Hoiberg's plans for Cornhuskers no longer include Doc Sadler

Updated Mar. 18, 2022 1:52 p.m. ET
Associated Press

Nebraska coach Fred Hoiberg announced Friday he had eliminated the position of special assistant to the head coach and that Doc Sadler would leave the program.

The folksy Sadler had grown into a beloved figure among fans during his six-year run as head coach from 2006-12. He returned when Hoiberg was hired three years ago, spending the first two years as an assistant and this season as special assistant with no on-court coaching duties.

The announcement came a day after Hoiberg announced he and his chief recruiter, Matt Abdelmassih, mutually agreed to part ways.

The moves are part of a restructuring following three straight 20-loss seasons.

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Athletic director Trev Alberts had announced last month that

Hoiberg, who is under contract through the 2026-27 season, has had his salary reduced from $3.5 million to $3.25 million and he will forfeit a $500,000 retention bonus that would be due if he were still coaching coach on March 31, 2024. His contract buyout was reduced from $18.5 million to $11 million.

The Arkansas-born Sadler, 61, has had a dozen head or assistant coaching jobs, but he always considered Nebraska home.

“Doc has given his heart and soul to the Nebraska basketball program twice in his coaching career, and we appreciate all his contributions to the success of Husker basketball,” Hoiberg said. “Doc has a great basketball mind and has been a valuable resource on our coaching staffs both here and at Iowa State. I wish him nothing but the best in the future.”

As head coach, Sadler was 101-89 overall with three NIT appearances at Nebraska but just 34-64 in conference games. In the Huskers’ final five years in the Big 12, Sadler’s teams never finished higher than seventh. They finished last in his only year coaching the team in the Big Ten.

Abdelmassih had been an assistant for Hoiberg for three seasons at Nebraska and also worked on Hoiberg’s Iowa State staff for five. The two also worked together with the NBA’s Minnesota Timberwolves for two years.

“Matt and I have a close relationship dating back to our time in the front office with the Timberwolves,” Hoiberg said. “He was a big part of our success at Iowa State and played a leading role in building our roster at Nebraska. I wish Matt and his family nothing but the best.”

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