SFCityBear said:
GMP said:
HKBear97! said:
GMP said:
Oakbear said:
eastcoastcal said:
What sucks is we have to sit through a full season of this! I would feel better if we were a week or two away from seeing a change, but I have to wait til March (god forbid we retain Fox. If that happened I might stop being a fan of the basketball program) to have any hope for this program
we may have to sit thru more than one season of this.. AD loves the guy? so will not fire him
The Fox hiring and retention is another example of subconscious institutional racism at work. Knowlton admitted he hired him because he felt so comfortable with him. But that's not a job requirement. And it's caused by subconscious racism - who you're comfortable around is who you are used to being around.
It's also instructive to read Knowlton's words about why he fired Jones:
Quote:
"What I was really evaluating was: Where are we now after two years and how much can we move the needle in another year? By the end of the season, and then with another couple days of evaluating, it became obvious that we wouldn't be able to move the needle enough, and that's when I had to make a leadership change."
If he applied that same logic to Fox, he would have fired him after last season. But he feels comfortable and now, well, he's got to let him coach until we get a practice facility, 3-4 years from now! Good lord. Knowlton is the worst thing that ever happened to this program. Worse than Boseman.
Sorry, but you're trying too hard here. Under Wyking the team looked like it never practiced. We couldn't break a press, set plays were terrible, inbound plays were non-existent and we were losing to real bottom dweller teams.
I think it was an idiotic hire, but I could see the rationale for Knowlton hiring Fox. Fox had a lot of experience as a head coach (in contrast to Wyking who had none), was seen as a developer of talent (didn't see a lot of that under Wyking), west coast experience at Nevada and had the resume of a good teacher/coach (Nevada record, US Olympic team coach, etc). Again, absolutely idiotic hire and Knowlton clearly relied way too much on the search firm, but in terms of checking the box after the Wyking disaster, Fox did technically check some boxes. A competent AD would have weighed his resume at Georgia and realized there was a reason he was fired, but sadly, Knowlton's not a competent AD.
Maybe I needed to be more clear:
1. Fox was hired because of subconscious racism. I'm not saying he was completely unqualified. Yes, he was a passable candidate. But Knowlton publicly stated he went with Fox because he felt more comfortable with him. The other widely rumored candidate was Decuire, who is not white. This, IMO, is not a coincidence.
2. In determining whether Fox should have continued as our coach after 2021, Knowlton failed to apply the logic he used in firing Jones. If he had done so, Fox would have been fired. And he should have been fired. Unlike point #1, I don't know (or very strongly believe) that Knowlton's failure to be consistent is due to subconscious racism because unlike when Fox was hired, Knowlton has not admitted as much this time around. I suspect it is due to subconscious racism (based on what I believe is Knowlton's admitted history of subconscious racism in hiring Fox), but I am also open to the fact that Knowlton is just a complete idiot who doesn't understand how to do his job.
This comment is asinine, unfair to Knowlton, offensive, and has no place on this board, or anywhere. Where were you when Knowlton hired Charmin Smith, a black woman, to be the Head Women's Basketball coach? Where were you when Knowlton hired Robyne Johnson, also a black woman, to be the Director of both Men's and Women's Track and Field teams, the first female to ever hold the position? Do you think Knowlton doesn't feel comfortable around men who are black, but this same person feels comfortable around women who are black? What kind of racist is that, subconscious, or otherwise?
Aren't you aware that the University has a very strong desire, even a strong policy, to hire to improve and increase diversity at the University, and will bend over backwards to give opportunity to prospective students and to prospective employees some advantage in accepting or hiring them? Fox might even have been held to a higher bar than DeCuire. I suspect fox was hired because of his history of being a head coach in D1, and the respect he had among other D1 coaches, and it didn't have a damn thing to with the color of his skin. Knowlton probably did it because DeCuire had not been a head coach before, and perhaps that seemed more of a risk. There could be other reasons, but one of them is not racism, subconscious or conscious, not in this day and age at UC Berkeley.
DeCuire was the head coach at Montana at the time and was interviewed by Knowlton the morning he returned from taking his team to the NCAA Tournament after winning his conference championship.
"The University" may have a policy, but individuals make decisions that violate policies all the time. That is why HR, compliance, etc. exist.
When Knowlton was informed by swimmers and their parents that McKeever engaged in abuse and racial discrimination, he brushed it off as her being "a tough coach" that one day they "would look back and appreciate." He later gave McKeever a big raise and five year contract. There was no investigation until everything came out in the press. I am pretty sure university (and state) policy requires investigation of claims of abuse and racial discrimination. Thus to assume Knowlton followed an affirmative university policy in hiring, when he ignored claims of racism and abuse, is assuming far too much. He relied on the search firm and interviewed two people. That is what he said.
Knowlton in his public statement on "Black Lives Matter" made it clear that race and even more likeky gender equity issues are new to him: "we (speaking for Cal) are learning" he said.
Anyone who is familiar with equity issues in hiring and the idea of "affinity bias" would simply not say what Knowlton said. They would purposely NOT cite that as a reason for hiring Fox over DeCuire even if it were true. The fact that he said it is the best evidence thst he is unaware of it.
Unconscious bias is pernicious. Sports is the most competitive, results oriented endeavor we engage in. However the results of bias, conscious and unconscious are obvious: For example, 50 years ago the SEC had no African American players. 20 years ago there was maybe one starting African American QB in the NFL (.usually from a HBU). Announcers even tried to explain "why African Americans were not good at playing QB or swimming."
Today the majority of NFL teams have an African American or Samoan QB.
Did somehow African Americans as a whole become more capable of playing QB? Or were they just finally given the opportunity? HS QBs no longer forced to change position due to the coaches' conscious or unconscious bias? NFL franchises looking for results instead of "classic good looking" (ie white, preferably blond) QBs to be the "face of the franchise."
Now if this bias could exist for so long with regard to QBs until very recently, it should not be too difficult to see that bias could still persist with respect to head coaching, much less athletics administration or corporate management, where the evaluation is far less objective.
Not that there isn't still overt bias, such as Trump saying he would "Never hire a black accountant" because he wants all his accountants being "little guys with yarmulkes" with many people liking Trump because he says out loud what they think.