This has got to be killing him. As much as we all hate his guts, I don't think his is an agenda of just collecting his millions and losing and losing.
Of course any other power 5 the coach would have been out a year ago...
Not to mention he has driven away most of the remaining fan base so there's no one left to care....except for us yahoos on an internet message board.CalBearinLA said:
Would you leave a job where u we're getting paid over a mil and your boss will cover for you every time? I wouldn't.
He's milking this "injured" team thing way too much. Trying to convince everyone it's not his fault
annarborbear said:
Back in 2016, we had $3.5 million in ticket sales in men's basketball. Wonder how much that will be this year under Knowlton/Fox,
my suggestion would be that he not communicate at all directly with the players during the games, all communications would be done by andrew francisHoopDreams said:
fox has the worst body language on the sideline when the game is going
he looks so tight and upset with his arms tightly crossed, a big frown on his face, and his head shaking side-to-side
this is not a good look for the players as he's supposed be a leader, showing he's in command of the game and showing confidence to his players
he also has horrible body language in post game interviews… he should work on this which only takes effort on his part
You mean like this?Shocky1 said:my suggestion would be that he not communicate at all directly with the players during the games, all communications would be done by andrew francisHoopDreams said:
fox has the worst body language on the sideline when the game is going
he looks so tight and upset with his arms tightly crossed, a big frown on his face, and his head shaking side-to-side
this is not a good look for the players as he's supposed be a leader, showing he's in command of the game and showing confidence to his players
he also has horrible body language in post game interviews… he should work on this which only takes effort on his part
when mike montgomery would get really upset back in the day at a player he was wise & introspective enough to realize that his message would not get thru & then travis decuire would go sit down next to the player & deliver coach's message in a constructive way
100% agree with your commentary re: fox's body language, do you notice how the players fail almost every time when exiting the game to maintain eye contact with him?
At the Southern game, at every timeout, Fox stood in the background, while the assistant coaches did all the talking with the players. Right before the end of the timeout, Fox would join them, and diagram a play for them.Shocky1 said:my suggestion would be that he not communicate at all directly with the players during the games, all communications would be done by andrew francisHoopDreams said:
fox has the worst body language on the sideline when the game is going
he looks so tight and upset with his arms tightly crossed, a big frown on his face, and his head shaking side-to-side
this is not a good look for the players as he's supposed be a leader, showing he's in command of the game and showing confidence to his players
he also has horrible body language in post game interviews… he should work on this which only takes effort on his part
when mike montgomery would get really upset back in the day at a player he was wise & introspective enough to realize that his message would not get thru & then travis decuire would go sit down next to the player & deliver coach's message in a constructive way
100% agree with your commentary re: fox's body language, do you notice how the players fail almost every time when exiting the game to maintain eye contact with him?
If it were me, I think I would resign. First, however, I would ask my players if they think I should resign, and if they said no, that would be the only reason I would stay. What they think would mean more to me than 15-20 disgruntled fans posting on website.bearister said:
Resign with full pay out? Sure.
Agree to calling a firing a resignation with a full pay out? Sure.
Resign and forfeit payout? Whatya reckon?
That is probably another reason why I never had any desire to coach. Brutal business. Darn near killed Pete Newell. He never chewed out a player in a game, and hardly ever called a timeout. His style was to coach in practice, and let the players play the game. He did chew a lot of towels up on the bench during a game. It led to ulcers, I believe, and to his very early retirement. As a coach, you just can't play the game for these kids. You train them as best you can, but in the end they are the ones who will either win the game or lose it. If they win, they will get most of the credit, not you, and if they lose the game, you will likely get all the blame.Big C said:
I can't imagine a coach resigning before the end of a season (barring some bizarre circumstance or transgression). It would be like a player quitting. They are hard-wired to think that they will somehow be able to turn things around.
SFCityBear said:If it were me, I think I would resign. First, however, I would ask my players if they think I should resign, and if they said no, that would be the only reason I would stay. What they think would mean more to me than 15-20 disgruntled fans posting on website.bearister said:
Resign with full pay out? Sure.
