Kansas
Ex-St. John’s coach, KU assistant Roberts retires

LAWRENCE, Kan. — Longtime college basketball coach Norm Roberts, who spent six seasons leading St. John’s but is perhaps better known for his long tenure as an assistant at Kansas, announced his retirement Monday after nearly four decades in coaching.
During his time on Bill Self’s bench, the Jayhawks won seven regular-season Big 12 Conference titles and three Big 12 Tournament titles, reached the Elite Eight of the NCAA Tournament four times and won the 2022 national championship.
“I’ve been fortunate that I’ve never worked a day in my life. Being able to coach at Kansas and be part of this program has been unbelievable,” Roberts said in a statement issued by the school. “After 37 years as a coach, it is time for me to move on, enjoy my family, spend more time with my wife and sons.”
Roberts was born in New York and played there for Queens College, a Division II school, before spending four seasons as its coach. He was hired by Self as an assistant at Oral Roberts in 1995 and followed him through stops at Tulsa and Illinois before arriving at Kansas, where Roberts came on the radar of St. John’s.
He wound up going 81-101 with the Red Storm, twice making the postseason but never the NCAA Tournament.
Roberts spent a quick stint at Florida before returning to Kansas in 2012, serving as one of Self’s closest confidants. He was the Jayhawks’ acting coach in recent years when Self dealt with some health issues and served a four-game suspension.
“This is a bittersweet moment for me because Norm and I have been together since 1995,” Self said. “Norm has played a key role to our success at all of the stops we’ve had together, especially here at Kansas. From recruiting to developing players to scouting and his knowledge of the game, both on and off the court, Norm has been instrumental in what we have achieved.
“We’ve had some unbelievable memories that will last our lifetimes.”
The 59-year-old Roberts was responsible for helping to recruit and coach seven NBA lottery picks, including Josh Jackson, Joel Embiid and Andrew Wiggins. In all, he has helped 35 players from Kansas alone go on to have professional basketball careers.
Roberts also coached his son, Niko, during his four-year career at Kansas. His other son, Justin, played at Toledo and Niagara.
“The thing I’m going to remember most are the players,” Roberts said, “and watching them grow, watching them succeed, and watching them fight through adversity and come back from that.”

Kansas
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Kansas
Kansas State men’s golf clinging to final NCAA regional qualifying spot for nationals

Kansas State women’s golf coach Stew Burke on the NCAA Championship
Kansas State women’s golf coach Stew Burke talks about the upcoming NCAA Championship, which starts Friday in Carlsbad, California.
The Kansas State men’s golf team remains on track to qualify for its first NCAA Championship, but with zero margin for error.
With a score of 4-over-par 292 Tuesday the Wildcats held onto fifth place in the NCAA Bremerton Regional at Gold Mountain Golf Course in Bremerton, Washington. The tournament concludes Wednesday with the top five teams advancing to nationals May 23-28 in Carlsbad, California.
The 10th-seeded Wildcats, who were tied for fourth after one round, have just a one-shot cushion over sixth-place Charlotte with South Florida and Utah lurking two back at 8-under. Kansas is in 10th place at 16-over, 10 shots below the qualifying line.
K-State senior Cooper Schultz, the co-leader with Florida’s Luke Poulter at 4-under Monday, dropped into a three-way tie for sixth with an even-par 72 in the second round. Florida’s Matthew Kress tops the leaderboard heading into Wednesday’s final round at 10-under, one shot ahead of Poulter.
No. 2 seed Florida is comfortably in the team lead at 25-under, followed by top seed Arizona State in second at minus-16, South Carolina at 2-under and Colorado at 1-under.
Senior Kobe Valociek turned in K-State’s best round of the day at 1-under 71, moving up 11 spots into 21st place. Ian McCrary, who shot even par on Monday, dropped to 35th overall with a second-round 76, while Nicklaus Mason is tied for 48th at 7-under after a 3-over 75 on Tuesday.
K-State will go head-to-head in a group with Colorado and Charlotte in the final round on Wednesday behind leaders Florida, Arizona State and South Carolina, which tees off first at 8 a.m. Pacific (10 a.m. central).
Arne Green is based in Salina and covers Kansas State University sports for the Gannett network. He can be reached at agreen@gannett.com or on X (formerly Twitter) at @arnegreen.
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