Those first few hours, those first few days, they werenβt the easiest admitted Notre Dame basketball coach Micah Shrewsberry.
Flying back from a week-long West Coast road trip Saturday was hard. Being home for the first time in eight days was hard. Returning to his Rolfs Hall office Monday morning, hard. Just existing. Hard.
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There is regret. There is disappointment. There is embarrassment, none of which is going away anytime soon and all of it stemming from the Irish head coachβs behavior at the end of Friday’s game against California when he rushed toward an official following his teamβs 72-71 loss.
Shrewsberry had to be restrained by assistant coach Mike Farrelly and shielded by Irish power forwards Matthew MacLellan and Tommy Ahneman, who prevented Shrewsberry from confronting Adam Flore over his and-one foul call on Irish guard Logan Imes. The foul led to a four-point play by Cal guard Dai Dai Ames and the first Irish loss in Atlantic Coast Conference play.
On Monday, during his 10-minute window on the ACC Coaches Zoom call, where he appeared last among the 18 leagueβs coaches during the three-hour and 20-minute session, Shrewsberry spoke for the first time of the post-game incident.
He was more apologetic than apoplectic over seeing his team have a league road win snatched away by a questionable call in the closing seconds.
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βWe all make mistakes; I made a huge mistake,β Shrewsberry said. βNow itβs about learning from it and growing from it.β
Grow from it by leaning on a crush of texts and phone calls and conversations that have helped Shrewsberry work through one of the tougher moments of his coaching career.
βWhen youβre going through stuff, you have people you can rely on,β he said. βI appreciate every single person that reached out to me and tried to help me. Thatβs what we all need.β
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What has he needed? Where do you start?
βA lot of self-reflection, a lot of talking with people within our program, within our university, a lot of people I rely on and count on as mentors,β Shrewsberry said. βHow do you handle situations better? What happens the next time and how do we handle those?
βThatβs been a huge part of the last two days. Itβs been a tough two days.β
Late Saturday morning, before the Notre Dame traveling party flew back from Northern California, Shrewsberry issued a public apology for his actions. The conference also issued a public reprimand of Shrewsberry, in his third season at Notre Dame. It would have no further public comment, the league said, and considered the matter closed.
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Gone, maybe, but not forgotten.
βItβs something thatβs not going away,β Shrewsberry said. βI apologized after the game and Iβm still doing that right now. Itβs something that I have to move on from.β
Shrewsberry appeared on Zoom after the Irish had finished practice Monday in Purcell Pavilion. Notre Dame (10-5, 1-1 ACC) is off most of the week from game action before its conference home opener Saturday, January 10 against Clemson (12-3; 2-0).
βYou get a couple of these a year in conference play, where you get a chance to really focus on ourselves,β Shrewsberry said. βWe have to take advantage of it.β
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And keep moving forward. The Irish and their coach.
Follow South Bend Tribune and NDInsider columnist Tom Noie on X (formerly Twitter): @tnoieNDI. Contact Noie at tnoie@sbtinfo.com
This article originally appeared on Indianapolis Star: Notre Dame basketball coach Micah Shrewsberry speaks on charging ref