Cleveland State loses as the #1 seed by 15 in the conference semi-finals. That is unacceptable. They are out of the NCAA tournament.
"Unacceptable" in what regard? You would now not want him as Cal coach?calfanz said:
Cleveland State loses as the #1 seed by 15 in the conference semi-finals. That is unacceptable. They are out of the NCAA tournament.
Teams have bad days. Virginia a few years ago became the first #1 seed in the NCAA tournament to lose to a #16 seed. That does not mean Tony Bennett is a bad coach overall.calfanz said:
Cleveland State loses as the #1 seed by 15 in the conference semi-finals. That is unacceptable. They are out of the NCAA tournament.
Fire Gates. I mean hire him first. OK do we move onto Shantay? How are Portland's NCAA chances? How about Golden and USF? Of course I'm kidding, but I still stand by my position that we would do much better with Gates, Legans or Golden. We need new blood. Say no to career retreads.calfanz said:
Cleveland State loses as the #1 seed by 15 in the conference semi-finals. That is unacceptable. They are out of the NCAA tournament.
Big C said:
When you're consistently in the bottom third of a twelve-team conference (with no relief in sight), rolling the dice comes without a lot of cost. Golden, Gates, Legans, Pasternak, Somebody Else? Doesn't really matter. Pick one. Or work to get the practice facility going and wait a year... whatever.
mbBear said:Big C said:
When you're consistently in the bottom third of a twelve-team conference (with no relief in sight), rolling the dice comes without a lot of cost. Golden, Gates, Legans, Pasternak, Somebody Else? Doesn't really matter. Pick one. Or work to get the practice facility going and wait a year... whatever.
If we want to spend time thinking about Gates, my first "worry" would be if he (and his agent) anticipate being in the running for a bigger/better job than Cal's? We can be critical that Knowlton isn't jumping to get him, but does he even want to come? Yes, an Alma Mater is often a nice appeal, but Gates still has Midwest roots-Cal isn't a "homecoming"...and he is now better known in the Midwest than ever before....
I think that is an oversimplification of the Martin issue. Not every minimally successful coach will not always jump to the next gig. That is a bigger issue for mid-majors, IMHO.HoopDreams said:
The problem with Cal is when we do find The Coach and gets Cal back to the tournament, will they jump ship ?
Look at Martin. Recruited well ONE year, got to NCAA (4 seed) One year, and boom … off to the next gig at a big pay hikembBear said:Big C said:
When you're consistently in the bottom third of a twelve-team conference (with no relief in sight), rolling the dice comes without a lot of cost. Golden, Gates, Legans, Pasternak, Somebody Else? Doesn't really matter. Pick one. Or work to get the practice facility going and wait a year... whatever.
If we want to spend time thinking about Gates, my first "worry" would be if he (and his agent) anticipate being in the running for a bigger/better job than Cal's? We can be critical that Knowlton isn't jumping to get him, but does he even want to come? Yes, an Alma Mater is often a nice appeal, but Gates still has Midwest roots-Cal isn't a "homecoming"...and he is now better known in the Midwest than ever before....
Well there was also the fact that the university entangled him in a long investigation over mutual flirtation between one of his assistants and a reporter, and his son was denied admission to Cal. Also, I'm not positive about the timing, but if his last year coincided with Mike Williams taking over as AD, that in itself could have been the reason for him leaving.HoopDreams said:
The problem with Cal is when we do find The Coach and gets Cal back to the tournament, will they jump ship ?
Look at Martin. Recruited well ONE year, got to NCAA (4 seed) One year, and boom … off to the next gig at a big pay hikembBear said:Big C said:
When you're consistently in the bottom third of a twelve-team conference (with no relief in sight), rolling the dice comes without a lot of cost. Golden, Gates, Legans, Pasternak, Somebody Else? Doesn't really matter. Pick one. Or work to get the practice facility going and wait a year... whatever.
If we want to spend time thinking about Gates, my first "worry" would be if he (and his agent) anticipate being in the running for a bigger/better job than Cal's? We can be critical that Knowlton isn't jumping to get him, but does he even want to come? Yes, an Alma Mater is often a nice appeal, but Gates still has Midwest roots-Cal isn't a "homecoming"...and he is now better known in the Midwest than ever before....
