It was the reign of Cuonzo Martin. He was a good guy, a good coach, and a talented recruiter. He failed to have NCAA success at Cal, and he failed to stay long enough to bring his plan to fruition. What was so bad about it was that he gave Cal fans the hope that it could all be done so simply: Recruit the best of the best players, teach them to play a tough help defense, and reduce the offense to mostly one on one play, either take it to the rim or shoot a three. His success was mostly in our hearts and our hopes, in exciting individual athletic plays, but not in winning any championships or making a run in the dance. Still, we look back on that and we say, "What could have been," and we think if only we got a coach who could recruit like that again, only get more of these fabulous recruits. We continue to dream, and not be realistic, not look for another less exciting path to success.
In our dreams, we don't accept reality. Reality is recruits are like race horses. They can get injured, get sick, have a bad night shooting a basketball. Just about every team just about every year has these things happen to their team, causing them to fail as a team, and fans wait until next year. It happens to Cal almost every year. Even this past season, Cal had almost no real depth. Cal's only top 100 ranked and best player gets injured, misses 7 games, plays hurt the rest of the way. One of Cal's bigs gets appendicitis, and misses 4 games, and takes more games to get back in shape. A promising athletic freshman was just beginning to warrant more playing time and gets a serious head injury, missing several games, and never returning to form. A promising freshman arrives still not in shape from a serious injury received in high school, and it takes almost to the end of the season before he is able to become a starter. And Cal becomes a last place team.
There is an American team currently doing well without the top recruits, the best of the best. Not as good as Duke or Kentucky does, but well enough for Cal fans to live with and love, I believe.
This major team has been on a 12 year run now, which includes winning 5 conference championships, 2 conference tournaments, receiving 8 invitations to the NCAA tournament, winning the NCAA championship once, reaching the regional final one other time, reaching the regional semi-final one other time, reaching the 3rd round one other time, and reaching the second round one other time. Would that be good enough for us?
I should think so.
Over those 12 years, the program has had 28 RSCI top 100 recruits, an average of just over two top 100 recruits per yearly roster. NONE of those recruits was ranked higher than #32 in the RSCI Composite rankings. NONE of those recruits was ranked as a 5-star recruit by individual services. NONE of those recruits was ranked in the top 10 recruits in their class. No one was a one and done or a two and done player. The program sent 10 players to the NBA. 6 of them were 4 year players and 4 of them were 3 year players. Two of their players transferred to another school, and later went to the NBA. 4 other recruits transferred to another school. Many of the recruits for this program were what we would call high 3-star to high 4-star recruits. Was that the coach's plan? I don't know.
The team, the program, is Virginia, of the ACC. Their coach is Tony Bennett.
I think that Cal should think like Virginia when planning a way forward, and stop dreaming of top 10 one and done players. We've been there, done that. What we got in 2016 was two key injuries and one player having a horrible night, and we lost to a team with no highly ranked recruits, mostly lowly ranked or unranked recruits. We got a 3rd place in the PAC12, and early exit in the PAC12 tournament, and a high seed in the NCAA, but no titles. No trophies. In order to win with top 10 recruits, one and done players, Cal would need to land class after class after class of top 10 recruits, to account for all the injuries, illnesses, and attrition from players leaving early every single season. Recruiting is like searching for a woman. There are those women you will spend a night with and those you would like to marry. I prefer Tony Bennett's approach to recruiting, because of Cal's high entrance requirements and other possible drawbacks which might be unique to Cal. I honestly don't think Cal can become Kentucky or Duke. But I think we might be able to become like Virginia. What do you think?
In our dreams, we don't accept reality. Reality is recruits are like race horses. They can get injured, get sick, have a bad night shooting a basketball. Just about every team just about every year has these things happen to their team, causing them to fail as a team, and fans wait until next year. It happens to Cal almost every year. Even this past season, Cal had almost no real depth. Cal's only top 100 ranked and best player gets injured, misses 7 games, plays hurt the rest of the way. One of Cal's bigs gets appendicitis, and misses 4 games, and takes more games to get back in shape. A promising athletic freshman was just beginning to warrant more playing time and gets a serious head injury, missing several games, and never returning to form. A promising freshman arrives still not in shape from a serious injury received in high school, and it takes almost to the end of the season before he is able to become a starter. And Cal becomes a last place team.
There is an American team currently doing well without the top recruits, the best of the best. Not as good as Duke or Kentucky does, but well enough for Cal fans to live with and love, I believe.
This major team has been on a 12 year run now, which includes winning 5 conference championships, 2 conference tournaments, receiving 8 invitations to the NCAA tournament, winning the NCAA championship once, reaching the regional final one other time, reaching the regional semi-final one other time, reaching the 3rd round one other time, and reaching the second round one other time. Would that be good enough for us?
I should think so.
Over those 12 years, the program has had 28 RSCI top 100 recruits, an average of just over two top 100 recruits per yearly roster. NONE of those recruits was ranked higher than #32 in the RSCI Composite rankings. NONE of those recruits was ranked as a 5-star recruit by individual services. NONE of those recruits was ranked in the top 10 recruits in their class. No one was a one and done or a two and done player. The program sent 10 players to the NBA. 6 of them were 4 year players and 4 of them were 3 year players. Two of their players transferred to another school, and later went to the NBA. 4 other recruits transferred to another school. Many of the recruits for this program were what we would call high 3-star to high 4-star recruits. Was that the coach's plan? I don't know.
The team, the program, is Virginia, of the ACC. Their coach is Tony Bennett.
I think that Cal should think like Virginia when planning a way forward, and stop dreaming of top 10 one and done players. We've been there, done that. What we got in 2016 was two key injuries and one player having a horrible night, and we lost to a team with no highly ranked recruits, mostly lowly ranked or unranked recruits. We got a 3rd place in the PAC12, and early exit in the PAC12 tournament, and a high seed in the NCAA, but no titles. No trophies. In order to win with top 10 recruits, one and done players, Cal would need to land class after class after class of top 10 recruits, to account for all the injuries, illnesses, and attrition from players leaving early every single season. Recruiting is like searching for a woman. There are those women you will spend a night with and those you would like to marry. I prefer Tony Bennett's approach to recruiting, because of Cal's high entrance requirements and other possible drawbacks which might be unique to Cal. I honestly don't think Cal can become Kentucky or Duke. But I think we might be able to become like Virginia. What do you think?
SFCityBear