BeachedBear said:
Sorry folks, but even finishing in 7th place or around .500 is not enough to retain Fox. IMHO the program needs to show that it's firing on ALL cylinders by the end of the season. That includes:
- Playing well including results in the W/L column
- Dramatic Individual player improvement from three of four of (Thieman, Brown, Kuany and Thore ) who are all his guys in their THIRD year in the program.
- Shaking ALL of the rust off a bizarre Covid season
- Recruiting, recruiting, recruiting
- Engagement by Anyone in the program with the fans and an improved HAAS experience
Some may say that this is not all under his control, but HE is the head coach and making $Million+. In three years under FOX, we have seen some glimpses of competence and fodder for HOPE, but not much in results. The P12 seems to be improving and our coach needs to GAIN ground, not show incremental improvement.
I don't disagree that this is where we SHOULD be eight months from now, but since there seems like such a miniscule chance that we can improve that much, why even continue like we are?
If the answer is that we couldn't afford to fire another coach after only two seasons, hey, I get that, financially, but it makes it sound like we're spinning in neutral, writing off a whole season.
Now, I realize that I'm probably not setting the bar high enough and that what I wrote above... um... barely makes sense, but my point is this: If the agreed-upon benchmarks for the upcoming season are basically UNREACHABLE by the current staff, why didn't we replace them four months ago?
This is why I'm suggesting that IF we go 7-11 or 8-10 this coming season (within reason and well out of the conference cellar) AND the team meets the "eye test" of looking reasonably well-coached with notable individual player progress AND the recruiting seems to be progressing, maybe Fox survives to Year Four.
Nice hypothetical to have, considering it's unlikely we will even be able to do that.