sluggo said:If Cal pays triple the money of a mid-major head coach or top assistant at a top program, that person will either come to Cal or take an even better offer. Once they are here, after they show they are good, they can be bumped up. That is a hell of a lot better than hiring someone who is known not to be good and then not being able to fire them because they are overpaid. Cal's strategy is the worst of all worlds.NathanAllen said:This mindset is kind-of the issue, in my opinion. Regardless if you think Fox is worth it or not, Cal's perception on the market is likely already one that doesn't pay coaches at market rate. Because it doesn't, despite being in an incredibly expensive area of the country. If it starts low-balling coaches, that's only going to get worse.sluggo said:Mid-major would have been for one third of what Cal gave him. That is why I am confident Cal could have had him for much less. It is also why I think Cal can get a better coach without breaking the bank.NathanAllen said:I mean, I'm guessing if he really wanted to get back into coaching, he could've gone the mid-major route. Like Steve Alford going to Nevada after getting canned at UCLA. I mean, Cal certainly isn't the only power conference program to hire coaches fired from other power conference programs. St. John's has done it twice, hiring Steve Lavin and Mike Anderson. Auburn and Bruce Pearl. Tennessee and Rick Barnes. Kansas State and Bruce Weber. Obviously, Lavin, Anderson, Pearl, Barnes, and Weber have all had much more success than Fox, but still, they were all fired. Mississippi State has had Ben Howland for six seasons now and only one NCAA Tournament appearance (and no wins). It's not uncommon.sluggo said:Hilarious. Fox would have taken much less unless he was enjoying being unemployed, and he would have had even less value if he sat out another year. There is only one Cal for hiring bad coaches, where else was he going to go?NathanAllen said:Absolutely.BeachedBear said:I think that's a fair assessment. I think an NCAA Tourney next season would even satisfy some of the wordier and more argumentative posters. I also think there are creative ways to negotiate a contract/extension so that it supports a long term view for recruiting while also having enough exit strategies for both sides. That way - paying off two coaches ago (Jones), does not need to be part of the decision tree for hiring a new coach. That topic peaks its head now and then, but is a red herring IMHO.NathanAllen said:This is going to be unpopular among the vocal posters of this thread, but if Cal makes the NCAA Tourney next season, I think you've got to tack on a year or two to his contract.BeachedBear said:
Quick summary of the thread:
- Fire Fox now
- Fire Fox after the tourney
- Replace Fox after next season
- Replace Fox after season Four
I couldn't find anyone suggesting that Fox is the coach of the future and that we should extend his contract. That seems telling to me.
If it's an NIT, it gets a bit more complex.
No NIT, you've got to start seriously considering a replacement.
Because while I don't want to take the negative/fatalist approach that some on this thread have taken and I can't predict the future, the way the roster is set up now, unless we get some surprises from current or future players, the year after next will be a step back. Bradley/Kelly/Anticevich will be tough to replace.
This will be another unpopular take, (and I know Knowlton is unpopular among many vocal posters), but at the time of hiring Fox, Cal wasn't exactly in a very good place to negotiate a contract for itself. (I think that's pretty evident considering Cal hired a coach that had been out of work for a year after being let go from another Power Conference school.) It had to be a favorable contract for a coach to attract someone.
Cal already pays less than all but one one power conference school (Wazzu pays Kyle Smith $1.4 million). Mid-majors like Cincinnati and VCU pay their coaches as much as Cal is paying Fox. Dayton and Iona are paying almost as much. Cal already pays like top-end mid-majors.
And it's my opinion Cal will continue to have the problems it does in hiring coaches until it's willing to pay up. Because even if they are able to get an up-and-comer or a proven winner, what's to say a school willing to pay more isn't going to swoop in and take that coach (Missouri and Martin)?
Exactly