TERRE HAUTE —
Three years after being a bridesmaid, Greg Lansing is headed to the Indiana State men’s basketball altar.
Several sources close to the Indiana State men’s basketball program have confirmed that Associate Head Coach Greg Lansing has been named head coach. He will succeed Kevin McKenna, who resigned on Monday to take an assistant coach position at Oregon.
No sources wished to speak on the record at this time. Lansing himself declined comment.
Indiana State will hold a news conference at noon today at the Hulman Center Varsity Club, an event that the school is currently characterizing as a news conference on “the future of the men’s basketball program.” The public is invited.
Lansing gets a job that he was a finalist for in 2007 when McKenna was hired. McKenna elected to keep Lansing on staff as associate head coach.
Director of Athletics Ron Prettyman said Monday that ISU’s search for a head coach in the wake of McKenna’s resignation would be brief. It took less than 24 hours from the time McKenna announced his intentions to the Sycamores on Sunday night for news reports to circulate that Lansing would be his successor.
“This will move very quickly. We’re in a crucial recruiting stage right now.
“The timing couldn’t be worse. The month of July is the heaviest recruiting time in college basketball. I am not going to be able to do a methodical search as I’ve done with other searches,” Prettyman said Monday afternoon.
Lansing has the reputation as a good recruiter, and he recruited several of ISU’s current players. Lansing has not been a head coach at the collegiate level but has been a part of the Sycamore program for eight years over two different stints.
Lansing, an assistant at ISU since 2006, was a finalist for the job in 2007 when Royce Waltman was dismissed. McKenna was hired from Creighton’s staff instead.
Lansing has been associate head coach since McKenna was hired in 2007. Lansing was hired by Waltman in 2006 and served under Waltman during his last season at the helm.
Lansing had a previous stint at ISU from 1996 to 1999, serving under Sherman Dillard and Waltman. During that time, Lansing helped recruit Nate Green, who became MVC Player of the Year in 2000.
Lansing left in 1999 to join Steve Alford’s staff at Iowa. He was an assistant coach at Iowa from 1999-2006. Iowa had a 135-92 record with Lansing on staff.
Before Lansing joined the ISU staff, he was head coach at Roosevelt High School in Des Moines. He led the school to its first winning seasons in more than a decade. Greg is the son of Dave Lansing, a 33-year coach in Iowa who is a member of the Iowa High School Athletic Association Coaches Hall of Fame.
Lansing is married to Angie Lansing, who is currently the ISU senior women’s administrator and ISU athletics business manager. Angie Lansing was an Academic All-American as a track and field and cross country runner for the Sycamores when she was known as Angie Menser.
Lansing is the first ISU basketball coach hired from the existing men’s basketball staff since Bill Hodges was hired off of Bob King’s staff in 1978.
News
Lansing takes over: ISU picks new coach for men's basketball program
Sycamores move forward in wake of McKenna's resignation
- News
-
-
Spreading Goodwill
Goodwill Industries Inc. on Tuesday opened its third Terre Haute store.
-
Feds sending money to Feather Creek
Clinton residents have reason to celebrate.
Federal officials have granted more than $800,000 toward a $1.2 million project of widening and deepening Feather Creek, which has been a flooding problem in the city since the Great Depression. Work could begin in spring 2013. -
City to clean up Toney site
A contaminated petroleum site at the northwestern edge of Indiana State University’s campus will be transferred to the city of Terre Haute to remove the property from a pending sale.
-
Bennett: Terre Haute ‘moving in the right direction’
After four years of shrinking budgets and a slow economy, Terre Haute is “moving in the right direction,” Mayor Duke Bennett said Tuesday morning in his first “State of the City” address since being re-elected by Terre Haute voters in November.
Difficult financial and political battles are largely in the past, he said, and now the city can start moving forward in ways not possible in the past four years. -
Terre Haute group locates missing caver
An Iraq war veteran and caving enthusiast took his own life about half a mile from where he left his car on a rural road but more than four months passed before four young spelunkers exploring where they weren’t allowed found him deep inside a treacherous cave, Indiana conservation officers said Tuesday.
-
Schools celebrate rising graduation rates as ‘team effort’
For the fourth year in a row, Vigo County School Corp. graduation rates have topped the state average, school district officials said during a news conference Tuesday.
-
Arrested officer already on administrative leave
A summons to appear in Vigo Superior Court 1 has been issued to the former police chief of West Terre Haute after a theft case filed Monday was transferred from a different court.
-
Parade to honor Punter for N.Y. Giants
A parade has been scheduled for 1:30 p.m. Friday to honor Terre Haute native Steve Weatherford, a punter with the Super Bowl champion New York Giants.
