Wren Robinson New player

7,165 Views | 62 Replies | Last: 1 yr ago by calumnus
calumnus
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SFCityBear said:

calumnus said:

SFCityBear said:

concernedparent said:

4thGenCal said:

calumnus said:

Looking at Wrenn Robinson videos, he is a great shooter with good length (6'2" 6'5 wingspan). Top JC player (PG on championship team), had full eligibility out of HS (St. Ignatius) so was able to be added in season and is only a sophomore.

He has looked great in limited minutes, IMO he needs to start getting ALOT of minutes and if his excellent play continues start supplanting Brown, but also backing up Askew.

Totally agree but Fox has said that Wrenn "is under sized"! ridiculous because though He is really just 6'1" in shoes (stood next to him)He is physically strong and has good handles and a nice smooth shot. Fox did say that He will be a contributing player for the next 2 seasons. Its almost as though bringing in a walk on via Paris Austin recommendation, is an affront to the staff and they are only playing him if absolutely necessary. Wrenn has confidence and has bball savvy, hope he gets more minutes.
Fox also did Paris Austin dirty. His obsession with defensive potential over actual basketball skill is why we're the worst offense in the P5. The 1 is the least consequential spot on defense. You need someone who can run an offense or make something happen.
I think Mike Montgomery and a host of other coaches would disagree with you on this. Monty often talked about how important it is to stop the ball at point of attack, which is typically the point guard's responsibility. He had it with Jorge, and with Cobbs. Jason Kidd could interrupt an entire offense, with his defense of opposing guards trying to penetrate Cal's defense. The weakness of the 2016 team, other than depth, was at point guard. Wallace was a very good player, essential to the team's success, but he was not great at stopping the ball at point of attack.

You do have a good point with the current roster, because the worst part about this team is the offense. We could score 10-12 more points per game with a decent point guard, and that would be enough to give us a chance to win some games. So we need someone who can run a team right now, not a top defender at point guard. Right now, the only player on this team who has had proven point guard success, both passing and scoring (albeit at a lower college level than the PAC12) is Clayton, and he sits on the bench, injured. He hasn't played a single minute yet.


Wrenn Robinson (the topic of this thread) won a championship at SFCC last year. Great 3 pt shooter, good shooter off the dribble and good on ball defender. He should not be dismissed just because he came to Cal as a walk-on.
Where did I dismiss Robinson? I've never seen Robinson play, and have no idea whether he can play point and run a team at PAC12 or P5 level, and no one here knows that for sure either, because he has not yet done it for an appreciable number of games. Most of what I have read about here is about his shooting. We don't need shooters, we need scorers. There is a difference. I wrote about Coleman, about whom I know very little, except his stats, because he has played several seasons in Division 1. If Robinson can do the job of running the team at point, I'm behind him 100%. If we only had a point guard, that would free up Askew to operate and focus on getting open, because he and Lars are the team's only dependable scorers. We haven't had a skilled point guard since I can't remember when.


You say you didn't dismiss him, then you proceed to dismiss him? But "dismiss" was too strong for your original post, I should have said "when evaluating the roster, don't sleep on Robinson, the subject of this thread."

He averaged 25 points a game with his AAU team. He is a MUCH better scorer than Brown. He is more than a catch and shoot guy, he can score off the dribble and has a nice step back three. Plays good defense too from what I've seen. Most importantly he would better compliment Askew and make him more effective as a scorer, since currently Brown's guy can sag off him and provide help defense on Askew when he drives.

RedlessWardrobe
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Let me oversimplify the issue of using this kid:

Fox had planned to use both Hyder and Clayton in his rotation. Both are injured.
One of Cal's many weaknesses is lack of 3 point shooting.
Robinson, like the two injured guys is a guard. He can shoot threes. He has JC experience.
Why not use him?
BC Calfan
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RedlessWardrobe said:

Let me oversimplify the issue of using this kid:

Fox had planned to use both Hyder and Clayton in his rotation. Both are injured.
One of Cal's many weaknesses is lack of 3 point shooting.
Robinson, like the two injured guys is a guard. He can shoot threes. He has JC experience.
Why not use him?
Allow my to oversimplify further:

We are 0-11 and the only winless team in Division I Basketball.

Why not use him?
oskidunker
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BC Calfan said:

RedlessWardrobe said:

Let me oversimplify the issue of using this kid:

Fox had planned to use both Hyder and Clayton in his rotation. Both are injured.
One of Cal's many weaknesses is lack of 3 point shooting.
Robinson, like the two injured guys is a guard. He can shoot threes. He has JC experience.
Why not use him?
Allow my to oversimplify further:

We are 0-11 and the only winless team in Division I Basketball.

Why not use him?
Attention Fox. If you do what you always do, you will get whatbyou always do. Think outside the box. That being said, o-32 is likely coming for you.
Go Bears!
calumnus
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RedlessWardrobe said:

Let me oversimplify the issue of using this kid:

Fox had planned to use both Hyder and Clayton in his rotation. Both are injured.
One of Cal's many weaknesses is lack of 3 point shooting.
Robinson, like the two injured guys is a guard. He can shoot threes. He has JC experience.
Why not use him?


Exactly, if Hyder, Clayton or Celestine were available, or if we had won a game using his lineups, it would be more understandable, but given that Robinson fits a desperate need on a desperate team, and excelled in his brief stints, he should get a chance to play more.

Unless Fox is trying to get fired.
oskidunker
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calumnus said:

RedlessWardrobe said:

Let me oversimplify the issue of using this kid:

Fox had planned to use both Hyder and Clayton in his rotation. Both are injured.
One of Cal's many weaknesses is lack of 3 point shooting.
Robinson, like the two injured guys is a guard. He can shoot threes. He has JC experience.
Why not use him?


Exactly, if Hyder, Clayton or Celestine were available, or if we had won a game using his lineups, it would be more understandable, but given that Robinson fits a desperate need on a desperate team, and excelled in his brief stints, he should get a chance to play more.

Unless Fox is trying to get fired.
More likely he is embarrassed that a walk on might be better than his recruits
Go Bears!
calumnus
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oskidunker said:

calumnus said:

RedlessWardrobe said:

Let me oversimplify the issue of using this kid:

Fox had planned to use both Hyder and Clayton in his rotation. Both are injured.
One of Cal's many weaknesses is lack of 3 point shooting.
Robinson, like the two injured guys is a guard. He can shoot threes. He has JC experience.
Why not use him?


Exactly, if Hyder, Clayton or Celestine were available, or if we had won a game using his lineups, it would be more understandable, but given that Robinson fits a desperate need on a desperate team, and excelled in his brief stints, he should get a chance to play more.

Unless Fox is trying to get fired.
More likely he is embarrassed that a walk on might be better than his recruits


Plus a walk-on PG that was brought to Cal by a former Cal PG who himself came to Cal under the previous coach.
SFCityBear
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oskidunker said:

PtownBear1 said:

Am I the only one confused how a player can be added mid season?
Walk ons can be added anytime.
FWIW, I read somewhere here on the Bear Insider that Robinson had been with the team since the 3rd game of the season.
SFCityBear
SFCityBear
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oskidunker said:

SFCityBear said:

calumnus said:

SFCityBear said:

concernedparent said:

4thGenCal said:

calumnus said:

Looking at Wrenn Robinson videos, he is a great shooter with good length (6'2" 6'5 wingspan). Top JC player (PG on championship team), had full eligibility out of HS (St. Ignatius) so was able to be added in season and is only a sophomore.

He has looked great in limited minutes, IMO he needs to start getting ALOT of minutes and if his excellent play continues start supplanting Brown, but also backing up Askew.

Totally agree but Fox has said that Wrenn "is under sized"! ridiculous because though He is really just 6'1" in shoes (stood next to him)He is physically strong and has good handles and a nice smooth shot. Fox did say that He will be a contributing player for the next 2 seasons. Its almost as though bringing in a walk on via Paris Austin recommendation, is an affront to the staff and they are only playing him if absolutely necessary. Wrenn has confidence and has bball savvy, hope he gets more minutes.
Fox also did Paris Austin dirty. His obsession with defensive potential over actual basketball skill is why we're the worst offense in the P5. The 1 is the least consequential spot on defense. You need someone who can run an offense or make something happen.
I think Mike Montgomery and a host of other coaches would disagree with you on this. Monty often talked about how important it is to stop the ball at point of attack, which is typically the point guard's responsibility. He had it with Jorge, and with Cobbs. Jason Kidd could interrupt an entire offense, with his defense of opposing guards trying to penetrate Cal's defense. The weakness of the 2016 team, other than depth, was at point guard. Wallace was a very good player, essential to the team's success, but he was not great at stopping the ball at point of attack.

You do have a good point with the current roster, because the worst part about this team is the offense. We could score 10-12 more points per game with a decent point guard, and that would be enough to give us a chance to win some games. So we need someone who can run a team right now, not a top defender at point guard. Right now, the only player on this team who has had proven point guard success, both passing and scoring (albeit at a lower college level than the PAC12) is Clayton, and he sits on the bench, injured. He hasn't played a single minute yet.


Wrenn Robinson (the topic of this thread) won a championship at SFCC last year. Great 3 pt shooter, good shooter off the dribble and good on ball defender. He should not be dismissed just because he came to Cal as a walk-on.
Where did I dismiss Robinson? I've never seen Robinson play, and have no idea whether he can play point and run a team at PAC12 or P5 level, and no one here knows that for sure either, because he has not yet done it for an appreciable number of games. Most of what I have read about here is about his shooting. We don't need shooters, we need scorers. There is a difference. I wrote about Coleman, about whom I know very little, except his stats, because he has played several seasons in Division 1. If Robinson can do the job of running the team at point, I'm behind him 100%. If we only had a point guard, that would free up Askew to operate and focus on getting open, because he and Lars are the team's only dependable scorers. We haven't had a skilled point guard since I can't remember when.
We don't need shooters? No one on this team we are currently playing is a good shooter. Set screens and get someone open who can make a shot and we have a better chance. Its painful to watch A wide open Brown refuse to shoot when Askew passes to him. Why is he playing shooting guard when he cant shoot?
I made a mistake. Sorry. It was Clayton, not Coleman, I had written about. I have been chided in this forum several times for using the term "Shooting Guard" just in the way you are using it. It was pointed out to me that guards have many more responsibilities now. Point guards need to be able to score and shoot well, along with playing defense, in addition to the main responsibilities of running offense and setting up teammates. Shooting guards need to be able to pass, play defense, in addition to scoring. If we read recruit ranking profiles of players, we are seeing more and more the term, "Combo Guard", and Shooting Guard and Point Guard may be going out of favor. It is ironic that we are going back to the terms used in my youth, where there were just guards. And just forwards and centers up front, instead of many using the terms small forward, power forward, and center. Coaches like Montgomery sometimes used "Forward" to cover bigs, and "Wings", to cover the SG and SF.

