NathanAllen said:
calumnus said:
In Braun's last year we finished second to last. Monty took that team, minus Anderson, and finished 3rd in his first year and 1st in his second going to the NCAA tournament both years.
Yeah, but Fox isn't Monty, Braun isn't Wyking Jones, and Cal's program was vastly different at the end of Braun's tenure compared to Jones's.
First, Monty took Stanford to NCAA Tournament appearances all eight seasons he was the head coach there, and one at least one game in the Tournament each year. He also had a Final Four appearance, as well as an Elite Eight and Sweet 16 appearances. In 14 seasons, Fox has taken five teams to the NCAA Tournament (three at Nevada, two at UGA). He's won two NCAA Tournament games total. I think this was your point, but so far, Fox doesn't have the coaching achievements or chops that Monty had coming to Cal.
With all due respect, I'd like to make a correction here. Mike Montgomery coached 18 seasons at Stanford, not 8 seasons. Nearly all his glory at Stanford was achieved in his final 10 seasons on the Farm. His first 8 years at Stanford had some success but were less than stellar. The success in those years was two trips to the NCAA. In 1989, his #13 nationally ranked Stanford team lost in the first round to lowly Siena. In 1991, Stanford was unranked, but won the NIT Championship. In 1992, Stanford was unranked and lost to Alabama in the first round of the NCAA. Three OK seasons out of 8 years, and an over all record of 142-102, and a 7-23 season in 1993 that he would like to forget. It was 1994 in his 9th year at Stanford, and his 17th year as a head coach, that his career finally took off at Stanford, and he went on to have the success at Stanford, and later at Cal. I would add to your list of his accomplishments that he won 5 conference championships (one at Cal), and a conference tourney championship.
Montgomery's first head coaching job was at Montana, and produced only one conference championship, and no invitations to the NCAA. His record was 154-77, and his teams never achieved a national ranking in 8 seasons.
So I think that even though I am a Montgomery fan, comparing a younger Mark Fox starting his 3rd job as a head coach to Mike Montgomery, who retired after finishing his 4th job is not quite fair. If we want to compare like experience to like experience, how about comparing the results of Fox's first coaching job at Nevada with the results of Montgomery's first job at Montana, and likewise the results of Fox's second coaching job at Georgia with the results of the first 8 years of Montgomery's second coaching job at Stanford?
Fox's record at Nevada was pretty good. He won four conference championships, and was invited to the NCAA 3 times in 5 years. In 2005, his Nevada team was ranked #24 nationally, and beat Texas in the first round of the NCAA. They lost to the nation's #1 team, Illinois, in the second round. In 2006, Nevada was ranked #20, but was knocked off by Montana in the first round. In 2007, Nevada was ranked #10 in the country, beat Creighton in the first round, but lost to a very good #5 ranked UMass team in the 2nd round. Fox's record over five years at Nevada was 123-43, 0.741 winning percentage against a Strength of Schedule (SOS) of 1.53. Montgomery's record over his first 8 years at Montana was 154-77, 0.667 winning percentage vs a SOS of -1.23. Both coaches inherited some good talent from the previous head coach. Fox inherited Kevin Pinkney, Nick Fazekas, and Ramon Sessions, all of whom did play in the NBA. Monty inherited Larry Kristowiak who also played in the NBA. Fox clearly had a better record at Nevada against a tougher schedule than Montgomery had at Montana against a weaker schedule.
Fox's 9 year record at Georgia was remarkably similar to Montgomery's first 8 years at Stanford, with both men in their second head coaching job. Fox's record was 163-133, a 0.551 winning percentage against an SOS of 7.80. Montgomery was 142-102, a 0.582 winning percentage against an SOS of 7.21. Fox took Georgia to the NCAA in 2011, losing to #13 Washington in round one and in 2015, losing to Michigan State in round one. Both coaches inherited some good players from the previous coach, Fox getting Trey Thomkins and Travis Leslie, who both played in the NBA, Montgomery got Todd Lichti, Howard Wright, and Greg Butler, who all played in the NBA. After they left, Monty landed Adam Keefe, and little else for a few years, until he landed Brevin Knight, and at that point, Monty's career really took off, leading the Stanford program into national prominence. But in those first 8 seasons at Stanford, Monty's highest finish was 2nd in conference, and included a 10th place finish. He had only one ranked team, 1989, ranked #13. He had three 20-win seasons in 8 years, and had 2 NCAA appearances and an NIT title, as mentioned above. Fox in his 9 years at Georgia. His best finish was 2nd in the SEC. He had four 20-win seasons. His only nationally ranked team was in 2011, ranked #24 for just one week.
Fox was better in his first job at Nevada than Montgomery was in his at Montana. In their second jobs, over his first 8 seasons, Montgomery was slightly better than Fox, only due to his 1989 team which did achieve a #13 ranking, albeit spoiled by a 1st round exit from the NCAA, beaten by a supposedly much weaker team, and maybe Stanford's NIT title, which is not the prestigious tournament it once was.
Monty was an excellent coach, but he did not really blossom until his 17th year as a head coach. Fox is in his 16th year, and it will take longer to see if he can blossom as Montgomery eventually did, considering Fox inherited just one good player when he arrived here at Cal, and then a shutdown over a pandemic, resulting in a screwball season, from which Fox and the players will have to recover and get back on track, hopefully next season.
SFCityBear