Bob Knight: A Latter-Day MacArthur?
By Timothy M. Roberts History News Service
On September 10, Indiana University President Myles Brand
dismissed Indiana University's men's basketball coach Bob
Knight, nicknamed "The General," for defying university
officials and for violating a "zero tolerance" policy
against his angry rages. Brand was criticized for his rash
act against a national celebrity. Meanwhile, Knight
complained that he was a victim of changing expectations
that ended his hard-line leadership.
An Indiana trustee critical of Brand's action invoked a
pointed comparison: "President Truman fired General
MacArthur. President Brand fired General Knight." Defending
Knight, the trustee compared Knight's firing to the earlier
dismissal of a popular general by a chief executive -- the
firing in 1951 of General Douglas MacArthur by President
Harry Truman.
But is the comparison valid? In fact there are noteworthy
coincidences between the two controversies. Both MacArthur
and Knight were admired for their success and
self-confidence, and neither tolerated ambiguity in
decision-making. Their leadership style led them to defy
higher authorities. When those above them in authority
risked public criticism and punished their defiance, both
tried to manipulate the public by casting themselves as
victims.
MacArthur was arguably America's greatest military field
commander. In World War II he led the recapture of the
Pacific islands from Japan. In July 1950 the Truman
administration sent him to Korea after Communist North
Korean troops launched a surprise attack on South Korea.
There he devised a daring amphibious assault behind enemy
lines that enabled United Nations forces to drive the North
Koreans back. This tactic confirmed MacArthur as a "virtuoso
strategist," said one analyst.
Like MacArthur, Knight too has been regarded as a
strategic genius. His Indiana teams were feared because of
their ability to exploit opponents' weaknesses from game to
game. Like MacArthur, Knight is a severe disciplinarian,
whom subordinates regard with respect, not love. Someone
said MacArthur was "the only man in the world who could walk
into a room full of drunks and all would be stone-sober
within five minutes." What other place but a Bob Knight
locker room or press conference could have feared such
discipline?
Yet the very nature of the success that the two men
enjoyed led each to his undoing. Both preferred to operate
without supervision. After United Nations troops occupied
most of North Korea, Truman, MacArthur's commander-in-chief,
ordered preparations to negotiate peace. Instead, after
Chinese intervention forced an ignominious retreat to the
south, MacArthur tried to widen the war, pleading for
American use of the atomic bomb. In an inflammatory letter
to Congress, he declared, "The Communists have elected
global conquest. We must win. There is no substitute for
victory." Accustomed to autonomy, MacArthur ignored
presidential authority and pleaded his case outside the
chain of command.
Knight also created a virtual fiefdom, free from
administrative interference. Indiana, said an opposing
coach, was the one institution where the basketball coach
was larger than either the basketball program or the
university itself. Neither the university president, nor
trustees, nor alumni would accept tampering with a coach so
embraced by a basketball-loving state. They were seduced by
success. Much as MacArthur won victory in the Pacific,
Knight coached Indiana to three national titles and eleven
Big Ten championships.
But in the midst of championships, Knight was verbally
and physically abusive of fans, police, players,
secretaries, referees and reporters, and was antagonistic
toward Indiana University's administration. Within his
domain he became a tyrant, and threatened the reputation of
the entire university.
Despite MacArthur's immense popularity with the American
people, Truman recalled him from Korea in April 1951. The
general's removal provoked an uproar. Congressmen and
newspapers called for Truman's impeachment, while American
people burned the president in effigy. MacArthur addressed a
joint session of Congress, whispering that he was interested
only in doing "his duty as God gave him the light to see
that duty." He visited New York City, where 7.5 million
people gathered to cheer him.
The removal of Knight also created a firestorm, rating
him a page-one story in The New York Times and a national
interview on ESPN. In support of Knight, students rioted in
Bloomington and burned Brand in effigy. Brand's
administrators and his family were harassed. Knight has
remained unrepentant, pleading that he is only a
misunderstood teacher of the game of basketball.
Each in his day, MacArthur and Knight displayed a
stubbornness that captured the nation's imagination. During
the 1950s anti-Communist fears were widespread, and
MacArthur's refusal to negotiate with an enemy that he
regarded as evil won over an American public not ready to
strike deals. Similarly, the image of Knight rebuking prima
donna players, irritating reporters and even roughing up
foreign policemen struck a chord with American fans. Both
men refused to compromise their principles -- even when
their principles pushed them to their self-destruction.
What one observer said of Knight applies to both men: "He
has a potent mix of high competence with characteristics
that cause him to sabotage himself. That's a fascinating
thing -- in a kind of morbid way -- for people to observe."
Timothy M. Roberts is a visiting assistant professor of
history at Metropolitan State College of Denver.
[Timothy M. Roberts 1771 South Forest Street, Denver, CO
80222. Telephone: (303) 733-3218; fax: (303) 556-2671;
e-mail timandemily@mindspring.com.]
History News Service
Co-Directors:
Joyce Appleby: appleby@history.ucla.edu
Telephone: 310-470-8946
James M. Banner, Jr.: jbanner@aya.yale.edu
Telephone: 202-462-5655
Website designed and administered by Christopher
Bates.
This article was posted on October 9, 2000.
Pictured at top (left to right): King George III
of England, Harriet Beecher Stowe, "Surrender at
Appomattox", Albert Schweitzer, The sinking of the U.S.S.
Arizona at Pearl Harbor, Bill Clinton.
|