You asked "Why is Brown playing shooting guard?" The answer is simple, I think. Baskets are scored by shots, and for a shooter to get the opportunity to shoot, he must have the ball in his hands. There are 6 ways for him to get the ball:

1. He can get a rebound.
2. He can receive a pass from a teammate.
3. He can intercept a pass from an opponent.
4. He can steal a ball from the opponent.
5. He can pick up a loose ball.
6. And rarest of all, he can receive the ball off the tip of a jump ball.

The point is, Brown's team must have the ball in order to score. Joel Brown is playing the bulk of the minutes at guard because he is very often around the ball and gets the ball that is loose, or being passed, or dribbled carelessly. He gets a ton of balls for his teammates to use to try scoring baskets.

Joel Brown is the best on the team in getting the ball for his teammates to shoot with.

1. Brown leads the team in steals
2. He is second on the team behind Lars, in defensive rebounds
3. He is second on the team behind Lars, in total rebounds
4. It isn't quantified with stats, but IMO, Brown gets his hands on more loose balls than any Cal player
5. Brown is the best defender out of all the guards on this team which we have seen, also IMO.
6. Offensively, Brown leads the team in assists

He can't hit the broad side of a barn with his shots, but if he doesn't play some position on the floor, Cal will not have the ball as often to try and score, as they would have the ball with him in there.
SFCityBear
oskidunker
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SFCityBear said:

oskidunker said:

SFCityBear said:

calumnus said:

SFCityBear said:

concernedparent said:

4thGenCal said:

calumnus said:

Looking at Wrenn Robinson videos, he is a great shooter with good length (6'2" 6'5 wingspan). Top JC player (PG on championship team), had full eligibility out of HS (St. Ignatius) so was able to be added in season and is only a sophomore.

He has looked great in limited minutes, IMO he needs to start getting ALOT of minutes and if his excellent play continues start supplanting Brown, but also backing up Askew.

Totally agree but Fox has said that Wrenn "is under sized"! ridiculous because though He is really just 6'1" in shoes (stood next to him)He is physically strong and has good handles and a nice smooth shot. Fox did say that He will be a contributing player for the next 2 seasons. Its almost as though bringing in a walk on via Paris Austin recommendation, is an affront to the staff and they are only playing him if absolutely necessary. Wrenn has confidence and has bball savvy, hope he gets more minutes.
Fox also did Paris Austin dirty. His obsession with defensive potential over actual basketball skill is why we're the worst offense in the P5. The 1 is the least consequential spot on defense. You need someone who can run an offense or make something happen.
I think Mike Montgomery and a host of other coaches would disagree with you on this. Monty often talked about how important it is to stop the ball at point of attack, which is typically the point guard's responsibility. He had it with Jorge, and with Cobbs. Jason Kidd could interrupt an entire offense, with his defense of opposing guards trying to penetrate Cal's defense. The weakness of the 2016 team, other than depth, was at point guard. Wallace was a very good player, essential to the team's success, but he was not great at stopping the ball at point of attack.

You do have a good point with the current roster, because the worst part about this team is the offense. We could score 10-12 more points per game with a decent point guard, and that would be enough to give us a chance to win some games. So we need someone who can run a team right now, not a top defender at point guard. Right now, the only player on this team who has had proven point guard success, both passing and scoring (albeit at a lower college level than the PAC12) is Clayton, and he sits on the bench, injured. He hasn't played a single minute yet.


Wrenn Robinson (the topic of this thread) won a championship at SFCC last year. Great 3 pt shooter, good shooter off the dribble and good on ball defender. He should not be dismissed just because he came to Cal as a walk-on.
Where did I dismiss Robinson? I've never seen Robinson play, and have no idea whether he can play point and run a team at PAC12 or P5 level, and no one here knows that for sure either, because he has not yet done it for an appreciable number of games. Most of what I have read about here is about his shooting. We don't need shooters, we need scorers. There is a difference. I wrote about Coleman, about whom I know very little, except his stats, because he has played several seasons in Division 1. If Robinson can do the job of running the team at point, I'm behind him 100%. If we only had a point guard, that would free up Askew to operate and focus on getting open, because he and Lars are the team's only dependable scorers. We haven't had a skilled point guard since I can't remember when.
We don't need shooters? No one on this team we are currently playing is a good shooter. Set screens and get someone open who can make a shot and we have a better chance. Its painful to watch A wide open Brown refuse to shoot when Askew passes to him. Why is he playing shooting guard when he cant shoot?
I made a mistake. Sorry. It was Clayton, not Coleman, I had written about. I have been chided in this forum several times for using the term "Shooting Guard" just in the way you are using it. It was pointed out to me that guards have many more responsibilities now. Point guards need to be able to score and shoot well, along with playing defense, in addition to the main responsibilities of running offense and setting up teammates. Shooting guards need to be able to pass, play defense, in addition to scoring. If we read recruit ranking profiles of players, we are seeing more and more the term, "Combo Guard", and Shooting Guard and Point Guard may be going out of favor. It is ironic that we are going back to the terms used in my youth, where there were just guards. And just forwards and centers up front, instead of many using the terms small forward, power forward, and center. Coaches like Montgomery sometimes used "Forward" to cover bigs, and "Wings", to cover the SG and SF.

You asked "Why is Brown playing shooting guard?" The answer is simple, I think. Baskets are scored by shots, and for a shooter to get the opportunity to shoot, he must have the ball in his hands. There are 6 ways for him to get the ball:

1. He can get a rebound.
2. He can receive a pass from a teammate.
3. He can intercept a pass from an opponent.
4. He can steal a ball from the opponent.
5. He can pick up a loose ball.
6. And rarest of all, he can receive the ball off the tip of a jump ball.

The point is, Brown's team must have the ball in order to score. Joel Brown is playing the bulk of the minutes at guard because he is very often around the ball and gets the ball that is loose, or being passed, or dribbled carelessly. He gets a ton of balls for his teammates to use to try scoring baskets.

Joel Brown is the best on the team in getting the ball for his teammates to shoot with.

1. Brown leads the team in steals
2. He is second on the team behind Lars, in defensive rebounds
3. He is second on the team behind Lars, in total rebounds
4. It isn't quantified with stats, but IMO, Brown gets his hands on more loose balls than any Cal player
5. Brown is the best defender out of all the guards on this team which we have seen, also IMO.
6. Offensively, Brown leads the team in assists

He can't hit the broad side of a barn with his shots, but if he doesn't play some position on the floor, Cal will not have the ball as often to try and score, as they would have the ball with him in there.






I am willing to run that risk.













Go Bears!
SFCityBear
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oskidunker said:

SFCityBear said:

oskidunker said:

SFCityBear said:

calumnus said:

SFCityBear said:

concernedparent said:

4thGenCal said:

calumnus said:

Looking at Wrenn Robinson videos, he is a great shooter with good length (6'2" 6'5 wingspan). Top JC player (PG on championship team), had full eligibility out of HS (St. Ignatius) so was able to be added in season and is only a sophomore.

He has looked great in limited minutes, IMO he needs to start getting ALOT of minutes and if his excellent play continues start supplanting Brown, but also backing up Askew.

Totally agree but Fox has said that Wrenn "is under sized"! ridiculous because though He is really just 6'1" in shoes (stood next to him)He is physically strong and has good handles and a nice smooth shot. Fox did say that He will be a contributing player for the next 2 seasons. Its almost as though bringing in a walk on via Paris Austin recommendation, is an affront to the staff and they are only playing him if absolutely necessary. Wrenn has confidence and has bball savvy, hope he gets more minutes.
Fox also did Paris Austin dirty. His obsession with defensive potential over actual basketball skill is why we're the worst offense in the P5. The 1 is the least consequential spot on defense. You need someone who can run an offense or make something happen.
I think Mike Montgomery and a host of other coaches would disagree with you on this. Monty often talked about how important it is to stop the ball at point of attack, which is typically the point guard's responsibility. He had it with Jorge, and with Cobbs. Jason Kidd could interrupt an entire offense, with his defense of opposing guards trying to penetrate Cal's defense. The weakness of the 2016 team, other than depth, was at point guard. Wallace was a very good player, essential to the team's success, but he was not great at stopping the ball at point of attack.

You do have a good point with the current roster, because the worst part about this team is the offense. We could score 10-12 more points per game with a decent point guard, and that would be enough to give us a chance to win some games. So we need someone who can run a team right now, not a top defender at point guard. Right now, the only player on this team who has had proven point guard success, both passing and scoring (albeit at a lower college level than the PAC12) is Clayton, and he sits on the bench, injured. He hasn't played a single minute yet.


Wrenn Robinson (the topic of this thread) won a championship at SFCC last year. Great 3 pt shooter, good shooter off the dribble and good on ball defender. He should not be dismissed just because he came to Cal as a walk-on.
Where did I dismiss Robinson? I've never seen Robinson play, and have no idea whether he can play point and run a team at PAC12 or P5 level, and no one here knows that for sure either, because he has not yet done it for an appreciable number of games. Most of what I have read about here is about his shooting. We don't need shooters, we need scorers. There is a difference. I wrote about Coleman, about whom I know very little, except his stats, because he has played several seasons in Division 1. If Robinson can do the job of running the team at point, I'm behind him 100%. If we only had a point guard, that would free up Askew to operate and focus on getting open, because he and Lars are the team's only dependable scorers. We haven't had a skilled point guard since I can't remember when.
We don't need shooters? No one on this team we are currently playing is a good shooter. Set screens and get someone open who can make a shot and we have a better chance. Its painful to watch A wide open Brown refuse to shoot when Askew passes to him. Why is he playing shooting guard when he cant shoot?
I made a mistake. Sorry. It was Clayton, not Coleman, I had written about. I have been chided in this forum several times for using the term "Shooting Guard" just in the way you are using it. It was pointed out to me that guards have many more responsibilities now. Point guards need to be able to score and shoot well, along with playing defense, in addition to the main responsibilities of running offense and setting up teammates. Shooting guards need to be able to pass, play defense, in addition to scoring. If we read recruit ranking profiles of players, we are seeing more and more the term, "Combo Guard", and Shooting Guard and Point Guard may be going out of favor. It is ironic that we are going back to the terms used in my youth, where there were just guards. And just forwards and centers up front, instead of many using the terms small forward, power forward, and center. Coaches like Montgomery sometimes used "Forward" to cover bigs, and "Wings", to cover the SG and SF.

You asked "Why is Brown playing shooting guard?" The answer is simple, I think. Baskets are scored by shots, and for a shooter to get the opportunity to shoot, he must have the ball in his hands. There are 6 ways for him to get the ball:

1. He can get a rebound.
2. He can receive a pass from a teammate.
3. He can intercept a pass from an opponent.
4. He can steal a ball from the opponent.
5. He can pick up a loose ball.
6. And rarest of all, he can receive the ball off the tip of a jump ball.

The point is, Brown's team must have the ball in order to score. Joel Brown is playing the bulk of the minutes at guard because he is very often around the ball and gets the ball that is loose, or being passed, or dribbled carelessly. He gets a ton of balls for his teammates to use to try scoring baskets.

