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Door open for Crookshank return?

  Daily News File Photo

Andre Levingston says Eric Crookshank (above) may return to the Rainmen if he has "learned his lesson."


MATTHEW WUEST, METRO HALIFAX
February 03, 2009 1:13 p.m.
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Halifax Rainmen owner Andre Levingston has softened his stance on the suspension of star Eric Crookshank.

Levingston, in the aftermath of the firing of head coach and general manager Rick Lewis on Tuesday, said “I never say never” on the possibility of reinstating the 6-foot-8 forward.

When Crookshank was banished for the season on Jan. 14 for “conduct detrimental to the team,” Levingston said the suspension would not be overturned under any circumstances.

“The one thing we want to make sure is that he’s learned his lesson, that he knows there are consequences,” Levingston said. “If there was an opportunity, remotely, for him to come back this year, it’s because I feel that he has learned his lesson.”

Levingston said the only way Crookshank can show he’s learned his lesson is to “keep doing what he’s doing,” working hard in the community and “doing the things he said he was going to do” when he accepted his suspension.

“He’s been doing a good job with it,” Levingston said.

Levingston said he sees Crookshank every day, but the topic of reinstatement has never been discussed.

Levingston said he wants to have a new head coach in place by Thursday and isn’t focused on Crookshank.

“I’m not even thinking about the Crookshank issue, to be honest,” Levingston said. “I’m dealing with bringing in a good head coach who can get us a championship.”

Levingston was quick to clarify that the Crookshank suspension was his decision, not Lewis’s, and that he’s not waiting for his new head coach to rubberstamp a reinstatement.

“If Crookshank comes back or does not come back, that’s going to be my decision, not the coach’s,” he said.

When asked if Crookshank would be in the lineup for Sunday’s home game against the Vermont Frost Heaves, Levingston said “I really don’t know the answer to that.”

Crookshank, the franchise's most recognizable face, averaged more than 20 points and 10 rebounds last season and was an American Basketball Association all-star.

As for replacing Lewis, Levingston said interim head coach Shannon Hansen is not a candidate, and firmly ruled out the possibility of stepping onto the sidelines himself, saying he “couldn’t mix” ownership with coaching.

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