PtownBear1 said:Well there was also the fact that the university entangled him in a long investigation over mutual flirtation between one of his assistants and a reporter, and his son was denied admission to Cal. Also, I'm not positive about the timing, but if his last year coincided with Mike Williams taking over as AD, that in itself could have been the reason for him leaving.HoopDreams said:
The problem with Cal is when we do find The Coach and gets Cal back to the tournament, will they jump ship ?
Look at Martin. Recruited well ONE year, got to NCAA (4 seed) One year, and boom … off to the next gig at a big pay hikembBear said:Big C said:
When you're consistently in the bottom third of a twelve-team conference (with no relief in sight), rolling the dice comes without a lot of cost. Golden, Gates, Legans, Pasternak, Somebody Else? Doesn't really matter. Pick one. Or work to get the practice facility going and wait a year... whatever.
If we want to spend time thinking about Gates, my first "worry" would be if he (and his agent) anticipate being in the running for a bigger/better job than Cal's? We can be critical that Knowlton isn't jumping to get him, but does he even want to come? Yes, an Alma Mater is often a nice appeal, but Gates still has Midwest roots-Cal isn't a "homecoming"...and he is now better known in the Midwest than ever before....
HoopDreams said:
The problem with Cal is when we do find The Coach and gets Cal back to the tournament, will they jump ship ?
Look at Martin. Recruited well ONE year, got to NCAA (4 seed) One year, and boom … off to the next gig at a big pay hikembBear said:Big C said:
When you're consistently in the bottom third of a twelve-team conference (with no relief in sight), rolling the dice comes without a lot of cost. Golden, Gates, Legans, Pasternak, Somebody Else? Doesn't really matter. Pick one. Or work to get the practice facility going and wait a year... whatever.
If we want to spend time thinking about Gates, my first "worry" would be if he (and his agent) anticipate being in the running for a bigger/better job than Cal's? We can be critical that Knowlton isn't jumping to get him, but does he even want to come? Yes, an Alma Mater is often a nice appeal, but Gates still has Midwest roots-Cal isn't a "homecoming"...and he is now better known in the Midwest than ever before....
BC Calfan said:
Agreed having a good coach that is sought after is a good thing. It should be normal. It's up to the AD to keep him AND have a good plan B should he leave.
I'm quite proud of the fact that Cal is not in the habit of giving applicants preferential consideration for admission based on who their parents are.HoopDreams said:
How Cal denied his son, a very good student, admissions to Cal is one of the biggest frustrations and lost opportunities of the decade
GoCal80 said:I'm quite proud of the fact that Cal is not in the habit of giving applicants preferential consideration for admission based on who their parents are.HoopDreams said:
How Cal denied his son, a very good student, admissions to Cal is one of the biggest frustrations and lost opportunities of the decade
HoopDreams said:
We don't have a legacy admissions policy, nor do we have an affirmative actions admissions policy, but I understood he is a good student and schools like Harvard find a wayGoCal80 said:I'm quite proud of the fact that Cal is not in the habit of giving applicants preferential consideration for admission based on who their parents are.HoopDreams said:
How Cal denied his son, a very good student, admissions to Cal is one of the biggest frustrations and lost opportunities of the decade
I agree with other posters that you are oversimplifying the Martin issue. Aside from the factors mentioned, Missouri gambled by offering Martin a huge pay raise with a lot of the money essentially guaranteed through generous buyout provisions in his contract. Cal could not and should not have matched given Martin's track record, and Martin would have been crazy to turn down Missouri. Martin has now been at Missouri for five years, and it is clear that their gamble failed. He has only had a winning record in conference one year (his first) and the program is on a bad trajectory (last in the conference this season). While it is true that some coaches use jobs as stepping stones, others such as Mark Few and Tony Bennett like where they are and won national championships at colleges that had never done so before. In addition, schools like Providence and Xavier have been used as stepping stones for years, but the sustained success helps attract top coaching and athletic talent. In short, I would love to have the problem of a coach so successful that other schools want to hire him away.HoopDreams said:
The problem with Cal is when we do find The Coach and gets Cal back to the tournament, will they jump ship ?
Look at Martin. Recruited well ONE year, got to NCAA (4 seed) One year, and boom … off to the next gig at a big pay hikembBear said:Big C said:
When you're consistently in the bottom third of a twelve-team conference (with no relief in sight), rolling the dice comes without a lot of cost. Golden, Gates, Legans, Pasternak, Somebody Else? Doesn't really matter. Pick one. Or work to get the practice facility going and wait a year... whatever.