Joel Brown is the best on the team in getting the ball for his teammates to shoot with.

1. Brown leads the team in steals
2. He is second on the team behind Lars, in defensive rebounds
3. He is second on the team behind Lars, in total rebounds
4. It isn't quantified with stats, but IMO, Brown gets his hands on more loose balls than any Cal player
5. Brown is the best defender out of all the guards on this team which we have seen, also IMO.
6. Offensively, Brown leads the team in assists

He can't hit the broad side of a barn with his shots, but if he doesn't play some position on the floor, Cal will not have the ball as often to try and score, as they would have the ball with him in there.






I am willing to run that risk.














That is fine with me. If Fox plays Robinson, that is fine with me. I have no opinion on who should play. If you think Robinson will be the savior of this team, fine. I was only trying to answer your question, "Why does Brown play shooting guard?" At the very least, I would like to see Fox switch the two guards' positions. Askew is not a true point guard. And we need someone who runs plays and distributes much better. Brown is not good at that either, but Brown, even when he used to be the point guard, did not always need the ball in his hands. Askew is most effective when he has the ball in his hands, but as a scorer, not a distributor of the ball. That is why before the season, I was looking forward to seeing Clayton play. We may not see him this year. I look forward to seeing Wrenn Robinson play, but I hope he will have enough point guard skills to emerge as a leader, to free Askew up to play the off guard and concentrate on shooting. He should be able to score 25 almost every night. It is the old story, if you don't have a very good coach, you better have one good point guard to have an offense. They make ordinary scorers into good scorers. I agree with you that we need better shooters, but they are only good if they get the ball, and we haven't shown we have a good facilitator on this roster, so far.
SFCityBear
calumnus
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SFCityBear said:

oskidunker said:

SFCityBear said:

oskidunker said:

SFCityBear said:

calumnus said:

SFCityBear said:

concernedparent said:

4thGenCal said:

calumnus said:

Looking at Wrenn Robinson videos, he is a great shooter with good length (6'2" 6'5 wingspan). Top JC player (PG on championship team), had full eligibility out of HS (St. Ignatius) so was able to be added in season and is only a sophomore.

He has looked great in limited minutes, IMO he needs to start getting ALOT of minutes and if his excellent play continues start supplanting Brown, but also backing up Askew.

Totally agree but Fox has said that Wrenn "is under sized"! ridiculous because though He is really just 6'1" in shoes (stood next to him)He is physically strong and has good handles and a nice smooth shot. Fox did say that He will be a contributing player for the next 2 seasons. Its almost as though bringing in a walk on via Paris Austin recommendation, is an affront to the staff and they are only playing him if absolutely necessary. Wrenn has confidence and has bball savvy, hope he gets more minutes.
Fox also did Paris Austin dirty. His obsession with defensive potential over actual basketball skill is why we're the worst offense in the P5. The 1 is the least consequential spot on defense. You need someone who can run an offense or make something happen.
I think Mike Montgomery and a host of other coaches would disagree with you on this. Monty often talked about how important it is to stop the ball at point of attack, which is typically the point guard's responsibility. He had it with Jorge, and with Cobbs. Jason Kidd could interrupt an entire offense, with his defense of opposing guards trying to penetrate Cal's defense. The weakness of the 2016 team, other than depth, was at point guard. Wallace was a very good player, essential to the team's success, but he was not great at stopping the ball at point of attack.

You do have a good point with the current roster, because the worst part about this team is the offense. We could score 10-12 more points per game with a decent point guard, and that would be enough to give us a chance to win some games. So we need someone who can run a team right now, not a top defender at point guard. Right now, the only player on this team who has had proven point guard success, both passing and scoring (albeit at a lower college level than the PAC12) is Clayton, and he sits on the bench, injured. He hasn't played a single minute yet.


Wrenn Robinson (the topic of this thread) won a championship at SFCC last year. Great 3 pt shooter, good shooter off the dribble and good on ball defender. He should not be dismissed just because he came to Cal as a walk-on.
Where did I dismiss Robinson? I've never seen Robinson play, and have no idea whether he can play point and run a team at PAC12 or P5 level, and no one here knows that for sure either, because he has not yet done it for an appreciable number of games. Most of what I have read about here is about his shooting. We don't need shooters, we need scorers. There is a difference. I wrote about Coleman, about whom I know very little, except his stats, because he has played several seasons in Division 1. If Robinson can do the job of running the team at point, I'm behind him 100%. If we only had a point guard, that would free up Askew to operate and focus on getting open, because he and Lars are the team's only dependable scorers. We haven't had a skilled point guard since I can't remember when.
We don't need shooters? No one on this team we are currently playing is a good shooter. Set screens and get someone open who can make a shot and we have a better chance. Its painful to watch A wide open Brown refuse to shoot when Askew passes to him. Why is he playing shooting guard when he cant shoot?
I made a mistake. Sorry. It was Clayton, not Coleman, I had written about. I have been chided in this forum several times for using the term "Shooting Guard" just in the way you are using it. It was pointed out to me that guards have many more responsibilities now. Point guards need to be able to score and shoot well, along with playing defense, in addition to the main responsibilities of running offense and setting up teammates. Shooting guards need to be able to pass, play defense, in addition to scoring. If we read recruit ranking profiles of players, we are seeing more and more the term, "Combo Guard", and Shooting Guard and Point Guard may be going out of favor. It is ironic that we are going back to the terms used in my youth, where there were just guards. And just forwards and centers up front, instead of many using the terms small forward, power forward, and center. Coaches like Montgomery sometimes used "Forward" to cover bigs, and "Wings", to cover the SG and SF.

You asked "Why is Brown playing shooting guard?" The answer is simple, I think. Baskets are scored by shots, and for a shooter to get the opportunity to shoot, he must have the ball in his hands. There are 6 ways for him to get the ball:

1. He can get a rebound.
2. He can receive a pass from a teammate.
3. He can intercept a pass from an opponent.
4. He can steal a ball from the opponent.
5. He can pick up a loose ball.
6. And rarest of all, he can receive the ball off the tip of a jump ball.

The point is, Brown's team must have the ball in order to score. Joel Brown is playing the bulk of the minutes at guard because he is very often around the ball and gets the ball that is loose, or being passed, or dribbled carelessly. He gets a ton of balls for his teammates to use to try scoring baskets.

Joel Brown is the best on the team in getting the ball for his teammates to shoot with.

1. Brown leads the team in steals
2. He is second on the team behind Lars, in defensive rebounds
3. He is second on the team behind Lars, in total rebounds
4. It isn't quantified with stats, but IMO, Brown gets his hands on more loose balls than any Cal player
5. Brown is the best defender out of all the guards on this team which we have seen, also IMO.
6. Offensively, Brown leads the team in assists

He can't hit the broad side of a barn with his shots, but if he doesn't play some position on the floor, Cal will not have the ball as often to try and score, as they would have the ball with him in there.






I am willing to run that risk.














That is fine with me. If Fox plays Robinson, that is fine with me. I have no opinion on who should play. If you think Robinson will be the savior of this team, fine. I was only trying to answer your question, "Why does Brown play shooting guard?" At the very least, I would like to see Fox switch the two guards' positions. Askew is not a true point guard. And we need someone who runs plays and distributes much better. Brown is not good at that either, but Brown, even when he used to be the point guard, did not always need the ball in his hands. Askew is most effective when he has the ball in his hands, but as a scorer, not a distributor of the ball. That is why before the season, I was looking forward to seeing Clayton play. We may not see him this year. I look forward to seeing Wrenn Robinson play, but I hope he will have enough point guard skills to emerge as a leader, to free Askew up to play the off guard and concentrate on shooting. He should be able to score 25 almost every night. It is the old story, if you don't have a very good coach, you better have one good point guard to have an offense. They make ordinary scorers into good scorers. I agree with you that we need better shooters, but they are only good if they get the ball, and we haven't shown we have a good facilitator on this roster, so far.


No one is saying Robinson is "the savior" of the team. No one. No one is even saying he should start over Brown. ALL I have said is he should get some playing time off the bench. Especially when guys like Clayton, Askew, Celestine and even Hyder are injured. He is a PG/combo guard that, unlike our other guards, has always been known for his 3 pt shooting. He has played well in his brief appearances. It would be good to see more. That is all.

SFCityBear
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calumnus said:

SFCityBear said:

calumnus said:

SFCityBear said:

concernedparent said:

4thGenCal said:

calumnus said:

Looking at Wrenn Robinson videos, he is a great shooter with good length (6'2" 6'5 wingspan). Top JC player (PG on championship team), had full eligibility out of HS (St. Ignatius) so was able to be added in season and is only a sophomore.

He has looked great in limited minutes, IMO he needs to start getting ALOT of minutes and if his excellent play continues start supplanting Brown, but also backing up Askew.

Totally agree but Fox has said that Wrenn "is under sized"! ridiculous because though He is really just 6'1" in shoes (stood next to him)He is physically strong and has good handles and a nice smooth shot. Fox did say that He will be a contributing player for the next 2 seasons. Its almost as though bringing in a walk on via Paris Austin recommendation, is an affront to the staff and they are only playing him if absolutely necessary. Wrenn has confidence and has bball savvy, hope he gets more minutes.
Fox also did Paris Austin dirty. His obsession with defensive potential over actual basketball skill is why we're the worst offense in the P5. The 1 is the least consequential spot on defense. You need someone who can run an offense or make something happen.
I think Mike Montgomery and a host of other coaches would disagree with you on this. Monty often talked about how important it is to stop the ball at point of attack, which is typically the point guard's responsibility. He had it with Jorge, and with Cobbs. Jason Kidd could interrupt an entire offense, with his defense of opposing guards trying to penetrate Cal's defense. The weakness of the 2016 team, other than depth, was at point guard. Wallace was a very good player, essential to the team's success, but he was not great at stopping the ball at point of attack.

You do have a good point with the current roster, because the worst part about this team is the offense. We could score 10-12 more points per game with a decent point guard, and that would be enough to give us a chance to win some games. So we need someone who can run a team right now, not a top defender at point guard. Right now, the only player on this team who has had proven point guard success, both passing and scoring (albeit at a lower college level than the PAC12) is Clayton, and he sits on the bench, injured. He hasn't played a single minute yet.


Wrenn Robinson (the topic of this thread) won a championship at SFCC last year. Great 3 pt shooter, good shooter off the dribble and good on ball defender. He should not be dismissed just because he came to Cal as a walk-on.
Where did I dismiss Robinson? I've never seen Robinson play, and have no idea whether he can play point and run a team at PAC12 or P5 level, and no one here knows that for sure either, because he has not yet done it for an appreciable number of games. Most of what I have read about here is about his shooting. We don't need shooters, we need scorers. There is a difference. I wrote about Coleman, about whom I know very little, except his stats, because he has played several seasons in Division 1. If Robinson can do the job of running the team at point, I'm behind him 100%. If we only had a point guard, that would free up Askew to operate and focus on getting open, because he and Lars are the team's only dependable scorers. We haven't had a skilled point guard since I can't remember when.


