Jim Calhoun On Indefinite Medical Leave

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STORRS, Conn. -- University of Connecticut basketball coach Jim Calhoun is taking an indefinite medical leave of absence, the school announced Friday.
The Hall of Fame coach, who turns 70 in May, has been suffering for several months from spinal stenosis, a lower back condition that causes him severe pain and hampers mobility, according to the release.
"Last summer, Jim had some significant back pain and has seen two excellent back specialists," said Dr. Peter Schulman, Calhoun's primary care doctor. "The initial approach recommended to him was stretching, physical therapy and exercise, and that was successful for several months. It turns out that there is some degenerative problem in the lumbar vertebrae and it's impinging on the nerves."
Calhoun talked to the staff Friday and reiterated that he wants to beat this injury and return, but he will listen to his doctors and heed their advice.
Calhoun says in a telephone interview with The Associated Press, "I'm hurting." He says "bottom line is I'm going to need some work done."
George Blaney, the team's associate head coach, will lead the team in Calhoun's absence. The Huskies (14-7, 4-5 Big East) have lost four games in a row. They host Seton Hall on Saturday before traveling to Louisville on Monday.
The school confirmed that Calhoun will miss at least those two games.
"Jim has been able to manage it with the physical therapy and stretching, but over the last several days, things have become worse and he is not able to deal with this on a day to day basis, so other options need to be considered," Schulman said. "Right now, he is physically unable to coach."
According to a source, Calhoun was in intense pain during the Georgetown game Wednesday night and on the flight home from Washington D.C., and as a result has been bedridden the past two days as his family and doctors decide the correct course of action.
Surgery is a possibility, the source said, as the back pain, which started over the summer, has intensified in the past 72 hours.
Calhoun has expressed to those close to him his frustration that this occurred during a time when the team needs him most.
Former GW coach Karl Hobbs, who has been an administrative assistant, is likely to have coaching duties during Calhoun's absence, according to the school.
The staff has former head coaches in Hobbs, Glen Miller and interim head coach Blaney.
Assistant Kevin Ollie is privately being groomed to replace Calhoun, according to multiple sources.
Calhoun has had a history of health problems. He is a three-time cancer survivor, overcoming prostate cancer in 2003 and skin cancer twice, most recently in 2008.
Calhoun has either missed or left the bench in 28 games due to medical reasons as UConn's coach. The Huskies are 20-8 in those games. His last extended medical leave came in 2010, when he missed seven games with stress-related issues.
Calhoun is No. 6 on the all-time wins list with 867. He has won three national championships at Connecticut and was inducted into the Basketball Hall of Fame in 2005. He coached the team to its fourth Final Four and third national title last April. Only Bob Knight (1,273) has coached more games in Division I than Calhoun (1,240).
The subject of Calhoun's tenure is not new. He said last month he decided to not retire after last year's national championship in large part because he wanted to see through the NCAA sanctions leveled on him and his program for recruiting violations. The NCAA required Calhoun to sit out wins over South Florida and St. John's and a loss to Seton Hall for violations that included a finding that the coach had failed to maintain "an atmosphere of compliance" in the program.
He told reporters that the idea of bringing closure to that issue was a "major, major factor" in his decision to come back this season.
In August, Calhoun said through the assistant director of athletics that he informed university president Susan Herbst he would coach during the coming season.
Sources close to Calhoun say he wants to continue coaching and see the program through the current probation and into a proposed new practice facility.
In June, he said he felt good, worked out and spent a lot of time riding his bike. Each year, he rides between 25 and 50 miles at his annual Jim Calhoun Cancer Challenge Ride and Walk. In 2009, he broke several ribs and was hospitalized after falling during the charity event.

Information from ESPN.com's Andy Katz and The Associated Press was used in this report.
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