KoreAmBear said:
Dude is out of college ball for a year with his stock declining, gets fast tracked by a clueless AD in our hiring system and becomes a Power 5 head coach again at a program with a storied history.
Pandemic coincides with most of his time thus far at Cal and AD provides leniency on his performance and extends all coaches an extra year because of it.
Now the chaos surrounding SC and UCLA moving to the Big-10 is drawing attention away from what looks to be the worst of all his atrocious seasons at Cal after losing his best player (Kelly) to the portal (lost best player 2 years in a row) and one of his best players to injury (Celestine).
Because of all these factors above, he seems to be sitting pretty. What a life.
I get your point, but I don't know how lucky he feels when his teams have very little of it. Or whether having another year where he is given the chance to do well in these circumstances, getting ridiculed and booed all the time is somehow lucky.
How can we call Kelly transferring after playing a full 4 years for Cal, a loss for Fox? How long do you think a player has to play for a school, knowing that 50% or so players transfer to at least one other school during their college careers? These days, I think we were lucky that Kelly, or any player, stays for 4 years. I think Anticevich staying for 5 years may be a rarity.
You refer to Bradley leaving as a loss for Fox, and that is a better argument for Fox losing a player. I think Fox and Bradley had a bit of an adversarial relationship at times, so Fox may not agree with you on that one.
I believe Fox did lose Betley, and he said almost as much himself, when he admitted that he may have pushed Betley too hard in the first half of the season, causing him to get exhausted and his play fell off in the 2nd half of the season. Knowing about Betley's previous injury, Fox should have gone easier on him in early games. Betley did not transfer, he just left Cal, and last I heard he was playing some golf and taking it easy. I guess he could be coming back, or going to another program, or retiring.
As to losing Celestine to injury, I give credit to Fox for signing a player who had been badly injured in high school, missed his final year, and arrived not yet ready to play. Fox took a chance on him, because he saw the talent there. I don't see that as Fox losing a player. He may turn out to be another Al Grigsby, giving us what he can over more seasons than we expected. The team also lost DJ Thorpe to injury and retirement, the only backup to Lars with any D1 experience. I don't see that as Fox losing a player.
What I think is losing a player is like Fox losing Betley, or Cuonzo losing Mathews. Cuonzo rode Mathews hard, trying to get him to take the ball to the rim and play defense, etc., and he left for a coach who would appreciate him at Gonzaga.
Finally, Fox may have or will have lots of money from this Cal experience, but I'm not sure he's happy, especially if he reads this forum, and sees how many BI fans dislike him. I don't know the man, but I think he is trying to coach his kids to be successful, and he doesn't enjoy all these losses any more than we do. If I was him, I'd consider resigning, but it is hard to walk away from all that money. That is Cal's fault, making it hard to walk away from, and hard for them to fire him.
SFCityBear