You say you didn't dismiss him, then you proceed to dismiss him? But "dismiss" was too strong for your original post, I should have said "when evaluating the roster, don't sleep on Robinson, the subject of this thread."

He averaged 25 points a game with his AAU team. He is a MUCH better scorer than Brown. He is more than a catch and shoot guy, he can score off the dribble and has a nice step back three. Plays good defense too from what I've seen. Most importantly he would better compliment Askew and make him more effective as a scorer, since currently Brown's guy can sag off him and provide help defense on Askew when he drives.


This is a favorite tactic. Accuse a poster of something he never said or implied, even making something up, in order to discredit the poster instead of answering his initial post. Politicians do this for a living.

Actually, I really liked your post other than the opening personal shot at me. I l liked it because it was something positive, something to give us as glimmer of hope. You spend countless hours of dreaming up new ways to trash the Cal coach, and you have helped convince the few fans left in our forum to follow suit. It has been a long time since you have said anything positive or encouraging about a current Cal player. I remember you begrudgingly admit that Lars had improved some, but other than that I remember you trashing Fox's record of recruiting, going all the way back to Nevada, on almost a daily basis, while at the same time stating that you support the Cal players. How can you say that a player is not a good recruit, and at the same time turn around and say you support the player? Isn't that hypocrisy?

In any case, it seems as though my post may have caused you to come out in full support of Robinson, touting his previous record, and his skills, and how he might be able to help this team score more if he were given more minutes. I loved it, and I'd like you to do more of it.

With that being said, I too, am interested in seeing what this young man can do, believe it or not. But we need to get real for a moment, too. You touted his high school numbers, 26 points a game in high school and AAU, which is also high school, although at a slightly higher level. Division 1 rosters are full of kids who had great high school records. Usually, it is the best of the best in high school who make a splash in D1/P5, and usually not right away. Robinson has had a year in Junior College ball at CCSF, and it was a good year, and he was a big factor in CCSF's championship run. You may not have noticed, but the Robinson had a big dropoff in scoring during his junior college year, averaging less than 10 points a game at CCSF. Players have to prove themselves at each level, and Robinson will have to prove himself at Cal. Was Robinson participating in practice since Cal's 3rd game? If so, then Fox has a pretty good idea of what Robinson can do against players like Brown and Askew by now. Askew has a good deal of size over Robinson, and Brown as a defender is a load for any guard he faces. It will be good experience for Robinson to go against those two veterans in practice, and by now Fox should have a pretty good idea of what Robinson can do. And hopefully Robinson is progressing individually and as a member of the team. I was also very hopeful about Clayton, because he had 5 years in Division 1, with good success, but that was in a relatively weaker conference. Clayton, as well as Robinson, would have to prove himself at D1, P5 conference level, no small task.

So I have a proposition for you: If my writing something that annoys you will lead you to writing something positive about a Cal player, then what I can do is post some slow-pitch softballs that you can hit out of the park, and in exchange would you write more good encouraging thoughts about Cal players? The daily drumbeat of criticism, right or not, is really depressing.
SFCityBear
calumnus
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SFCityBear said:

calumnus said:

SFCityBear said:

calumnus said:

SFCityBear said:

concernedparent said:

4thGenCal said:

calumnus said:

Looking at Wrenn Robinson videos, he is a great shooter with good length (6'2" 6'5 wingspan). Top JC player (PG on championship team), had full eligibility out of HS (St. Ignatius) so was able to be added in season and is only a sophomore.

He has looked great in limited minutes, IMO he needs to start getting ALOT of minutes and if his excellent play continues start supplanting Brown, but also backing up Askew.

Totally agree but Fox has said that Wrenn "is under sized"! ridiculous because though He is really just 6'1" in shoes (stood next to him)He is physically strong and has good handles and a nice smooth shot. Fox did say that He will be a contributing player for the next 2 seasons. Its almost as though bringing in a walk on via Paris Austin recommendation, is an affront to the staff and they are only playing him if absolutely necessary. Wrenn has confidence and has bball savvy, hope he gets more minutes.
Fox also did Paris Austin dirty. His obsession with defensive potential over actual basketball skill is why we're the worst offense in the P5. The 1 is the least consequential spot on defense. You need someone who can run an offense or make something happen.
I think Mike Montgomery and a host of other coaches would disagree with you on this. Monty often talked about how important it is to stop the ball at point of attack, which is typically the point guard's responsibility. He had it with Jorge, and with Cobbs. Jason Kidd could interrupt an entire offense, with his defense of opposing guards trying to penetrate Cal's defense. The weakness of the 2016 team, other than depth, was at point guard. Wallace was a very good player, essential to the team's success, but he was not great at stopping the ball at point of attack.

You do have a good point with the current roster, because the worst part about this team is the offense. We could score 10-12 more points per game with a decent point guard, and that would be enough to give us a chance to win some games. So we need someone who can run a team right now, not a top defender at point guard. Right now, the only player on this team who has had proven point guard success, both passing and scoring (albeit at a lower college level than the PAC12) is Clayton, and he sits on the bench, injured. He hasn't played a single minute yet.


Wrenn Robinson (the topic of this thread) won a championship at SFCC last year. Great 3 pt shooter, good shooter off the dribble and good on ball defender. He should not be dismissed just because he came to Cal as a walk-on.
Where did I dismiss Robinson? I've never seen Robinson play, and have no idea whether he can play point and run a team at PAC12 or P5 level, and no one here knows that for sure either, because he has not yet done it for an appreciable number of games. Most of what I have read about here is about his shooting. We don't need shooters, we need scorers. There is a difference. I wrote about Coleman, about whom I know very little, except his stats, because he has played several seasons in Division 1. If Robinson can do the job of running the team at point, I'm behind him 100%. If we only had a point guard, that would free up Askew to operate and focus on getting open, because he and Lars are the team's only dependable scorers. We haven't had a skilled point guard since I can't remember when.


You say you didn't dismiss him, then you proceed to dismiss him? But "dismiss" was too strong for your original post, I should have said "when evaluating the roster, don't sleep on Robinson, the subject of this thread."

He averaged 25 points a game with his AAU team. He is a MUCH better scorer than Brown. He is more than a catch and shoot guy, he can score off the dribble and has a nice step back three. Plays good defense too from what I've seen. Most importantly he would better compliment Askew and make him more effective as a scorer, since currently Brown's guy can sag off him and provide help defense on Askew when he drives.


This is a favorite tactic. Accuse a poster of something he never said or implied, even making something up, in order to discredit the poster instead of answering his initial post. Politicians do this for a living.

Actually, I really liked your post other than the opening personal shot at me. I l liked it because it was something positive, something to give us as glimmer of hope. You spend countless hours of dreaming up new ways to trash the Cal coach, and you have helped convince the few fans left in our forum to follow suit. It has been a long time since you have said anything positive or encouraging about a current Cal player. I remember you begrudgingly admit that Lars had improved some, but other than that I remember you trashing Fox's record of recruiting, going all the way back to Nevada, on almost a daily basis, while at the same time stating that you support the Cal players. How can you say that a player is not a good recruit, and at the same time turn around and say you support the player? Isn't that hypocrisy?

In any case, it seems as though my post may have caused you to come out in full support of Robinson, touting his previous record, and his skills, and how he might be able to help this team score more if he were given more minutes. I loved it, and I'd like you to do more of it.

With that being said, I too, am interested in seeing what this young man can do, believe it or not. But we need to get real for a moment, too. You touted his high school numbers, 26 points a game in high school and AAU, which is also high school, although at a slightly higher level. Division 1 rosters are full of kids who had great high school records. Usually, it is the best of the best in high school who make a splash in D1/P5, and usually not right away. Robinson has had a year in Junior College ball at CCSF, and it was a good year, and he was a big factor in CCSF's championship run. You may not have noticed, but the Robinson had a big dropoff in scoring during his junior college year, averaging less than 10 points a game at CCSF. Players have to prove themselves at each level, and Robinson will have to prove himself at Cal. Was Robinson participating in practice since Cal's 3rd game? If so, then Fox has a pretty good idea of what Robinson can do against players like Brown and Askew by now. Askew has a good deal of size over Robinson, and Brown as a defender is a load for any guard he faces. It will be good experience for Robinson to go against those two veterans in practice, and by now Fox should have a pretty good idea of what Robinson can do. And hopefully Robinson is progressing individually and as a member of the team. I was also very hopeful about Clayton, because he had 5 years in Division 1, with good success, but that was in a relatively weaker conference. Clayton, as well as Robinson, would have to prove himself at D1, P5 conference level, no small task.

So I have a proposition for you: If my writing something that annoys you will lead you to writing something positive about a Cal player, then what I can do is post some slow-pitch softballs that you can hit out of the park, and in exchange would you write more good encouraging thoughts about Cal players? The daily drumbeat of criticism, right or not, is really depressing.


That is a lie. The only negative I said about Lars is that Kelly was better and should have been the starter and gotten more minutes, especially Lar's/Fox's first year. Moreover, I am the one who was telling people on this board that with Kelly's departure, Lars was our best returning player this year. When we were discussing his improvement, I cited the stats that back that up. When you asked whether he could make the NBA, I simply said his path is playing professionally overseas, for him most likely in Europe, which is a good life, as many great Cal Bears have done before him.

As for the other stuff, go back and look at your own posts and do some self-reflection or just admit I was right about Mark Fox all along ;-)

Or, if the only thing keeping you from enjoying the glory of Mark Fox basketball, our 0-12 start against a cupcake schedule and what Knowlton and Fox have done to our program whike both making $millions, is my posts, just enjoy the games without reading them.

Happy Holidays SFCity
BearlyCareAnymore
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SFCityBear said:

calumnus said:

SFCityBear said:

calumnus said:

SFCityBear said:

concernedparent said:

4thGenCal said:

calumnus said:

Looking at Wrenn Robinson videos, he is a great shooter with good length (6'2" 6'5 wingspan). Top JC player (PG on championship team), had full eligibility out of HS (St. Ignatius) so was able to be added in season and is only a sophomore.

He has looked great in limited minutes, IMO he needs to start getting ALOT of minutes and if his excellent play continues start supplanting Brown, but also backing up Askew.

Totally agree but Fox has said that Wrenn "is under sized"! ridiculous because though He is really just 6'1" in shoes (stood next to him)He is physically strong and has good handles and a nice smooth shot. Fox did say that He will be a contributing player for the next 2 seasons. Its almost as though bringing in a walk on via Paris Austin recommendation, is an affront to the staff and they are only playing him if absolutely necessary. Wrenn has confidence and has bball savvy, hope he gets more minutes.
Fox also did Paris Austin dirty. His obsession with defensive potential over actual basketball skill is why we're the worst offense in the P5. The 1 is the least consequential spot on defense. You need someone who can run an offense or make something happen.
I think Mike Montgomery and a host of other coaches would disagree with you on this. Monty often talked about how important it is to stop the ball at point of attack, which is typically the point guard's responsibility. He had it with Jorge, and with Cobbs. Jason Kidd could interrupt an entire offense, with his defense of opposing guards trying to penetrate Cal's defense. The weakness of the 2016 team, other than depth, was at point guard. Wallace was a very good player, essential to the team's success, but he was not great at stopping the ball at point of attack.

