DETROIT (AP) -- Detroit Pistons assistant coach Sidney Lowe will return to North Carolina State to coach the school he led to a national championship under Jim Valvano. N.C. State, which has searched for a successor to Herb Sendek for the past month, will introduce Lowe as its new coach over the weekend, a person within the Pistons organization told The Associated Press on Thursday. The source spoke on the condition of anonymity because the school planned to make its announcement during a news conference Saturday. Lowe was the point guard on the Wolfpack's 1983 national championship team under Valvano and ranks second among the school's all-time assist leaders and third in steals. Lowe, 46, declined comment when asked whether he had interviewed for the opening. "Right now, my focus is right here," Lowe said Wednesday night as he walked onto the court while the Pistons were warming up. He said earlier this week he would be interested in the job, but wasn't focusing on it as Detroit chases a second NBA title in three years. The Pistons concluded their first-round series against Milwaukee on Wednesday and will play the winner of the Cleveland-Washington series. The hiring was first reported by The News & Observer of Raleigh and ESPN.com. NC State athletics director Lee Fowler and Pistons coach Flip Saunders did not immediately return phone calls Thursday afternoon. Saunders said most coaches, including Lowe, think about what it would be like to coach where they went to college. "He's always kept in close touch with the program," Saunders said Wednesday. The Wolfpack's top two targets -- Texas' Rick Barnes and Memphis' John Calipari -- reportedly turned down offers of about $2 million a year to replace Sendek, who went 191-132 in 10 seasons before leaving for Arizona State last month. Last week, two more names linked to the job -- former UCLA coach and TV analyst Steve Lavin, and West Virginia coach John Beilein -- issued statements saying they would remain in their current positions. Regina Davis, the mother of incoming recruit Larry Davis, said associate athletics director Jon Fagg had called the family to tell them that the new coach would contact them Thursday or Friday. "We were being patient all along and we just figured we'd rather they take their time and get the right guy instead of making a hasty decision," said Davis, who lives in Deer Park, N.Y. Sendek led NC State to five straight NCAA tournament appearances, tying the late Valvano for the best run in school history. But Sendek was criticized in recent seasons despite that success, often for the program's Princeton-style motion offense and its struggles against Atlantic Coast Conference neighbors Duke and North Carolina. Sendek went 8-38 against those rivals, and went 9-16 against Wake Forest, the state's other ACC school. Lowe, who has never coached in college, played four seasons in the NBA before moving on to coaching, rising to become the head coach at Minnesota and Memphis. He has a career record of 79-228 and resigned at Memphis after the team's 0-8 start in to the 2002-2003 season. Lowe does not hold an undergraduate degree, which NC�State has said it will require of its next coach. He is completing degree work at St. Pauls College in Lawrenceville, Va., the school provost confirmed Wednesday.
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