If we want to spend time thinking about Gates, my first "worry" would be if he (and his agent) anticipate being in the running for a bigger/better job than Cal's? We can be critical that Knowlton isn't jumping to get him, but does he even want to come? Yes, an Alma Mater is often a nice appeal, but Gates still has Midwest roots-Cal isn't a "homecoming"...and he is now better known in the Midwest than ever before....
It's unfortunate Cal completely mismanaged the opportunity we were given when Martin was hired away. We had decent talent, momentum, fan support and buyout money from Missouri. The decision to hire Wyking destroyed all of that.mdbear said:I agree with other posters that you are oversimplifying the Martin issue. Aside from the factors mentioned, Missouri gambled by offering Martin a huge pay raise with a lot of the money essentially guaranteed through generous buyout provisions in his contract. Cal could not and should not have matched given Martin's track record, and Martin would have been crazy to turn down Missouri. Martin has now been at Missouri for five years, and it is clear that their gamble failed. He has only had a winning record in conference one year (his first) and the program is on a bad trajectory (last in the conference this season). While it is true that some coaches use jobs as stepping stones, others such as Mark Few and Tony Bennett like where they are and won national championships at colleges that had never done so before. In addition, schools like Providence and Xavier have been used as stepping stones for years, but the sustained success helps attract top coaching and athletic talent. In short, I would love to have the problem of a coach so successful that other schools want to hire him away.HoopDreams said:
The problem with Cal is when we do find The Coach and gets Cal back to the tournament, will they jump ship ?
Look at Martin. Recruited well ONE year, got to NCAA (4 seed) One year, and boom … off to the next gig at a big pay hikembBear said:Big C said:
When you're consistently in the bottom third of a twelve-team conference (with no relief in sight), rolling the dice comes without a lot of cost. Golden, Gates, Legans, Pasternak, Somebody Else? Doesn't really matter. Pick one. Or work to get the practice facility going and wait a year... whatever.
If we want to spend time thinking about Gates, my first "worry" would be if he (and his agent) anticipate being in the running for a bigger/better job than Cal's? We can be critical that Knowlton isn't jumping to get him, but does he even want to come? Yes, an Alma Mater is often a nice appeal, but Gates still has Midwest roots-Cal isn't a "homecoming"...and he is now better known in the Midwest than ever before....
This strikes me as much less of a problem than the one we have, which is that we won't sniff the tournament again in life with Fox.HoopDreams said:
The problem with Cal is when we do find The Coach and gets Cal back to the tournament, will they jump ship ?
Look at Martin. Recruited well ONE year, got to NCAA (4 seed) One year, and boom … off to the next gig at a big pay hikembBear said:Big C said:
When you're consistently in the bottom third of a twelve-team conference (with no relief in sight), rolling the dice comes without a lot of cost. Golden, Gates, Legans, Pasternak, Somebody Else? Doesn't really matter. Pick one. Or work to get the practice facility going and wait a year... whatever.
If we want to spend time thinking about Gates, my first "worry" would be if he (and his agent) anticipate being in the running for a bigger/better job than Cal's? We can be critical that Knowlton isn't jumping to get him, but does he even want to come? Yes, an Alma Mater is often a nice appeal, but Gates still has Midwest roots-Cal isn't a "homecoming"...and he is now better known in the Midwest than ever before....
For a coach like Few or Bennett to stay the school has to be committed to the program. That's not the case here. One could argue that it shouldn't be or that it should be and make valid points, but the fact is that there's nothing here to keep a successful coach whose profession is coaching basketball.mdbear said:I agree with other posters that you are oversimplifying the Martin issue. Aside from the factors mentioned, Missouri gambled by offering Martin a huge pay raise with a lot of the money essentially guaranteed through generous buyout provisions in his contract. Cal could not and should not have matched given Martin's track record, and Martin would have been crazy to turn down Missouri. Martin has now been at Missouri for five years, and it is clear that their gamble failed. He has only had a winning record in conference one year (his first) and the program is on a bad trajectory (last in the conference this season). While it is true that some coaches use jobs as stepping stones, others such as Mark Few and Tony Bennett like where they are and won national championships at colleges that had never done so before. In addition, schools like Providence and Xavier have been used as stepping stones for years, but the sustained success helps attract top coaching and athletic talent. In short, I would love to have the problem of a coach so successful that other schools want to hire him away.HoopDreams said:
The problem with Cal is when we do find The Coach and gets Cal back to the tournament, will they jump ship ?