You do have a good point with the current roster, because the worst part about this team is the offense. We could score 10-12 more points per game with a decent point guard, and that would be enough to give us a chance to win some games. So we need someone who can run a team right now, not a top defender at point guard. Right now, the only player on this team who has had proven point guard success, both passing and scoring (albeit at a lower college level than the PAC12) is Clayton, and he sits on the bench, injured. He hasn't played a single minute yet.


Wrenn Robinson (the topic of this thread) won a championship at SFCC last year. Great 3 pt shooter, good shooter off the dribble and good on ball defender. He should not be dismissed just because he came to Cal as a walk-on.
Where did I dismiss Robinson? I've never seen Robinson play, and have no idea whether he can play point and run a team at PAC12 or P5 level, and no one here knows that for sure either, because he has not yet done it for an appreciable number of games. Most of what I have read about here is about his shooting. We don't need shooters, we need scorers. There is a difference. I wrote about Coleman, about whom I know very little, except his stats, because he has played several seasons in Division 1. If Robinson can do the job of running the team at point, I'm behind him 100%. If we only had a point guard, that would free up Askew to operate and focus on getting open, because he and Lars are the team's only dependable scorers. We haven't had a skilled point guard since I can't remember when.


You say you didn't dismiss him, then you proceed to dismiss him? But "dismiss" was too strong for your original post, I should have said "when evaluating the roster, don't sleep on Robinson, the subject of this thread."

He averaged 25 points a game with his AAU team. He is a MUCH better scorer than Brown. He is more than a catch and shoot guy, he can score off the dribble and has a nice step back three. Plays good defense too from what I've seen. Most importantly he would better compliment Askew and make him more effective as a scorer, since currently Brown's guy can sag off him and provide help defense on Askew when he drives.


This is a favorite tactic. Accuse a poster of something he never said or implied, even making something up, in order to discredit the poster instead of answering his initial post. Politicians do this for a living.

Actually, I really liked your post other than the opening personal shot at me. I l liked it because it was something positive, something to give us as glimmer of hope. You spend countless hours of dreaming up new ways to trash the Cal coach, and you have helped convince the few fans left in our forum to follow suit. It has been a long time since you have said anything positive or encouraging about a current Cal player. I remember you begrudgingly admit that Lars had improved some, but other than that I remember you trashing Fox's record of recruiting, going all the way back to Nevada, on almost a daily basis, while at the same time stating that you support the Cal players. How can you say that a player is not a good recruit, and at the same time turn around and say you support the player? Isn't that hypocrisy?

In any case, it seems as though my post may have caused you to come out in full support of Robinson, touting his previous record, and his skills, and how he might be able to help this team score more if he were given more minutes. I loved it, and I'd like you to do more of it.

With that being said, I too, am interested in seeing what this young man can do, believe it or not. But we need to get real for a moment, too. You touted his high school numbers, 26 points a game in high school and AAU, which is also high school, although at a slightly higher level. Division 1 rosters are full of kids who had great high school records. Usually, it is the best of the best in high school who make a splash in D1/P5, and usually not right away. Robinson has had a year in Junior College ball at CCSF, and it was a good year, and he was a big factor in CCSF's championship run. You may not have noticed, but the Robinson had a big dropoff in scoring during his junior college year, averaging less than 10 points a game at CCSF. Players have to prove themselves at each level, and Robinson will have to prove himself at Cal. Was Robinson participating in practice since Cal's 3rd game? If so, then Fox has a pretty good idea of what Robinson can do against players like Brown and Askew by now. Askew has a good deal of size over Robinson, and Brown as a defender is a load for any guard he faces. It will be good experience for Robinson to go against those two veterans in practice, and by now Fox should have a pretty good idea of what Robinson can do. And hopefully Robinson is progressing individually and as a member of the team. I was also very hopeful about Clayton, because he had 5 years in Division 1, with good success, but that was in a relatively weaker conference. Clayton, as well as Robinson, would have to prove himself at D1, P5 conference level, no small task.

So I have a proposition for you: If my writing something that annoys you will lead you to writing something positive about a Cal player, then what I can do is post some slow-pitch softballs that you can hit out of the park, and in exchange would you write more good encouraging thoughts about Cal players? The daily drumbeat of criticism, right or not, is really depressing.


Actually, I think what he did in the past is give an honest assessment of Fox's crappy record and total lack of qualifications for this job and you stuck you fingers in your ears and screamed "I can't hear you!"

The results of the Fox regime were entirely predictable, made obvious by the fact that many predicted it.

The mistake that many make is thinking that hiring a coach with mediocre past results gives you a high floor and low ceiling. This has been proven false countless times, Walt Harris, Ty Willingham, and Mark Fox are just a few examples. And actually Braun after he left here. Most guys have windows. You have that many years of mediocrity and the window closes and the crash is ready to follow.

I would have thought that the generation that complains of snowflakes and participation trophies would have been against blowing sunshine up people's butts about the skill levels of players. Fox's recruiting sucks. If the players don't like honesty, prove everyone wrong by playing better. You don't support them by patting them on the head, handing them an orange slice and telling them they are wonderful.

From what I can see you have essentially accused calumnus of stating two opinions that have been proven one million percent correct. I would call them prophetic but it didn't take no prophet to nail those predictions.
stu
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BearlyCareAnymore said:

... Most guys have windows. You have that many years of mediocrity and the window closes and the crash is ready to follow...
Excellent observation. Up or out since most recruits are looking for up.
Big C
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BearlyCareAnymore said:

SFCityBear said:

calumnus said:

SFCityBear said:

calumnus said:

SFCityBear said:

concernedparent said:

4thGenCal said:

calumnus said:

Looking at Wrenn Robinson videos, he is a great shooter with good length (6'2" 6'5 wingspan). Top JC player (PG on championship team), had full eligibility out of HS (St. Ignatius) so was able to be added in season and is only a sophomore.

He has looked great in limited minutes, IMO he needs to start getting ALOT of minutes and if his excellent play continues start supplanting Brown, but also backing up Askew.

Totally agree but Fox has said that Wrenn "is under sized"! ridiculous because though He is really just 6'1" in shoes (stood next to him)He is physically strong and has good handles and a nice smooth shot. Fox did say that He will be a contributing player for the next 2 seasons. Its almost as though bringing in a walk on via Paris Austin recommendation, is an affront to the staff and they are only playing him if absolutely necessary. Wrenn has confidence and has bball savvy, hope he gets more minutes.
Fox also did Paris Austin dirty. His obsession with defensive potential over actual basketball skill is why we're the worst offense in the P5. The 1 is the least consequential spot on defense. You need someone who can run an offense or make something happen.
I think Mike Montgomery and a host of other coaches would disagree with you on this. Monty often talked about how important it is to stop the ball at point of attack, which is typically the point guard's responsibility. He had it with Jorge, and with Cobbs. Jason Kidd could interrupt an entire offense, with his defense of opposing guards trying to penetrate Cal's defense. The weakness of the 2016 team, other than depth, was at point guard. Wallace was a very good player, essential to the team's success, but he was not great at stopping the ball at point of attack.

You do have a good point with the current roster, because the worst part about this team is the offense. We could score 10-12 more points per game with a decent point guard, and that would be enough to give us a chance to win some games. So we need someone who can run a team right now, not a top defender at point guard. Right now, the only player on this team who has had proven point guard success, both passing and scoring (albeit at a lower college level than the PAC12) is Clayton, and he sits on the bench, injured. He hasn't played a single minute yet.


Wrenn Robinson (the topic of this thread) won a championship at SFCC last year. Great 3 pt shooter, good shooter off the dribble and good on ball defender. He should not be dismissed just because he came to Cal as a walk-on.
Where did I dismiss Robinson? I've never seen Robinson play, and have no idea whether he can play point and run a team at PAC12 or P5 level, and no one here knows that for sure either, because he has not yet done it for an appreciable number of games. Most of what I have read about here is about his shooting. We don't need shooters, we need scorers. There is a difference. I wrote about Coleman, about whom I know very little, except his stats, because he has played several seasons in Division 1. If Robinson can do the job of running the team at point, I'm behind him 100%. If we only had a point guard, that would free up Askew to operate and focus on getting open, because he and Lars are the team's only dependable scorers. We haven't had a skilled point guard since I can't remember when.


You say you didn't dismiss him, then you proceed to dismiss him? But "dismiss" was too strong for your original post, I should have said "when evaluating the roster, don't sleep on Robinson, the subject of this thread."

He averaged 25 points a game with his AAU team. He is a MUCH better scorer than Brown. He is more than a catch and shoot guy, he can score off the dribble and has a nice step back three. Plays good defense too from what I've seen. Most importantly he would better compliment Askew and make him more effective as a scorer, since currently Brown's guy can sag off him and provide help defense on Askew when he drives.


This is a favorite tactic. Accuse a poster of something he never said or implied, even making something up, in order to discredit the poster instead of answering his initial post. Politicians do this for a living.

Actually, I really liked your post other than the opening personal shot at me. I l liked it because it was something positive, something to give us as glimmer of hope. You spend countless hours of dreaming up new ways to trash the Cal coach, and you have helped convince the few fans left in our forum to follow suit. It has been a long time since you have said anything positive or encouraging about a current Cal player. I remember you begrudgingly admit that Lars had improved some, but other than that I remember you trashing Fox's record of recruiting, going all the way back to Nevada, on almost a daily basis, while at the same time stating that you support the Cal players. How can you say that a player is not a good recruit, and at the same time turn around and say you support the player? Isn't that hypocrisy?

In any case, it seems as though my post may have caused you to come out in full support of Robinson, touting his previous record, and his skills, and how he might be able to help this team score more if he were given more minutes. I loved it, and I'd like you to do more of it.

With that being said, I too, am interested in seeing what this young man can do, believe it or not. But we need to get real for a moment, too. You touted his high school numbers, 26 points a game in high school and AAU, which is also high school, although at a slightly higher level. Division 1 rosters are full of kids who had great high school records. Usually, it is the best of the best in high school who make a splash in D1/P5, and usually not right away. Robinson has had a year in Junior College ball at CCSF, and it was a good year, and he was a big factor in CCSF's championship run. You may not have noticed, but the Robinson had a big dropoff in scoring during his junior college year, averaging less than 10 points a game at CCSF. Players have to prove themselves at each level, and Robinson will have to prove himself at Cal. Was Robinson participating in practice since Cal's 3rd game? If so, then Fox has a pretty good idea of what Robinson can do against players like Brown and Askew by now. Askew has a good deal of size over Robinson, and Brown as a defender is a load for any guard he faces. It will be good experience for Robinson to go against those two veterans in practice, and by now Fox should have a pretty good idea of what Robinson can do. And hopefully Robinson is progressing individually and as a member of the team. I was also very hopeful about Clayton, because he had 5 years in Division 1, with good success, but that was in a relatively weaker conference. Clayton, as well as Robinson, would have to prove himself at D1, P5 conference level, no small task.

