For nearly three years, Sean Elliott kept his secret pretty well hidden.
Almost nobody knew that, over three decades after ending his legendary Wildcats basketball career, Elliott had again become an Arizona student, gradually erasing a shortfall of 27 units via online classes since COVID hit in 2020 until he graduated this week.
Only his family, a few friends and two members of the San Antonio Spursโ broadcast team knew he was doing it โฆ plus a few astute students who just happened to notice the words โSean Elliottโ pop up on the screen during group communication.
It was there Elliott could not hide.
โAlmost every one of my classes had discussions where I had to comment on somebody elseโs discussion post, write a couple responses and then write my own,โ Elliott said. โThere were a few students that said, `Hey, itโs great that youโre back in school. I canโt believe it. Is that you? Really?โ
โI was like, `Yeah, thatโs me.โ That kind of surprised me because the kids are so young nowadays. I want to figure out whoโs going to school right now who knows who I am.โ
Well, for starters, maybe any UA student who has looked at the walls at McKale Center, where Elliottโs jersey has hung for 27 years.
Although todayโs UA students mostly werenโt even alive during Elliottโs 11-year NBA career, when he picked up two NBA All-Star invites and helped lead the Spurs to the 1999 NBA title, maybe some have seen him doing a Spurs broadcast or know that his jersey is also retired in San Antonio, where the Tucson native still lives today.
Despite all that success, Elliott said there was always something โthat ate away at meโ since leaving UA. A local star from Cholla High School who went on to become the national college player of the year and a No. 3 NBA Draft pick in 1989, Elliott said he promised his mom as an NBA rookie that he โwould go back, and go back and finish.โ
Over three decades later, while visiting Lute Olson as the legendary former UA coach battled illness that led to his death in August 2020, Elliott said the same thing. In fact, by then, Elliott had already re-enrolled.
โI said `Coach, Iโm gonna go back and do it,โ โ Elliott said. โHe wasnโt in the best of health, but he was just like, `Iโm so proud. Youโre going to do it.โ That really inspired me.โ
Elliott cited those two people โ the coach who โwould jump on youโ if he heard about you missing class or an assignment, and the mom who told him even an accomplished player could feel inadequate without a degree โ as his primary reasons to finish up what became a Bachelor of Interdisciplinary Studies.
It wasnโt to fill out his rรฉsumรฉ, to get a coaching job, nor anything else. Just for those two people. And to live up to a family full of degree-holders, including his kids and a wife with bachelorโs and masterโs degrees.
โI was the outlier,โ Elliott said, also noting: โI joke with my kids and my friends that I was on the 38-year plan. So I finally got it done. And Iโm pretty happy about it and pretty thrilled.โ
In a video interview Friday with three local media members, Elliott discussed his academic journey, while also reflecting on the more fluid dynamics of todayโs college basketball and current UA coach Tommy Lloyd:
Elliott said the idea of getting a degree was actually โthe whole goalโ when he arrived at UA as a freshman in the fall of 1985.
โI really didnโt know if Iโd be an NBA player or not. Thatโs the truth. Coming from Tucson, I just really never imagined that my career would go the way that it has gone. So I entered school to get my degree first, and that was my motherโs main goal. She was like, `Youโve got to get your degree no matter what.โ
โOver the years, Iโve procrastinated. I found every excuse in the book not to go back. I was always on a team during the summer, USA Basketball, the Olympic Trials, there was always something I had going on. So when I left school, I still had 27 units left to complete.
โOver the years itโs always been in the back of my mind that I had to complete this, but it honestly seemed like a really daunting task. I mean, I have a career. I had my kids, and Iโm busy here in San Antonio. I didnโt ever figure that Iโd be able to get it done.โ
The COVID restrictions of 2020 meant Elliott had โdowntime and no excuses,โ so he called former UA player and developmental director Reggie Geary, who followed Elliott to UA and played with him for the Spurs in 1997-98. Elliott then worked with UA senior associate AD Jennifer Mewes to get enrolled via the โCATS Foreverโ program for former UA athletes who return to finish degrees.
โ(Geary) is my little brother there in Arizona, and he pointed me in the right direction, got me all set up. (Mewes) was my advisor, and she was just awesome. So I got started, and I had a lot of work to do. But I fit it in, even in the course of the season, while traveling and doing whatever I had to do, I always took time out to watch my lectures, write my papers, do my homework, do whatever I had to do to get it done.โ
Saying he took two or three classes a semester, Elliott actually found it wasnโt all work.