Look at Martin. Recruited well ONE year, got to NCAA (4 seed) One year, and boom … off to the next gig at a big pay hikembBear said:Big C said:
When you're consistently in the bottom third of a twelve-team conference (with no relief in sight), rolling the dice comes without a lot of cost. Golden, Gates, Legans, Pasternak, Somebody Else? Doesn't really matter. Pick one. Or work to get the practice facility going and wait a year... whatever.
If we want to spend time thinking about Gates, my first "worry" would be if he (and his agent) anticipate being in the running for a bigger/better job than Cal's? We can be critical that Knowlton isn't jumping to get him, but does he even want to come? Yes, an Alma Mater is often a nice appeal, but Gates still has Midwest roots-Cal isn't a "homecoming"...and he is now better known in the Midwest than ever before....
I get the jest of what you are saying, but the program hardly had talent or momentum coming off of Martin's last year. The best returning offensive player by a wide margin was Coleman, and the last game had like 500 fans.HKBear97! said:It's unfortunate Cal completely mismanaged the opportunity we were given when Martin was hired away. We had decent talent, momentum, fan support and buyout money from Missouri. The decision to hire Wyking destroyed all of that.mdbear said:I agree with other posters that you are oversimplifying the Martin issue. Aside from the factors mentioned, Missouri gambled by offering Martin a huge pay raise with a lot of the money essentially guaranteed through generous buyout provisions in his contract. Cal could not and should not have matched given Martin's track record, and Martin would have been crazy to turn down Missouri. Martin has now been at Missouri for five years, and it is clear that their gamble failed. He has only had a winning record in conference one year (his first) and the program is on a bad trajectory (last in the conference this season). While it is true that some coaches use jobs as stepping stones, others such as Mark Few and Tony Bennett like where they are and won national championships at colleges that had never done so before. In addition, schools like Providence and Xavier have been used as stepping stones for years, but the sustained success helps attract top coaching and athletic talent. In short, I would love to have the problem of a coach so successful that other schools want to hire him away.HoopDreams said:
The problem with Cal is when we do find The Coach and gets Cal back to the tournament, will they jump ship ?
Look at Martin. Recruited well ONE year, got to NCAA (4 seed) One year, and boom … off to the next gig at a big pay hikembBear said:Big C said:
When you're consistently in the bottom third of a twelve-team conference (with no relief in sight), rolling the dice comes without a lot of cost. Golden, Gates, Legans, Pasternak, Somebody Else? Doesn't really matter. Pick one. Or work to get the practice facility going and wait a year... whatever.
If we want to spend time thinking about Gates, my first "worry" would be if he (and his agent) anticipate being in the running for a bigger/better job than Cal's? We can be critical that Knowlton isn't jumping to get him, but does he even want to come? Yes, an Alma Mater is often a nice appeal, but Gates still has Midwest roots-Cal isn't a "homecoming"...and he is now better known in the Midwest than ever before....
Personally, I'm not surprised Martin has failed at Missouri. I didn't believe his approach was sustainable. His recruiting strategy was questionable, very little player development and the offense was atrocious. There was a reason Tennessee fans wanted him gone. I was ecstatic when Missouri hired him away and then devastated when Wyking was announced as his replacement. Hope returned when Wyking was fired and then quickly disappeared with the hiring of retread Fox. So it goes being a Cal fan.
None of whom wanted to see more.Civil Bear said:
I get the jest of what you are saying, but the program hardly had talent or momentum coming off of Martin's last year. The best returning offensive player by a wide margin was Coleman, and the last game had like 500 fans.
