MSU basketball coach Tom Izzo and his staff have spent the last five weeks searching, interviewing and checking backgrounds of coaches from all over the state and into Ohio.
The search finally came to an end Monday when Izzo named former Spartan point guard Mark Montgomery as the Spartans No. 3 assistant coach. He is filling a vacancy left by Mike Garland, who was promoted to the No. 2 assistant spot after Stan Heath took the head coaching job at Kent State on April 19.
Montgomery played point guard for MSU from 1989-92 and has been an assistant coach at Central Michigan for the past four years.
Montgomery said his transition to coaching at MSU will be a smooth one because he is already familiar with the system.
A lot of the same plays they ran when I was here, theyre running them now, Montgomery said. Tom has tweaked a few things and changed some things. I think Im walking into a situation where the foundation is pretty solid so Im just going to have to pick up on some loose ends and clean some things up.
Its just learning his terminology and the words (Tom) uses - what he expects from me, thats kind of the biggest thing - where Im gonna fit in all of this.
Garland, speaking of his previous position, said the biggest thing Montgomery will have to adjust to is the NCAA rule that prohibits the third assistant coach from recruiting away from campus.
Hes kind of trading jobs with me, Garland said. Where (at Central Michigan) he was out on the road recruiting, hell be spending more time with our players, working more along the lines of individual workouts and doing self-scouts on our team - spending time with players and dealing with their academic and whatever social needs or campus needs they might have.
But Garland said that adjustment wont be a problem because the players already know Montgomery - especially the players he recruited.
A lot of our players know who he is because he was a heck of a player here, Garland said. He was on the 1989 Big Ten Championship team and hes quite a player himself. Hes dropped in from time to time and not only made himself (known) as a coach at Central Michigan but as an ex-Spartan and thats important. So our guys are well-aware of who he is.
The MSU coaching staff brought Montgomery on board not only because of his status as an alumnus but also because he is an Inkster native who has connections in Detroit.
Hes a Detroit-area player himself, Garland said. He knows a lot of (Detroit) players and coaches personally. He can get on the phone and still talk to coaches and continue to cultivate the relationships that he already has down there.
Some of the relationships that he has will be better than the ones that weve already established and, of course, thats going to help us to gain some ground.
The in-state recruiting battle with Michigan is one Montgomery is optimistic about MSU continuing to win.
Were just going to have to out-work them like we have been doing, Montgomery said. I think our success over the past three years puts us in front of Michigan. I think the atmosphere up here is better than Michigan. I know Im being a little biased because I played in it, but if you go to Breslin and you go to Crisler (Arena) theres a big difference.
But Montgomery said the success that gives MSU an edge over U-M will also result in people having greater expectations of his performance.
Its going to be pressured, no doubt about it, Montgomery said. After three straight Final Fours, expectations are very high around here, but thats one of the challenges I look forward to - thats why I wanted to come here.