So I have a proposition for you: If my writing something that annoys you will lead you to writing something positive about a Cal player, then what I can do is post some slow-pitch softballs that you can hit out of the park, and in exchange would you write more good encouraging thoughts about Cal players? The daily drumbeat of criticism, right or not, is really depressing.


Actually, I think what he did in the past is give an honest assessment of Fox's crappy record and total lack of qualifications for this job and you stuck you fingers in your ears and screamed "I can't hear you!"

The results of the Fox regime were entirely predictable, made obvious by the fact that many predicted it.

The mistake that many make is thinking that hiring a coach with mediocre past results gives you a high floor and low ceiling. This has been proven false countless times, Walt Harris, Ty Willingham, and Mark Fox are just a few examples. And actually Braun after he left here. Most guys have windows. You have that many years of mediocrity and the window closes and the crash is ready to follow.

I would have thought that the generation that complains of snowflakes and participation trophies would have been against blowing sunshine up people's butts about the skill levels of players. Fox's recruiting sucks. If the players don't like honesty, prove everyone wrong by playing better. You don't support them by patting them on the head, handing them an orange slice and telling them they are wonderful.

From what I can see you have essentially accused calumnus of stating two opinions that have been proven one million percent correct. I would call them prophetic but it didn't take no prophet to nail those predictions.

Leave it to BearlyCaresAnymore to pump some serious sunshine:

While we did hire Mark Fox after his window closed, it was not Cal who rehired Walt Harris or Ty Willingham! Not only that, we actually replaced Braun before his "sell by" date!

Cal Athletics: U.C. a tradition of untraditional excellence!
SFCityBear
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BearlyCareAnymore said:

SFCityBear said:

calumnus said:

SFCityBear said:

calumnus said:

SFCityBear said:

concernedparent said:

4thGenCal said:

calumnus said:

Looking at Wrenn Robinson videos, he is a great shooter with good length (6'2" 6'5 wingspan). Top JC player (PG on championship team), had full eligibility out of HS (St. Ignatius) so was able to be added in season and is only a sophomore.

He has looked great in limited minutes, IMO he needs to start getting ALOT of minutes and if his excellent play continues start supplanting Brown, but also backing up Askew.

Totally agree but Fox has said that Wrenn "is under sized"! ridiculous because though He is really just 6'1" in shoes (stood next to him)He is physically strong and has good handles and a nice smooth shot. Fox did say that He will be a contributing player for the next 2 seasons. Its almost as though bringing in a walk on via Paris Austin recommendation, is an affront to the staff and they are only playing him if absolutely necessary. Wrenn has confidence and has bball savvy, hope he gets more minutes.
Fox also did Paris Austin dirty. His obsession with defensive potential over actual basketball skill is why we're the worst offense in the P5. The 1 is the least consequential spot on defense. You need someone who can run an offense or make something happen.
I think Mike Montgomery and a host of other coaches would disagree with you on this. Monty often talked about how important it is to stop the ball at point of attack, which is typically the point guard's responsibility. He had it with Jorge, and with Cobbs. Jason Kidd could interrupt an entire offense, with his defense of opposing guards trying to penetrate Cal's defense. The weakness of the 2016 team, other than depth, was at point guard. Wallace was a very good player, essential to the team's success, but he was not great at stopping the ball at point of attack.

You do have a good point with the current roster, because the worst part about this team is the offense. We could score 10-12 more points per game with a decent point guard, and that would be enough to give us a chance to win some games. So we need someone who can run a team right now, not a top defender at point guard. Right now, the only player on this team who has had proven point guard success, both passing and scoring (albeit at a lower college level than the PAC12) is Clayton, and he sits on the bench, injured. He hasn't played a single minute yet.


Wrenn Robinson (the topic of this thread) won a championship at SFCC last year. Great 3 pt shooter, good shooter off the dribble and good on ball defender. He should not be dismissed just because he came to Cal as a walk-on.
Where did I dismiss Robinson? I've never seen Robinson play, and have no idea whether he can play point and run a team at PAC12 or P5 level, and no one here knows that for sure either, because he has not yet done it for an appreciable number of games. Most of what I have read about here is about his shooting. We don't need shooters, we need scorers. There is a difference. I wrote about Coleman, about whom I know very little, except his stats, because he has played several seasons in Division 1. If Robinson can do the job of running the team at point, I'm behind him 100%. If we only had a point guard, that would free up Askew to operate and focus on getting open, because he and Lars are the team's only dependable scorers. We haven't had a skilled point guard since I can't remember when.


You say you didn't dismiss him, then you proceed to dismiss him? But "dismiss" was too strong for your original post, I should have said "when evaluating the roster, don't sleep on Robinson, the subject of this thread."

He averaged 25 points a game with his AAU team. He is a MUCH better scorer than Brown. He is more than a catch and shoot guy, he can score off the dribble and has a nice step back three. Plays good defense too from what I've seen. Most importantly he would better compliment Askew and make him more effective as a scorer, since currently Brown's guy can sag off him and provide help defense on Askew when he drives.


This is a favorite tactic. Accuse a poster of something he never said or implied, even making something up, in order to discredit the poster instead of answering his initial post. Politicians do this for a living.

Actually, I really liked your post other than the opening personal shot at me. I l liked it because it was something positive, something to give us as glimmer of hope. You spend countless hours of dreaming up new ways to trash the Cal coach, and you have helped convince the few fans left in our forum to follow suit. It has been a long time since you have said anything positive or encouraging about a current Cal player. I remember you begrudgingly admit that Lars had improved some, but other than that I remember you trashing Fox's record of recruiting, going all the way back to Nevada, on almost a daily basis, while at the same time stating that you support the Cal players. How can you say that a player is not a good recruit, and at the same time turn around and say you support the player? Isn't that hypocrisy?

In any case, it seems as though my post may have caused you to come out in full support of Robinson, touting his previous record, and his skills, and how he might be able to help this team score more if he were given more minutes. I loved it, and I'd like you to do more of it.

With that being said, I too, am interested in seeing what this young man can do, believe it or not. But we need to get real for a moment, too. You touted his high school numbers, 26 points a game in high school and AAU, which is also high school, although at a slightly higher level. Division 1 rosters are full of kids who had great high school records. Usually, it is the best of the best in high school who make a splash in D1/P5, and usually not right away. Robinson has had a year in Junior College ball at CCSF, and it was a good year, and he was a big factor in CCSF's championship run. You may not have noticed, but the Robinson had a big dropoff in scoring during his junior college year, averaging less than 10 points a game at CCSF. Players have to prove themselves at each level, and Robinson will have to prove himself at Cal. Was Robinson participating in practice since Cal's 3rd game? If so, then Fox has a pretty good idea of what Robinson can do against players like Brown and Askew by now. Askew has a good deal of size over Robinson, and Brown as a defender is a load for any guard he faces. It will be good experience for Robinson to go against those two veterans in practice, and by now Fox should have a pretty good idea of what Robinson can do. And hopefully Robinson is progressing individually and as a member of the team. I was also very hopeful about Clayton, because he had 5 years in Division 1, with good success, but that was in a relatively weaker conference. Clayton, as well as Robinson, would have to prove himself at D1, P5 conference level, no small task.

So I have a proposition for you: If my writing something that annoys you will lead you to writing something positive about a Cal player, then what I can do is post some slow-pitch softballs that you can hit out of the park, and in exchange would you write more good encouraging thoughts about Cal players? The daily drumbeat of criticism, right or not, is really depressing.


Actually, I think what he did in the past is give an honest assessment of Fox's crappy record and total lack of qualifications for this job and you stuck you fingers in your ears and screamed "I can't hear you!"

The results of the Fox regime were entirely predictable, made obvious by the fact that many predicted it.

The mistake that many make is thinking that hiring a coach with mediocre past results gives you a high floor and low ceiling. This has been proven false countless times, Walt Harris, Ty Willingham, and Mark Fox are just a few examples. And actually Braun after he left here. Most guys have windows. You have that many years of mediocrity and the window closes and the crash is ready to follow.

I would have thought that the generation that complains of snowflakes and participation trophies would have been against blowing sunshine up people's butts about the skill levels of players. Fox's recruiting sucks. If the players don't like honesty, prove everyone wrong by playing better. You don't support them by patting them on the head, handing them an orange slice and telling them they are wonderful.

From what I can see you have essentially accused calumnus of stating two opinions that have been proven one million percent correct. I would call them prophetic but it didn't take no prophet to nail those predictions.
I have no objection to firing Mark Fox. What I object to is smearing a Cal coach for almost 4 years now with distortion of his history prior to coming to Cal, among other things. All this to prove he is right about his prediction. With his prediction and $5 he can get a cup of coffee somewhere in Berkeley.

Mark Fox's record at Georgia was not "crappy". "Crappy" means "bad" or "terrible". Fox's record at Cal has been "crappy". Maybe you got the two records mixed up. Later on in your post, twice you called Fox's record at Georgia "mediocre". "Mediocre" means "average", which is what it was (actually slightly above average). That was correct. Here is the actual record of Mark Fox as head coach of Georgia, from sports-reference.com, not the description which was given to you by calumnus:

Overerall record, wins and losses: 163-133, a .551 win percentage, which is a little above average. SEC Conference record, wins and losses: 77-79, a .494 win percentage, very slightly below average. If he had won one of the games he lost, he would have had a .500 percentage, which by definition is "average". A basketball game is sometimes lost on one bad call, or one missed shot.

Wins: 163 (3rd all-time among 25 Georgia head coaches.)
Games: 296 (4th all-time at Georgia)
NCAA Appearances: 2 (tied for 2nd all-time at Georgia)
Career Won-Loss Percentage: .551 (4th all-time among 14 coaches who have coached 100 games, and 7th all-time among 11 coaches who have coached 4 years or more)

Certainly, Fox's record at Georgia was not "crappy. Fox was successful at Georgia, up to a point. Georgia had hired a famous coach, Jim Harrick, in 1999, and he coached 4 decent seasons until his son, an assistant, was caught in some NCAA infractions. Georgia fired Herrick. Dennis Felton was hired to replace Herrick, and Felton went on to have an abysmal record, a .480 overall winning percentage, and a pretty bad .310 record in the SEC over six seasons. Then Georgia hired Mark Fox to reverse the trend, to make Georgia better. Under Fox Georgia became an average program, but a winning program again. It took time to dig Georgia out of the hole. Fox's career at Georgia can be seen as two distinct periods. The first 4 years were not pretty, as Fox had only one winning season. His win percentage was .508, and .424 in the SEC. The next 5 seasons were different, with a .576 win percentage, and .544 in the SEC. I'll bet you didn't know Fox's last 5 seasons at Georgia were all winning seasons, did you? 5 in a row.

