I'm probably going to get lambasted for this, but here goes...
I love that Ollie held the team together after the banning and got the 4th title, the first non-Calhoun, in 2014. I think you can say he did it with Calhoun's recruits, he did it with Napier and Boatright and Daniels and Giffey, he did it with centers that included Brimah and Nolan(!), or he did it with luck in the first tournament game. But either way, the first three words are, "he did it."
He clearly has UConn's back with his recent statements after the back-to-back championships.
And recall, he averaged nearly 10 points and 6.4 assists(!) in 1995, starting every game in a 28-5 year that, absent an otherworldly Elite Eight UCLA performance, might have been the first NC for Husky Nation.
He lost interest and intensity as the years rolled on. But stuck in the AAC was clearly limiting recruiting and exposure. The recruits want juice, and the AAC was dry as a bone. Tulsa? SMU? Seriously? I saw a game at SMU during that time on a visit to Dallas, stadium was less than half-full and you could have a normal conversation in the stands and hear every word. His divorce and the social stuff all were factors too, I'm sure. His all-star recruiting class lost Gilbert after 3 games, Larrier after 4, and Durham was coming off ACL surgery and limited. Vital was just a freshman, and Hamilton left a year too early.
As for the legal issue, he's not the first person, nor the last, to sue an employer for wrongful termination. You can hold a grudge, but here we are with 6 NC's - including the last two, and one NC which he coached, and one NC when he was an assistant. Water under the bridge, I'd let it go.
As much as it was amazing seeing Calhoun and Hurley hoisting this year's trophy together, I think the only thing that would have made it better would have been for Calhoun, Ollie and Hurley to hoist it together.