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IU's Eli Holman to transfer, apparently throws 'tantrum'

IU's Eli Holman to transfer, apparently throws 'tantrum'
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INDIANAPOLIS | Things just keep getting worse for Indiana men's basketball.

On Thursday, forward Eli Holman threw another potential wrench into the Hoosiers' rebuilding project by telling coaches he intended to transfer before apparently throwing a tantrum in the coaches' office that required a call to the campus police.

The meeting, which coach Tom Crean described as cordial initially, certainly did not end that way.

"His behavior took me, along with the other people in the office, by surprise," Crean said in a statement released by the university. "We saw him as a danger to himself and wanted to take precautionary measures to help him. We felt bad for Eli and, hopefully, were able to help him."

Campus police declined to comment on the situation, and The Associated Press left a message seeking comment for Capt. Jerry Minger of the Indiana University police department.

Holman did not have a listed telephone number in Bloomington. The Associated Press sent an e-mail seeking comment to a school address listed in his name.

"No one said anything about feeling threatened or like the anger was directed at a specific person," Minger told The Bloomington Herald-Times.

Police did not arrest Holman, but took a statement from Crean and others who witnessed the outburst, The Herald-Times reported. Holman left the building without speaking to the police.

Losing Holman, a 6-foot-9 freshman center from California, would leave Indiana with only five returning players from last season's roster and further complicates the rebuilding project Crean inherited from the previous staff.

While Holman did not play a big role at Indiana last season, averaging 1.0 points and 1.7 rebounds in six games before injuring his left wrist and taking a medical redshirt, he likely would have been a contributor next season because of the depleted Indiana roster.

Crean said he was as surprised with Holman's decision as he was with Holman's actions.

"He had a good meeting with our assistant coaches earlier in the day," Crean said. "I felt like he still was not sure whether or not he wanted to be here, which surprised me because everything we have seen from him had been very positive, in terms of staying at Indiana and moving forward. I have no idea what made him change his mind."

Crean already faced the prospect of replacing all five starters from last season, is without one scholarship because of the school's self-imposed sanctions in response to former coach Kelvin Sampson's phone scandal and now faces the possibility of being hit with academic sanctions from the NCAA next week.

The Indianapolis Star reported last month that the Hoosiers' team score on the NCAA's academic progress report is 899, well below the cutline of 925. Should the Hoosiers fall below the cutline and have players leave school while academically ineligible, they could be subjected to the loss of up to two more scholarships.

The problems at Indiana began last October when a university investigation showed Sampson and his staff made more than 100 impermissible phone calls while still on probation for a similar phone-call scandal during Sampson's tenure at Oklahoma.

While Indiana officials contended Sampson's violations were secondary, the NCAA accused Sampson of five major infractions in February. On Feb. 22, Sampson accepted a $750,000 buyout.

Interim coach Dan Dakich, an Andrean grad, replaced Sampson, then went 3-4 during the final month of the season.

But things have only gotten worse since then.

Hours before Crean was hired as coach in April, Dakich kicked starting guards Armon Basset and Jamarcus Ellis off the team for missing an appointment and then failing to show up to run laps as part of their punishment.

Crean has not yet said whether he will reinstate them.

If Bassett and Ellis do not return, Crean will be replacing all five starters from last year's team, which went 25-8 and lost to Arkansas in the first round of the NCAA tournament.

Big Ten freshman of the year Eric Gordon has declared he will enter the NBA draft and does not plan to withdraw, and starting forwards D.J. White, the Big Ten player of the year, and Lance Stemler have run out of eligibility.

The Hoosiers also lost their top two recruits for next season -- forward Devin Ebanks and guard Terrell Holloway -- who were granted their release after Sampson resigned in February.

Crean had been successful in putting together his new team.

He has four recruits signed for next season, including guard Nick Williams, who initially signed to play for Crean at Marquette. And he's gotten an oral commitment from forward Bobby Capobianco, of Loveland, Ohio.

But they apparently won't have Holman as a teammate.

"I was hopeful that we could work through this situation to come to an arrangement we both were comfortable with and to take some time to make a decision," Crean said. "I do not anticipate Eli being back at Indiana. We will do our best to help him move forward and wish him well."

Copyright 2012 nwitimes.com. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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