Agree to calling a firing a resignation with a full pay out? Sure.
Resign and forfeit payout? Whatya reckon?
I don't know what his contract legally requires of him, but I'd guess he feels he's lived up to it. If I were him, I would at least know that even though most or all of my players had shown some improvement, it is clear that the team is not improved, and I have not delivered a watchable or successful product.
I would resign, but not want the full payout. I'd be willing to negotiate the amount downward, and leave it up to the administration to decide if I even get one. I've been paid a lot already, and when everybody hates you, it is time to leave town.
It looks like a little tough love didn't hurt Crabbe too much. When I saw that happen, I thought, "Oh no. Not Monty." And I felt he was probably affected by his own behavior. I'd never seen him lose his cool with a player in a game before. To make things worse, The game was on national TV and Crabbe's parents were in attendance, I believe. At the end of the season, Crabbe left Cal to enter the NBA draft. When I saw what happened, I felt at the time that the incident would deeply affect Montgomery, and he would retire soon. After the following season, he retired, and quit coaching for good, it seems.bearister said:SFCityBear said:If it were me, I think I would resign. First, however, I would ask my players if they think I should resign, and if they said no, that would be the only reason I would stay. What they think would mean more to me than 15-20 disgruntled fans posting on website.bearister said:
Resign with full pay out? Sure.
Agree to calling a firing a resignation with a full pay out? Sure.
Resign and forfeit payout? Whatya reckon?
I don't know what his contract legally requires of him, but I'd guess he feels he's lived up to it. If I were him, I would at least know that even though most or all of my players had shown some improvement, it is clear that the team is not improved, and I have not delivered a watchable or successful product.
I would resign, but not want the full payout. I'd be willing to negotiate the amount downward, and leave it up to the administration to decide if I even get one. I've been paid a lot already, and when everybody hates you, it is time to leave town.
Well, you have honor, which is in short supply these days. 1 in a 100,000 (or more) would either walk away from, or negotiate downward, a few million dollar payout they are contractually entitled to.
In other news, triggered by that video of Monty pushing Crabbe:
In 7 NBA seasons Crabbe's total earnings are $85,774,000.
Allen Crabbe's NBA career scoring average is 9 points.
He currently is in the G League playing for the Westchester Knicks.
SFCityBear said:It looks like a little tough love didn't hurt Crabbe too much. When I saw that happen, I thought, "Oh no. Not Monty." And I felt he was probably affected by his own behavior. I'd never seen him lose his cool with a player in a game before. To make things worse, The game was on national TV and Crabbe's parents were in attendance, I believe. At the end of the season, Crabbe left Cal to enter the NBA draft. When I saw what happened, I felt at the time that the incident would deeply affect Montgomery, and he would retire soon. After the following season, he retired, and quit coaching for good, it seems.bearister said:SFCityBear said:If it were me, I think I would resign. First, however, I would ask my players if they think I should resign, and if they said no, that would be the only reason I would stay. What they think would mean more to me than 15-20 disgruntled fans posting on website.bearister said:
Resign with full pay out? Sure.
Agree to calling a firing a resignation with a full pay out? Sure.
Resign and forfeit payout? Whatya reckon?
I don't know what his contract legally requires of him, but I'd guess he feels he's lived up to it. If I were him, I would at least know that even though most or all of my players had shown some improvement, it is clear that the team is not improved, and I have not delivered a watchable or successful product.
I would resign, but not want the full payout. I'd be willing to negotiate the amount downward, and leave it up to the administration to decide if I even get one. I've been paid a lot already, and when everybody hates you, it is time to leave town.
Well, you have honor, which is in short supply these days. 1 in a 100,000 (or more) would either walk away from, or negotiate downward, a few million dollar payout they are contractually entitled to.
In other news, triggered by that video of Monty pushing Crabbe:
In 7 NBA seasons Crabbe's total earnings are $85,774,000.
Allen Crabbe's NBA career scoring average is 9 points.
He currently is in the G League playing for the Westchester Knicks.