NathanAllen said: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.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.
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.
Yes, Braun's last team was second to last in the Pac-10, but that was an entirely different Pac-10 than what we've seen recently. It was the best league in the nation that year. It had five (half) teams make the NCAA Tournament and another three make it to the NIT (including Cal). Hell, UCLA had Kevin Love and Russell Westbrook on its team that year and made it to the Final Four. Stanford and Wazzu made it to the Sweet 16.
Jones's last year needed an unlikely three-game winning streak in the last three games to get its only three wins in the league, in a league that ranked seventh in the country in KenPom's conference standings. That Pac-12 league had three teams make it to the NCAA Tournament, all as a nine-seed or lower, none of which made it past the Sweet-16.
I think your point that Monty was a better coach than Fox is objectively true based on wins and losses. But there's a lot of context to also consider. Here's another way of putting it: Jones left teams that finished No. 244 and No. 241 in KenPom, Braun's last two teams finished No. 78 and No. 67. Fox was left a dumpster fire, and objectively one of the worst Power Conference programs in recent history.
It is relative.
If Braun did poorly in a tough league, Monty excelled in the same tough league using Braun's players.
If Jones did poorly in a weak league, Fox has failed to elevate us significantly in the same weak league.
I think that absolves Braun more than it absolves Fox. If Monty can improve over Braun in a tough league, Fox should be able to improve over Jones in a weak league if he is a better coach. If anything a turnaround in a weak league should be easier, there are fewer quality teams to climb over.
Monty did it with great Xs and Os, but there is little evidence of great game day coaching in our offense or even our defense. Frankly, between the two I would take Braun over Fox just for personality, talent scouting and donor relations.
Turnarounds in basketball can be fast. Not counting Brown and Thorpe, 7 players on the roster are players he signed. 7 players can be a complete rotation in basketball.
Crazy that some are now arguing WSU is easier to recruit to than Cal.