-
DNA match leads to arrest in summer burglary
A recent DNA match in an Indiana database has led to the arrest of a burglary suspect by the Indiana State Police at Putnamville.
-
Authorities still looking into Monday shooting of teen
Investigation continues into a shooting Monday in the 600 block of Water Street, which is near the Wabash River on the city’s west side.
-
General Assembly ready to tackle legislative bottleneck
After a timeout to accommodate out-of-town Super Bowl visitors, the Indiana General Assembly is back in session to tackle legislation that had been bottlenecked by a contentious labor bill.
-
Shakeout helps prepare for earthquake
Drop. Cover. Hold on! Those are the directives for the Great Central U.S. ShakeOut, a multi-state earthquake drill that happened Tuesday morning.
-
Court: California gay marriage ban unconstitutional
A federal appeals court has declared California’s same-sex marriage ban unconstitutional, paving the way for a likely U.S. Supreme Court showdown on the voter-approved law.
-
Lost Creek trustee exploring possibility of providing computer lab for residents
A mobile computer lab has come to the Lost Creek Township Trustee’s Office to assist the public in job searches and applying for assistance programs.
-
Vigo schools see grad rate rise
The Vigo County School Corp. 2011 graduation rate improved nearly 4 percentage points and surpassed the state graduation rate, according to information from the state Department of Education.
-
Among Super Bowl ads, the stars were the cars
Lots of dogs and babies appeared in commercial advertisements for Super Bowl XLVI, but game-day ads also increasingly are pointing to social media handles, such as Twitter and Facebook.
-
Host city hopes its experience is a game winner
If praise and adulation could put points on the scoreboard, then Indianapolis had a blowout victory hosting its first Super Bowl.
-
Local news briefly: Feb. 7, 2012
• Woman faces arson charge
• Mother jailed on abuse charge
• New trial date for suspect
• Woman's arson trial July 10
• Child pornography trial set
-
West Terre Haute officer arrested on theft charges
A West Terre Haute police officer is facing allegations of misusing his department-issued gasoline credit card.
-
Teen hospitalized after shooting
The Terre Haute Police Department reported late Monday that a 16-year-old Terre Haute youth was flown via helicopter ambulance to an Indianapolis hospital after an accidental shooting. The extent of the youth’s injuries were not available late Monday night.
-
Rush to hospital leads to wreck on I-70
A motorist reportedly speeding to get to an Indianapolis hospital ended up getting medical treatment himself after a Monday morning crash on Interstate 70 near the 37-mile marker.
-
Fog a factor in West Terre Haute accident
Heavy fog contributed to a two-vehicle accident involving a West Terre Haute patrolman at 7:21 a.m. Monday.
-
SUPER BOWL XLVI: Super to the very end
A wild and record-setting Super Bowl week was capped Sunday with the New York Giants winning their fourth title game. But the host city of Indianapolis was a winner as well.
-
SUPER BOWL XLVI: Businesses see more carry out than carrying on during big game
Home delivery action was hotter than wing sauce Sunday afternoon, as football fans dipped in for the big game.
-
SUPER BOWL XLVI: Airport traffic increases as game day arrives
It isn’t every Sunday afternoon that jets line the runway at the Terre Haute International Airport, but many in town wouldn’t mind if they did.
-
MIKE LUNSFORD: Books open our eyes to that which we will never see
I got a letter last week from a friend, Sister Margaret Quinlan, who lives amidst the beauty of the St. Mary-of-the-Woods campus. Besides the email space and the time she invests in describing the flowers and trees and birds that she shares with her roomies out there, as well as her accounts of teaching and traveling, Margaret most often writes about books. She loves them, and she knows I do, too.
-
Rose-Hulman’s SADD games teach important lessons
Basketballs bounced about the gymnasium floor Saturday as middle school students learned alternatives to negative behavior.
-
Hotel demand in Terre Haute less than foreseen
Terre Haute hotels are seeing economic spillover from the Super Bowl, although not nearly what the community had hoped for.
-
Goal: ‘Times Square meets Super Bowl’
The unseasonably warm weather in the Super Bowl’s host city has created an envious problem: Record crowds descending on the the city’s downtown.
-
Bird patrol would love to crow about its new line of attack
Simple fishing line is the latest attempt Terre Haute’s Crow Committee is using to discourage the troublesome birds from landing on downtown buildings — joining a fake owl perched on a rooftop cooling unit, small speakers that play the sounds of a bird in distress and fireworks.
- More News Headlines
-