Georgia fired Mark Fox, and hired Tom Crean, who had a record that Cal fans, including me, were impressed. Crean had managed to rebuild both Marquette and Indiana, and was known as a fine recruiter and a sharp coach. Mark Fox left Crean two top 100 recruits, along with Nicholas Claxton who would leave for the NBA after a year with Crean, but Crean's first team went 11-21. In his second season, Crean landed Anthony Edwards, the #4 recruit in the nation, along with three other top 100 prospects. That team went 16-16. By Crean's 3rd season, he still had 4 top 100 players, but his team was only 14-12. The following year, all his top 100 players had departed, but Crean was able to land one, Jabri Abdur-Rahim. Even so, Crean's team finished 6-26. Georgia then fired Tom Crean. He finished with a 4 year record of .385 winning percentage, .208 in the SEC. Fox's first 4 years at Georgia: .508 winning percentage, .424 in conference. I guess Crean missed your "window" altogether, going from very good to failure. Not everyone has a window. Some coaches stay mediocre forever. And some go through your window and get better, I'd guess. The Georgia record shows that Fox had a much better record at Georgia than Felton, the coach he succeeded, and Crean, the coach who succeeded Fox at Georgia.

Calumnus has his own definition of failure, and he has high standards when it comes to some coaches. It includes every aspect of a coach's pedigree, where the coach played his basketball, learned his ball, where he coached, what his offense is, his defense, how he acts on the court, whether he yells at players or referees, what his gestures and facial expressions are, and what his practice philosophy is like, how well he can recruit, how well he can develop his players, what his press conferences are like. He has been more thoroughly hard on Mark Fox, than on any other modern Cal coach. But shouldn't a coach be fired for cause, not for his past history at previous schools? Predictions like this are worthless, unless you can get the ear of the AD and convince him to take action.

I hope I'm wrong, but perhaps both Georgia and now Cal are very tough places to build a winning program.


SFCityBear
stu
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Quote:

...
I hope I'm wrong, but perhaps both Georgia and now Cal are very tough places to build a winning program.
I think Georgia and Cal are very different places, maybe Fox was a better fit for Georgia.
calumnus
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SFCityBear said:

BearlyCareAnymore said:

SFCityBear said:

calumnus said:

SFCityBear said:

calumnus said:

SFCityBear said:

concernedparent said:

4thGenCal said:

calumnus said:

Looking at Wrenn Robinson videos, he is a great shooter with good length (6'2" 6'5 wingspan). Top JC player (PG on championship team), had full eligibility out of HS (St. Ignatius) so was able to be added in season and is only a sophomore.

He has looked great in limited minutes, IMO he needs to start getting ALOT of minutes and if his excellent play continues start supplanting Brown, but also backing up Askew.

Totally agree but Fox has said that Wrenn "is under sized"! ridiculous because though He is really just 6'1" in shoes (stood next to him)He is physically strong and has good handles and a nice smooth shot. Fox did say that He will be a contributing player for the next 2 seasons. Its almost as though bringing in a walk on via Paris Austin recommendation, is an affront to the staff and they are only playing him if absolutely necessary. Wrenn has confidence and has bball savvy, hope he gets more minutes.
Fox also did Paris Austin dirty. His obsession with defensive potential over actual basketball skill is why we're the worst offense in the P5. The 1 is the least consequential spot on defense. You need someone who can run an offense or make something happen.
I think Mike Montgomery and a host of other coaches would disagree with you on this. Monty often talked about how important it is to stop the ball at point of attack, which is typically the point guard's responsibility. He had it with Jorge, and with Cobbs. Jason Kidd could interrupt an entire offense, with his defense of opposing guards trying to penetrate Cal's defense. The weakness of the 2016 team, other than depth, was at point guard. Wallace was a very good player, essential to the team's success, but he was not great at stopping the ball at point of attack.

You do have a good point with the current roster, because the worst part about this team is the offense. We could score 10-12 more points per game with a decent point guard, and that would be enough to give us a chance to win some games. So we need someone who can run a team right now, not a top defender at point guard. Right now, the only player on this team who has had proven point guard success, both passing and scoring (albeit at a lower college level than the PAC12) is Clayton, and he sits on the bench, injured. He hasn't played a single minute yet.


Wrenn Robinson (the topic of this thread) won a championship at SFCC last year. Great 3 pt shooter, good shooter off the dribble and good on ball defender. He should not be dismissed just because he came to Cal as a walk-on.
Where did I dismiss Robinson? I've never seen Robinson play, and have no idea whether he can play point and run a team at PAC12 or P5 level, and no one here knows that for sure either, because he has not yet done it for an appreciable number of games. Most of what I have read about here is about his shooting. We don't need shooters, we need scorers. There is a difference. I wrote about Coleman, about whom I know very little, except his stats, because he has played several seasons in Division 1. If Robinson can do the job of running the team at point, I'm behind him 100%. If we only had a point guard, that would free up Askew to operate and focus on getting open, because he and Lars are the team's only dependable scorers. We haven't had a skilled point guard since I can't remember when.


You say you didn't dismiss him, then you proceed to dismiss him? But "dismiss" was too strong for your original post, I should have said "when evaluating the roster, don't sleep on Robinson, the subject of this thread."

He averaged 25 points a game with his AAU team. He is a MUCH better scorer than Brown. He is more than a catch and shoot guy, he can score off the dribble and has a nice step back three. Plays good defense too from what I've seen. Most importantly he would better compliment Askew and make him more effective as a scorer, since currently Brown's guy can sag off him and provide help defense on Askew when he drives.


This is a favorite tactic. Accuse a poster of something he never said or implied, even making something up, in order to discredit the poster instead of answering his initial post. Politicians do this for a living.

Actually, I really liked your post other than the opening personal shot at me. I l liked it because it was something positive, something to give us as glimmer of hope. You spend countless hours of dreaming up new ways to trash the Cal coach, and you have helped convince the few fans left in our forum to follow suit. It has been a long time since you have said anything positive or encouraging about a current Cal player. I remember you begrudgingly admit that Lars had improved some, but other than that I remember you trashing Fox's record of recruiting, going all the way back to Nevada, on almost a daily basis, while at the same time stating that you support the Cal players. How can you say that a player is not a good recruit, and at the same time turn around and say you support the player? Isn't that hypocrisy?

In any case, it seems as though my post may have caused you to come out in full support of Robinson, touting his previous record, and his skills, and how he might be able to help this team score more if he were given more minutes. I loved it, and I'd like you to do more of it.

With that being said, I too, am interested in seeing what this young man can do, believe it or not. But we need to get real for a moment, too. You touted his high school numbers, 26 points a game in high school and AAU, which is also high school, although at a slightly higher level. Division 1 rosters are full of kids who had great high school records. Usually, it is the best of the best in high school who make a splash in D1/P5, and usually not right away. Robinson has had a year in Junior College ball at CCSF, and it was a good year, and he was a big factor in CCSF's championship run. You may not have noticed, but the Robinson had a big dropoff in scoring during his junior college year, averaging less than 10 points a game at CCSF. Players have to prove themselves at each level, and Robinson will have to prove himself at Cal. Was Robinson participating in practice since Cal's 3rd game? If so, then Fox has a pretty good idea of what Robinson can do against players like Brown and Askew by now. Askew has a good deal of size over Robinson, and Brown as a defender is a load for any guard he faces. It will be good experience for Robinson to go against those two veterans in practice, and by now Fox should have a pretty good idea of what Robinson can do. And hopefully Robinson is progressing individually and as a member of the team. I was also very hopeful about Clayton, because he had 5 years in Division 1, with good success, but that was in a relatively weaker conference. Clayton, as well as Robinson, would have to prove himself at D1, P5 conference level, no small task.

So I have a proposition for you: If my writing something that annoys you will lead you to writing something positive about a Cal player, then what I can do is post some slow-pitch softballs that you can hit out of the park, and in exchange would you write more good encouraging thoughts about Cal players? The daily drumbeat of criticism, right or not, is really depressing.


Actually, I think what he did in the past is give an honest assessment of Fox's crappy record and total lack of qualifications for this job and you stuck you fingers in your ears and screamed "I can't hear you!"

The results of the Fox regime were entirely predictable, made obvious by the fact that many predicted it.

The mistake that many make is thinking that hiring a coach with mediocre past results gives you a high floor and low ceiling. This has been proven false countless times, Walt Harris, Ty Willingham, and Mark Fox are just a few examples. And actually Braun after he left here. Most guys have windows. You have that many years of mediocrity and the window closes and the crash is ready to follow.

I would have thought that the generation that complains of snowflakes and participation trophies would have been against blowing sunshine up people's butts about the skill levels of players. Fox's recruiting sucks. If the players don't like honesty, prove everyone wrong by playing better. You don't support them by patting them on the head, handing them an orange slice and telling them they are wonderful.

From what I can see you have essentially accused calumnus of stating two opinions that have been proven one million percent correct. I would call them prophetic but it didn't take no prophet to nail those predictions.
I have no objection to firing Mark Fox. What I object to is smearing a Cal coach for almost 4 years now with distortion of his history prior to coming to Cal, among other things. All this to prove he is right about his prediction. With his prediction and $5 he can get a cup of coffee somewhere in Berkeley.

Mark Fox's record at Georgia was not "crappy". "Crappy" means "bad" or "terrible". Fox's record at Cal has been "crappy". Maybe you got the two records mixed up. Later on in your post, twice you called Fox's record at Georgia "mediocre". "Mediocre" means "average", which is what it was (actually slightly above average). That was correct. Here is the actual record of Mark Fox as head coach of Georgia, from sports-reference.com, not the description which was given to you by calumnus:

Overerall record, wins and losses: 163-133, a .551 win percentage, which is a little above average. SEC Conference record, wins and losses: 77-79, a .494 win percentage, very slightly below average. If he had won one of the games he lost, he would have had a .500 percentage, which by definition is "average". A basketball game is sometimes lost on one bad call, or one missed shot.

Wins: 163 (3rd all-time among 25 Georgia head coaches.)
Games: 296 (4th all-time at Georgia)
NCAA Appearances: 2 (tied for 2nd all-time at Georgia)
Career Won-Loss Percentage: .551 (4th all-time among 14 coaches who have coached 100 games, and 7th all-time among 11 coaches who have coached 4 years or more)

Certainly, Fox's record at Georgia was not "crappy. Fox was successful at Georgia, up to a point. Georgia had hired a famous coach, Jim Harrick, in 1999, and he coached 4 decent seasons until his son, an assistant, was caught in some NCAA infractions. Georgia fired Herrick. Dennis Felton was hired to replace Herrick, and Felton went on to have an abysmal record, a .480 overall winning percentage, and a pretty bad .310 record in the SEC over six seasons. Then Georgia hired Mark Fox to reverse the trend, to make Georgia better. Under Fox Georgia became an average program, but a winning program again. It took time to dig Georgia out of the hole. Fox's career at Georgia can be seen as two distinct periods. The first 4 years were not pretty, as Fox had only one winning season. His win percentage was .508, and .424 in the SEC. The next 5 seasons were different, with a .576 win percentage, and .544 in the SEC. I'll bet you didn't know Fox's last 5 seasons at Georgia were all winning seasons, did you? 5 in a row.