โIโll be honest, I had a lot of fun. It was great. It really was. I had a fantastic time. As a matter of fact, when I turned in my last paper I was a little bummed out that I didnโt have any more classes, as crazy as that sounds, because every class I had was interesting. I had amazing professors. I didnโt find one class that I thought was boring.
โI would tell my wife all the time after listening to a lecture, `You know, college is made for older people. I donโt think itโs made for young people.โ For me, it was just so much fun to go back and continue to learn things and relearn things that I didnโt know.โ
Already established as a professional broadcaster, Elliott said the reading and writing in classes helped his communication skills. He also had the chance to branch out via electives, since he had already satisfied many upper-level requirements in his playing days.
โI could take classes that were just interesting or things that I hadnโt even thought of taking, like a detailed history of the Italian Renaissance. Something that I never thought that I would get so wrapped up in was my oceanography class. For a nerd like me, I looked forward to the two lectures a week. That was exciting.
โI had a couple upper-level sociology classes that were a little bit tough. Half the time while reading, Iโd have to highlight a word and look up the definition, like `What is this guy trying to say?โ But a lot of the other things I got to take were incredibly interesting. When you take classes like that, they teach you a little bit more about the world. I say, `I know a lot and I donโt know a lotโ โ and all those classes showed me exactly what I didnโt know.โ
Elliott said he didnโt walk at UAโs graduation ceremonies because he didnโt want to become a center of attention and take away from othersโ accomplishments. But when asked who was most proud of him, Elliott said โme,โ and laughed.
โI mean, there were so many nights where I was reading, writing, working at my computer and having arguments with my wife because she would help edit some of my papers. Sheโs like, `What? What is this? This isnโt a sentence. Youโre not supposed to put a comma there! What are you trying to say?โ
โAnd all those nights where I just kind of powered through, even if I was on an airplane, on the way from one city to another, where Iโm reading or Iโm trying to finish an assignment and get it turned in. Iโm just proud that I was able to stick with it and fulfill that promise.โ
While Elliott said he has no desire to be a coach or scout, saying he canโt imagine doing anything else but broadcasting, he did take a break from his work and UA studies to rejoin the Wildcats for a film session under Lloyd before their Sweet 16 NCAA Tournament loss to Houston in San Antonio in March 2022.
โI really appreciated the way he handled them. I appreciated his honesty with the players, the way he motivated them. If I had a son who was playing college basketball, Iโd be very, very comfortable with sending him to Coach Lloyd, honestly. I think heโs done a phenomenal job. Itโs just the last couple of years in the (NCAA) Tournament, itโs how the chips fall sometimes.
โWe were the best team in โ88, and we didnโt win it. I thought we were were the best team in โ89, and we lost on a last-second shot. Thatโs the beauty of the tournament. Things like that happen.
โBut I love him as a coach. Iโve watched a lot of basketball over the years, and when you watch his style and what heโs done with his players, I just appreciate it so much.โ
But, in yet just one example of how much more fluid college basketball rosters are now than during Elliottโs playing days, Lloyd is still recruiting to fill four or five roster spots for next season โ in the middle of May. So when todayโs high-major college basketball players graduate, it is often at their second, third or even fourth college.
โAt the risk of sounding like a curmudgeon, which I am, I hate it. We built teams, and we built something together. (Players leaving) donโt really leave any legacy. The transfer portal, I donโt know that much about (it), but what I can say is that I think it undermines the coaches as well.
โMy sophomore year at Arizona, Steve (Kerr, fellow UA standout) was hurt and coach Olson was on my ass every day. Every day. I went home from practice three or four times that year in tears. And I called my mom one day and said, `Mom, I donโt want to be here anymore. I want to leave.โ My mom said, `Boy, you arenโt going anywhere.โ I was like `OK, youโre right.โ I got to stick this out. I got to go through the fire that heโs putting me through right now. And that made me into the player that I became my junior and senior year.
โNow, if a coach hurts a playerโs feelings, the kidโs transferring that year. Even kids that are successful have gone to another place. And I saw a comment the other day where this kid said something about he wasnโt making six figures in NIL money, so heโs leaving. That whole thought process is completely corroded. Itโs unfortunate for college basketball.
โObviously, I want players to have rights and have freedom. But at the same time, when you commit to a school, why canโt you honor that commitment?โ
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