketball coach Bobby Knight pumps his fist in celebration alongside former Hoosiers point guard Isiah Thomas on Saturday at Assembly Hall in Bloomington. Knight made his first appearance at an Indiana basketball game since being fired in September 2000.
AP photo by Doug McSchooler / Former Indiana men's basketball coach Bobby Knight pumps his fist in celebration alongside former Hoosiers point guard Isiah Thomas on Saturday at Assembly Hall in Bloomington. Knight made his first appearance at an Indiana basketball game since being fired in September 2000.

BLOOMINGTON, Ind. - Bob Knight's short stroll from the practice gym to Assembly Hall ended a 20-year journey home.

It seemed as if he never left.

When the former Indiana Hoosiers men's basketball coach walked through the tunnel Saturday and onto his old court for the first time since he was fired in September 2000, the crowd went wild - chanting his name, roaring with approval, thanking him for all the success and banners he brought to Bloomington.

"It was one of the greatest and most emotional things for me," said former player Randy Wittman, who had a key role in the reunion. "I don't know if we'll see something like this again in college basketball. When he moved back here, I told him you're back here because this is where you belong."

The sellout crowd and dozens of former players lauded Knight after watching a video detailing his contributions to the program.

photo AP photo by Doug McSchooler / Former Indiana men's basketball coach Bobby Knight, center, makes his first appearance at a Hoosiers basketball game since being fired in September 2000. Knight is surrounded by former players and staff during Saturday's ceremony for the school's 1980 Big Ten championship at halftime of a game against Purdue.

He walked in with his son, Pat. He hugged Isiah Thomas. He was assisted into the arena by Quinn Buckner. And the 79-year-old Knight reveled in the moment, pumping his fist, pretending to direct Scott May in a practice drill and even leading fans in a chorus of "D-fense! D-fense!"

No, he didn't wear his trademark red sweater or throw a chair, but he did appear to get a little misty-eyed as the fans cheered.

"We love you, Bobby," one shouted.

Knight did not speak to the crowd over the public address system. He didn't need to.

Everyone in attendance knew what the famously combustible coach had accomplished in 29 seasons at Indiana: a program-record 662 victories, 11 Big Ten championships, five Final Four appearances and three national titles.

They knew some of the stories, too - the Olympic gold medal he won in 1984 with Michael Jordan after cutting Charles Barkley from the United States team; the infamous chair-throwing incident in 1985; and the firing that took place Sept. 10, 2000, causing the rift between Knight and the university.

University officials put Knight on a zero-tolerance policy earlier that year after an investigation into whether he had choked a player during a practice, with the accusation surfacing after the player - Neil Reed, who died at age 36 in 2012 - was no longer with the Hoosiers. That September, a student accused Knight of grabbing him in a hallway.

Knight responded by calling his own news conference, bringing witnesses to help explain his version. Two days later, Indiana University president Myles Brand - who went on to become executive director of the NCAA two years later and died at age 67 in 2009 - announced Knight's firing.

That was Knight's last public appearance in the building - until Saturday.

Despite the tireless efforts of university officials, led by athletic director Fred Glass, Knight refused every chance to come back.

He skipped championship team reunions and even declined to attend his own induction into the school's athletic hall of fame in 2009 because he said he didn't want his presence to detract from other class members.

The thaw began in earnest last spring, when he made a surprise appearance at an Indiana baseball game. In July, he bought a house three miles from the basketball arena.

"I visited Coach in Montana and Texas," former player Mike Woodson said. "This is home. I've spent the last month back here in Bloomington with him and had dinners a few times with him, and we were happy as hell he wanted to come back."

Knight hadn't exactly been invisible around Bloomington or the state after the firing.

He became the coach at Texas Tech in 2001, then retired before the season ended in 2008 with 902 career wins, a record at the time. He worked on ESPN as a color analyst. He gave speeches, attended fundraisers, signed autographs and attended basketball games and practices around Indiana.

He just didn't associate himself with the Hoosiers.

He also spoke at a Donald Trump rally in Grand Rapids, Michigan, in October 2016 and at another rally for President Trump on the south side of Indianapolis in November 2018.

And yet everyone associated with Hoosiers basketball still had one question: Will he ever come back?

"When he moved back here, I knew he was in a good place," Wittman said. "I knew he was happy here, living, and I told him you belong here."

It didn't take long for the rumors to start.

Some expected his return to come against Ohio State, his alma mater, on Jan. 11. Instead, he attended a game that day at Marian University, an NAIA school in Indianapolis, where another former player, Steve Downing, is the athletic director.

But with the Hoosiers playing their biggest rival, Purdue, longtime friend and rival Gene Keady seated in the front row and Indiana's 1980 Big Ten championship team being honored Saturday, Knight made it to Assembly Hall and delivered one of his traditional pregame speeches to the current Hoosiers before their 74-62 loss to the Boilermakers.

"I was standing there, and he was Coach Knight," Wittman said. "It was like he hadn't left that locker room. The words he gave to those players before they went out on the floor, it was fabulous."

The fans thought so, too, sending Knight home with one lasting chant: "Thank you Coach! Thank you Coach!"

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