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Friday, April 18
 
Officials make call to Self, but no meeting set

ESPN.com news services

Illinois coach Bill Self has a tough decision to make, and he's taking his time.

One day after Kansas received permission to talk to Self, school officials spoke with him via telephone, the St. Louis Post-Dispatch reported Friday.

Citing a source close to the Illini basketball program, the newspaper reported that the conversation took place Thursday, but no meeting was scheduled between Self and the Jayhawks.

"Nothing new to report today," Doug Vance, a member of the school's four-member search committee, told the newspaper. "We said that we were not going to make any public comment until the search is completed. And it's not there yet."

Illinois players and recruits are also in a holding pattern, wondering what Self's future will hold and how it might affect them.

"We've [current players[ talked about it a little bit," Illinois center Nick Smith told the Post-Dispatch. "There's nothing really any of us can do. It's all on him. I don't think it's about money. Going to Kansas isn't about money. It's just a personal decision."

Smith added that Self "told us we would know his decision before anybody else. I would expect a team meeting."

Self is aware that he is Kansas' top choice to replace Williams. Illinois in December rewarded him with a contract extension that will pay him $5 million if he remains Illini coach all five years.

"We're on the cusp of doing something great here," Self told The Associated Press before the team's annual postseason banquet Tuesday night. "There is a ton of incentive to stay," Self said. "My family's happy, I'm happy and we're going to be good (next year)."

The Illini will be good enough to rank among the top 20 to start next season. Illinois has one of the richest in-state recruiting pools and some recruiting analysts are saying there could be as many as 16 Division I high school sophomore prospects in the state.

Self left Wednesday for a family vacation in Florida, which is interesting because the last time he went to Florida on a vacation -- three years ago in May -- the Illinois job opened. That's when Self left Tulsa to succeed Lon Kruger in Champaign.

Self has strong Big 12 ties from his time spent working as an assistant under Larry Brown at Kansas and tenure as a player and assistant coach at Oklahoma State. Self has always considered the Kansas job a "dream position." Yet he has been successful in the Big Ten, taking Illinois to Elite Eight, Sweet 16 and second-round appearances.

Kansas officials said they wouldn't restrict their search to him alone. Sources have confirmed that Kansas has been selective in forming its pool of candidates. Aside from Self, the Jayhawks will try to pursue Marquette's Tom Crean, Gonzaga's Mark Few, and Notre Dame's Mike Brey.

Wichita State's Mark Turgeon, who played for Williams in the mid-1980s, removed his name from consideration Thursday night.

Sources close to Self said he expects to decide within days whether he would like to be included in Kansas' search. Kansas officials told ESPN.com that they want this process wrapped up in a matter of days, not weeks.

Williams coached the Jayhawks for 15 seasons, won nine conference championships, made the NCAA Tournament 14 straight years, reached the Final Four four times and the national championship game twice.

ESPN.com senior writer Andy Katz contributed to this report.




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