Civil Bear said:I get the jest of what you are saying, but the program hardly had talent or momentum coming off of Martin's last year. The best returning offensive player by a wide margin was Coleman, and the last game had like 500 fans.HKBear97! said:It's unfortunate Cal completely mismanaged the opportunity we were given when Martin was hired away. We had decent talent, momentum, fan support and buyout money from Missouri. The decision to hire Wyking destroyed all of that.mdbear said:I agree with other posters that you are oversimplifying the Martin issue. Aside from the factors mentioned, Missouri gambled by offering Martin a huge pay raise with a lot of the money essentially guaranteed through generous buyout provisions in his contract. Cal could not and should not have matched given Martin's track record, and Martin would have been crazy to turn down Missouri. Martin has now been at Missouri for five years, and it is clear that their gamble failed. He has only had a winning record in conference one year (his first) and the program is on a bad trajectory (last in the conference this season). While it is true that some coaches use jobs as stepping stones, others such as Mark Few and Tony Bennett like where they are and won national championships at colleges that had never done so before. In addition, schools like Providence and Xavier have been used as stepping stones for years, but the sustained success helps attract top coaching and athletic talent. In short, I would love to have the problem of a coach so successful that other schools want to hire him away.HoopDreams said:
The problem with Cal is when we do find The Coach and gets Cal back to the tournament, will they jump ship ?
Look at Martin. Recruited well ONE year, got to NCAA (4 seed) One year, and boom … off to the next gig at a big pay hikembBear said:Big C said:
When you're consistently in the bottom third of a twelve-team conference (with no relief in sight), rolling the dice comes without a lot of cost. Golden, Gates, Legans, Pasternak, Somebody Else? Doesn't really matter. Pick one. Or work to get the practice facility going and wait a year... whatever.
If we want to spend time thinking about Gates, my first "worry" would be if he (and his agent) anticipate being in the running for a bigger/better job than Cal's? We can be critical that Knowlton isn't jumping to get him, but does he even want to come? Yes, an Alma Mater is often a nice appeal, but Gates still has Midwest roots-Cal isn't a "homecoming"...and he is now better known in the Midwest than ever before....
Personally, I'm not surprised Martin has failed at Missouri. I didn't believe his approach was sustainable. His recruiting strategy was questionable, very little player development and the offense was atrocious. There was a reason Tennessee fans wanted him gone. I was ecstatic when Missouri hired him away and then devastated when Wyking was announced as his replacement. Hope returned when Wyking was fired and then quickly disappeared with the hiring of retread Fox. So it goes being a Cal fan.
Big C said:
These "death" analogies are way off base, IMO. There's no coming back from death, but if we commit to the practice facility we get a solid coach, we're back in it. Heck, we do one of those and it's a start (and one helps with the other).
This is absolutely not a hopeless situation, although it does take a pretty significant investment.
Good point. I'd like to see us look for a coach with experience raising a program from the depths rather than maintaining one already doing well.HKBear97! said:
This is college sports. The ONLY thing we need is a good coach. Tedford (early years Tedford, not late) took an absolute mess of a program and made it exciting again. You can do that even faster in basketball with the right hire. Do that and everything else will come to fruition.
HKBear97! said:Big C said:
These "death" analogies are way off base, IMO. There's no coming back from death, but if we commit to the practice facility we get a solid coach, we're back in it. Heck, we do one of those and it's a start (and one helps with the other).
This is absolutely not a hopeless situation, although it does take a pretty significant investment.
This is college sports. The ONLY thing we need is a good coach. Tedford (early years Tedford, not late) took an absolute mess of a program and made it exciting again. You can do that even faster in basketball with the right hire. Do that and everything else will come to fruition.
bluesaxe said:This strikes me as much less of a problem than the one we have, which is that we won't sniff the tournament again in life with Fox.HoopDreams said:
The problem with Cal is when we do find The Coach and gets Cal back to the tournament, will they jump ship ?
Look at Martin. Recruited well ONE year, got to NCAA (4 seed) One year, and boom … off to the next gig at a big pay hikembBear said:Big C said:
When you're consistently in the bottom third of a twelve-team conference (with no relief in sight), rolling the dice comes without a lot of cost. Golden, Gates, Legans, Pasternak, Somebody Else? Doesn't really matter. Pick one. Or work to get the practice facility going and wait a year... whatever.
If we want to spend time thinking about Gates, my first "worry" would be if he (and his agent) anticipate being in the running for a bigger/better job than Cal's? We can be critical that Knowlton isn't jumping to get him, but does he even want to come? Yes, an Alma Mater is often a nice appeal, but Gates still has Midwest roots-Cal isn't a "homecoming"...and he is now better known in the Midwest than ever before....