We know who made the announcement in the recent basketball firings, but the questions of the moment surround who will be calling the next shots in the University of Hawaii’s turbulent athletic program.
Ostensibly, it is the athletic director, Ben Jay, who is charged with operating the 21-team, $32 million enterprise. But the stunning U-turn that saw basketball coach Gib Arnold go from the prospect of a three-year extension and pay hike this summer to termination last week suggests we could be in for some behind-the-scenes jockeying.
The kind that UH’s history in such cases hints that we could be in for more changes.
It was Jay, under pressure from boosters, who moved ahead in the face of an ongoing NCAA investigation for a contract extension that would have bound UH to Arnold through 2017 at a cost of $1,095,000.
But three key changes, and the chain reaction they produced, brought Arnold’s tenure to a screeching halt two weeks before the start of the 2014-15 season and before the NCAA’s notice of allegations arrived.
The landscape was altered when Tom Apple, who hired and oversaw Jay and was said to have been favorably disposed to the contract extension, was removed as Manoa chancellor on Sept. 1. He was replaced by interim appointee Robert Bley-Vroman, dean of the College of Languages, Linguistics and Literature.
In between, attorney Jeff Portnoy, who was appointed to the Board of Regents by Gov. Neil Abercrombie late last year, assumed an active chairmanship of the restructured board’s Committee on Intercollegiate Athletics.
In apparent consultation with UH President David Lassner, Portnoy and other regents, Bley-Vroman kept Arnold’s extension tabled until boldly, and correctly, announcing the termination of the coach and long-time assistant Brandyn Akana on Oct. 28.
Except for a six-paragraph statement that concludes with the assertion Lassner and the regents "stand behind the athletics director and chancellor as they make these difficult decisions," there has been no public announcement of the process at which they were arrived at or explanation of the reasoning that went into them.
Nor was there an accounting of why, if the decision to terminate was made more than a week before the announcement, there was such a scramble to name a season-long replacement afterward.
The last time we witnessed something remotely like this was when then-AD Jim Donovan was overruled on the hiring process for a football coach.
Past examples tell us there are few things as potentially combustible around UH as the whiff of a power vacuum in the state’s only Division I athletic program. No place else on campus do so many agendas clash or so many hands grab for a piece of the action.
This is, after all, a campus where Washington Place has been known to counsel the AD on the preferred choice of sportscasters, state Capitol inhabitants aren’t above meddling in everything else and there is a hui created for every opening. Often before there are openings.
There are no limits to the challenges facing the financially struggling, under-performing UH athletic program these days. Questions about who is in charge don’t need to be among them.
Reach Ferd Lewis at flewis@staradvertiser.com or 529-4820.
MOVERS AND SHAKERS
Some major athletic power brokers at UH
ROBERT BLEY-VROMAN » Interim UH-Manoa Chancellor. Former Dean of UH College of Languages, Linguistics and Literature. Oversees athletics, serves on Board of Directors of booster group ‘Ahahui Koa Anuenue and represents UH at the Mountain West and Big West Conferences.
BERT T. KOBAYASHI JR. » Founding partner Kobayashi, Sugita & Goda law firm that has done extensive business with UH and has had the ear of a succession of ADs. Oversaw restructuring of ‘Ahahui Koa Anuenue a decade ago. Served on committees that helped select Norm Chow and Gib Arnold. Represented Jim Donovan and Greg McMackin. Coached junior varsity football at Punahou. Middle son, Jon, an attorney who ran an inn and cafe in Washington state, took over as director of Koa Anuenue nine months ago and is seen as a possible candidate for the next athletic director opening. Oldest son, Chris, has represented several athletes, including Manti Te’o and Akebono.
JEFF PORTNOY » Chair of Board of Regents Committee on Intercollegiate Athletics since July. Does analysis on radio broadcasts of UH men’s basketball games. Partner in Cades Schutte law firm, which has done extensive business with UH. Firm handled a 2011 inquiry of UH men’s basketball program and did work on "Wonder Blunder" report. Portnoy has represented the Honolulu Star-Advertiser in First Amendment cases and written an unpaid basketball blog.
JOHN "JACK" K. TSUI » Said to be a key confidant of Ben Jay. Chairman of Clarence T. C. Ching Foundation that donated $5 million, the largest-ever donation to UH athletics, to build the athletic complex that carries the Ching name. Served on committees that helped select Jim Donovan as athletic director and Greg McMackin as football coach. Honored as distinguished alumnus of Penn State.
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CORRECTION
A previous version of this article included an incorrect photo for Bert T. Kobayashi Jr. |