Because Arizona coach Tommy Lloyd has never lost a fulltime basketball-oriented staffer since he took over the Wildcats in 2021, he doesnβt usually have job openings.
So when Evan Manning called to seek his help finding work last spring, as an assistant coach on an Army staff that was not retained, Lloyd had to get creative.
Manning had grown up in the game as the son of former Kansas and NBA star Danny Manning, played as a walk-on at Kansas, worked under Lloyd as a graduate assistant at Gonzaga, and last season gained Division I assistant coaching experience under Jimmy Allen, who was fired by Army after last season.
Lloyd heard him out. Then basically told Manning to hang on.
βI reached out to him and asked if he knew of anything in the business, if he could help me out,β Manning said. βHe knew that there might be a chance to get hired at Arizona. He thought something could happen.β
Eventually, it did. Over the summer, UA administrators approved Manning for a $60,000 salary β roughly one-sixth of what UA assistant coaches make β to become UAβs director of basketball operations. In the role, Manning has taken some duties from special assistant TJ Benson while adding others that include teaching UA players of the programβs history and culture.
He joined the Wildcats just after they returned from a Middle East exhibition trip in late August.
βI just felt we needed a little bit more support internally and Evanβs a really talented guy whoβs obviously been around basketball his whole life and been at really high levels,β Lloyd said. βHeβs a great asset to the program.β
Benson cheered the move, which allows him to focus more on off-floor coaching efforts and on-campus recruiting.
βWhen I heard about it, I was like, `Do it, no brainer,β because I knew that it was going to make my life easier,β Benson said. βThatβs speaking from my standpoint, but I know how heβs helping our entire program right now. He was a big-time addition.β
NCAA rules now allow five staffers to help the head coach with on-floor duties, which at UA has been fulltime assistants Jack Murphy, Steve Robinson and Riccardo Fois, plus player development director Rem Bakamus and scouting director Ken Nakagawa.
But Lloyd and his staffers routinely say everyone does a little of everything. Besides, coaching and recruiting also happen off the floor, as do scouting and analytics.
βI think weβre all are pretty multi-faceted and talented with our coaching resumes,β says Benson, who was an assistant coach at Grand Canyon. βAt the end of the day, weβre all involved with a lot of different things where people probably are like, `Well, why is he doing that? Or why is he helping with this?β But itβs just how our staff made up. And we donβt have any egos in all of it.β
Benson has had a particularly easy time working with Manning, whom he calls a good friend. The two bonded at Gonzaga in 2020-21, when Benson was the coordinator for basketball administration and Manning was a graduate assistant.
The Zags raced to the national title game that season, which was marked by largely empty stands and COVID protocols.
βHeβs a great dude, comes from a great family, been around a lot of high level basketball,β Benson said. βThe year that we were together in Spokane was a crazy one, the COVID NCAA Tournament bubble year. We were around each other a lot.β
Also in 2020-21, Manning was assigned to work with Lloyd on his scouting assignments β and to help work with a long-term project named Oumar Ballo, a 7-foot freshman who played sparingly that season.
Then, during a second season at Gonzaga in 2021-22 and last season at Army, Manning watched from afar how Ballo turned into an all-Pac-12 player.
βHeβs been great to work with and to see his growth has been awesome,β Manning said. βCoach Lloyd has said it for a long time β heβs known how good Oumar can be. When I got to work with him there, you could definitely see the potential.
βItβs just that at Gonzaga, he was behind a couple of all Americans, so he just needed that opportunity. I think coming here probably changed his life, to be honest, because heβs gotten to be a very big part of a very good team. That growth has been awesome to see.β
While Manning didnβt bring any Arizona experience to the job, he grew up appreciating a similar basketball culture at Kansas. Thatβs helped him explain Wildcats history to players the way Lloyd wants to.
Evan lived in the Phoenix area as a young child when his dad, played for the Suns. But the family often spent offseasons in Kansas, where Danny was known for leading the Jayhawks to the 1988 title, and later moved there when Danny retired and began a coaching career.
βPeople always ask me questions aboutβ Kansas in 1988, Evan says. βAnd Iβve heard a lot about the β88 team at Arizona because of that. People talk about it a good amount. Itβs pretty cool, especially for my family. That was an important time.β
That same year, of course, was known at Arizona as the one where the Wildcats emerged as a national power under Lute Olson, creating the sort of legacy that Lloyd has been speaking to his players about.
Now Lloyd doesnβt have to do all the talking.
βItβs coach Lloydβs vision and weβre helping him out where we can,β Manning said. βYouβve gotta know the history of the place to appreciate it, especially in the day and age where kids can transfer pretty easily.
βThere might not be as much loyalty as there was 20 years ago, but if you can kind of set your anchor, guys appreciate what they have and where theyβre at. I think it goes a long way.β
Maybe Manning sets his anchor into Arizona, too. He said heβs interested in being an assistant coach again but also that he wants to be part of a winning program, and that working under Lloyd means youβre treated like an assistant coach anyway.
So it is possible that Lloyd may still not have a vacancy anytime soon.
βThe familiarity with Coach Lloyd and what heβs building here is really what made me want to come to Arizona,β Manning said. βI think the biggest thing is who you work with and who you work for, and I donβt think thereβs a better person to coach under than coach Lloyd.β