Georgia fired Mark Fox, and hired Tom Crean, who had a record that Cal fans, including me, were impressed. Crean had managed to rebuild both Marquette and Indiana, and was known as a fine recruiter and a sharp coach. Mark Fox left Crean two top 100 recruits, along with Nicholas Claxton who would leave for the NBA after a year with Crean, but Crean's first team went 11-21. In his second season, Crean landed Anthony Edwards, the #4 recruit in the nation, along with three other top 100 prospects. That team went 16-16. By Crean's 3rd season, he still had 4 top 100 players, but his team was only 14-12. The following year, all his top 100 players had departed, but Crean was able to land one, Jabri Abdur-Rahim. Even so, Crean's team finished 6-26. Georgia then fired Tom Crean. He finished with a 4 year record of .385 winning percentage, .208 in the SEC. Fox's first 4 years at Georgia: .508 winning percentage, .424 in conference. I guess Crean missed your "window" altogether, going from very good to failure. Not everyone has a window. Some coaches stay mediocre forever. And some go through your window and get better, I'd guess. The Georgia record shows that Fox had a much better record at Georgia than Felton, the coach he succeeded, and Crean, the coach who succeeded Fox at Georgia.

Calumnus has his own definition of failure, and he has high standards when it comes to some coaches. It includes every aspect of a coach's pedigree, where the coach played his basketball, learned his ball, where he coached, what his offense is, his defense, how he acts on the court, whether he yells at players or referees, what his gestures and facial expressions are, and what his practice philosophy is like, how well he can recruit, how well he can develop his players, what his press conferences are like. He has been more thoroughly hard on Mark Fox, than on any other modern Cal coach. But shouldn't a coach be fired for cause, not for his past history at previous schools? Predictions like this are worthless, unless you can get the ear of the AD and convince him to take action.

I hope I'm wrong, but perhaps both Georgia and now Cal are very tough places to build a winning program.





Again with the personal attacks? Just because I have consistently said Fox is a bad coach that should not have been hired in the first place, REALLY should not have been extended and we should move on from as soon as possible?

Are you just upset that it now too obvious I was right?

Who Mark Fox is has been long on display, He was far from an unknown. I have an opinion about why he was a bad fit and would do poorly at Cal. A big part of that is his personality, intelligence and coaching style. You cannot get away from that. It is central to the job. It is not "a smear."

Also, again, let me make my own arguments and state my own opinion. Do not make up stuff about me or what I said or flat out lie like you did about Lars.

If you want to say what YOU like about Fox, his personality, coaching style and methods, go ahead. That is what these boards are for.

But I wouldn't worry about Mark Fox. He will be fine. He will survive my criticism. He is going to leave Cal with $11 million of our money and our program in ashes.

And again, my opinion is we should not make personal attacks on the players or other posters. We are all Cal Bears. However, the coaches (and AD) are VERY highly paid professionals, mercenaries, and their performance, which includes their personality, is fair game and should be discussed. It comes with the territory. I don't think I ever said anything about Fox that I would not stand by. I did not call him names, but in my opinion he is not a good coach and is not a pleasant person and that turns off recruits and drives away good players with options as we have seen over the last four years.

You and I will go on being Cal fans long after Fox is gone and is living in luxury somewhere and I'm sure we would both like to be able to come here and discuss the job the coaches are doing without any personal feuds.
calumnus
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Wren Robinson still looking good when in. Great shooter, good PG skills, good defender. Can't understand not playing him more, especially with Askew and Clayton out.

We lament missing out on Mahaney, but in the stats per minute played, Robinson is actually playing slightly better.
oskidunker
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calumnus said:

Wren Robinson still looking good when in. Great shooter, good PG skills, good defender. Can't understand not playing him more, especially with Askew and Clayton out.

We lament missing out on Mahaney, but in the stats per minute played, Robinson is actually playing slightly better.
It would be interesting if Brown cant play in a game to see what would happen. Knowing fox ,Bowser would probably be the point guard.

Fox was quoted as saying that Wren would play a significant roll in the future. But for now he wants Brown for defense even though it is the offense that is killing us. We have a point guard who cant shoot free throws and can only make lay ups. One who does a bad job distributing the ball. You can figure out why this is happening
Go Bears!
calumnus
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oskidunker said:

calumnus said:

Wren Robinson still looking good when in. Great shooter, good PG skills, good defender. Can't understand not playing him more, especially with Askew and Clayton out.

We lament missing out on Mahaney, but in the stats per minute played, Robinson is actually playing slightly better.
It would be interesting if Brown cant play in a game to see what would happen. Knowing fox ,Bowser would probably be the point guard.

Fox was quoted as saying that Wren would play a significant roll in the future. But for now he wants Brown for defense even though it is the offense that is killing us. We have a point guard who cant shoot free throws and can only make lay ups. One who does a bad job distributing the ball. You can figure out why this is happening


With Clayton and Askew out, Fox could easily play Brown and Robinson together for significant minutes, instead of giving so many minutes to Bowser and Roberson.
BeachedBear
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Can walk ons enter the portal?
SFCityBear
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BeachedBear said:

Can walk ons enter the portal?
If he doesn't see some game action, he won't get much portal traction.
SFCityBear
HKBear97!
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SFCityBear said:

BearlyCareAnymore said:

SFCityBear said:

calumnus said:

SFCityBear said:

calumnus said:

SFCityBear said:

concernedparent said:

4thGenCal said:

calumnus said:

Looking at Wrenn Robinson videos, he is a great shooter with good length (6'2" 6'5 wingspan). Top JC player (PG on championship team), had full eligibility out of HS (St. Ignatius) so was able to be added in season and is only a sophomore.

He has looked great in limited minutes, IMO he needs to start getting ALOT of minutes and if his excellent play continues start supplanting Brown, but also backing up Askew.

Totally agree but Fox has said that Wrenn "is under sized"! ridiculous because though He is really just 6'1" in shoes (stood next to him)He is physically strong and has good handles and a nice smooth shot. Fox did say that He will be a contributing player for the next 2 seasons. Its almost as though bringing in a walk on via Paris Austin recommendation, is an affront to the staff and they are only playing him if absolutely necessary. Wrenn has confidence and has bball savvy, hope he gets more minutes.
Fox also did Paris Austin dirty. His obsession with defensive potential over actual basketball skill is why we're the worst offense in the P5. The 1 is the least consequential spot on defense. You need someone who can run an offense or make something happen.
I think Mike Montgomery and a host of other coaches would disagree with you on this. Monty often talked about how important it is to stop the ball at point of attack, which is typically the point guard's responsibility. He had it with Jorge, and with Cobbs. Jason Kidd could interrupt an entire offense, with his defense of opposing guards trying to penetrate Cal's defense. The weakness of the 2016 team, other than depth, was at point guard. Wallace was a very good player, essential to the team's success, but he was not great at stopping the ball at point of attack.

You do have a good point with the current roster, because the worst part about this team is the offense. We could score 10-12 more points per game with a decent point guard, and that would be enough to give us a chance to win some games. So we need someone who can run a team right now, not a top defender at point guard. Right now, the only player on this team who has had proven point guard success, both passing and scoring (albeit at a lower college level than the PAC12) is Clayton, and he sits on the bench, injured. He hasn't played a single minute yet.


Wrenn Robinson (the topic of this thread) won a championship at SFCC last year. Great 3 pt shooter, good shooter off the dribble and good on ball defender. He should not be dismissed just because he came to Cal as a walk-on.
Where did I dismiss Robinson? I've never seen Robinson play, and have no idea whether he can play point and run a team at PAC12 or P5 level, and no one here knows that for sure either, because he has not yet done it for an appreciable number of games. Most of what I have read about here is about his shooting. We don't need shooters, we need scorers. There is a difference. I wrote about Coleman, about whom I know very little, except his stats, because he has played several seasons in Division 1. If Robinson can do the job of running the team at point, I'm behind him 100%. If we only had a point guard, that would free up Askew to operate and focus on getting open, because he and Lars are the team's only dependable scorers. We haven't had a skilled point guard since I can't remember when.


You say you didn't dismiss him, then you proceed to dismiss him? But "dismiss" was too strong for your original post, I should have said "when evaluating the roster, don't sleep on Robinson, the subject of this thread."

He averaged 25 points a game with his AAU team. He is a MUCH better scorer than Brown. He is more than a catch and shoot guy, he can score off the dribble and has a nice step back three. Plays good defense too from what I've seen. Most importantly he would better compliment Askew and make him more effective as a scorer, since currently Brown's guy can sag off him and provide help defense on Askew when he drives.


This is a favorite tactic. Accuse a poster of something he never said or implied, even making something up, in order to discredit the poster instead of answering his initial post. Politicians do this for a living.

Actually, I really liked your post other than the opening personal shot at me. I l liked it because it was something positive, something to give us as glimmer of hope. You spend countless hours of dreaming up new ways to trash the Cal coach, and you have helped convince the few fans left in our forum to follow suit. It has been a long time since you have said anything positive or encouraging about a current Cal player. I remember you begrudgingly admit that Lars had improved some, but other than that I remember you trashing Fox's record of recruiting, going all the way back to Nevada, on almost a daily basis, while at the same time stating that you support the Cal players. How can you say that a player is not a good recruit, and at the same time turn around and say you support the player? Isn't that hypocrisy?

In any case, it seems as though my post may have caused you to come out in full support of Robinson, touting his previous record, and his skills, and how he might be able to help this team score more if he were given more minutes. I loved it, and I'd like you to do more of it.

With that being said, I too, am interested in seeing what this young man can do, believe it or not. But we need to get real for a moment, too. You touted his high school numbers, 26 points a game in high school and AAU, which is also high school, although at a slightly higher level. Division 1 rosters are full of kids who had great high school records. Usually, it is the best of the best in high school who make a splash in D1/P5, and usually not right away. Robinson has had a year in Junior College ball at CCSF, and it was a good year, and he was a big factor in CCSF's championship run. You may not have noticed, but the Robinson had a big dropoff in scoring during his junior college year, averaging less than 10 points a game at CCSF. Players have to prove themselves at each level, and Robinson will have to prove himself at Cal. Was Robinson participating in practice since Cal's 3rd game? If so, then Fox has a pretty good idea of what Robinson can do against players like Brown and Askew by now. Askew has a good deal of size over Robinson, and Brown as a defender is a load for any guard he faces. It will be good experience for Robinson to go against those two veterans in practice, and by now Fox should have a pretty good idea of what Robinson can do. And hopefully Robinson is progressing individually and as a member of the team. I was also very hopeful about Clayton, because he had 5 years in Division 1, with good success, but that was in a relatively weaker conference. Clayton, as well as Robinson, would have to prove himself at D1, P5 conference level, no small task.

So I have a proposition for you: If my writing something that annoys you will lead you to writing something positive about a Cal player, then what I can do is post some slow-pitch softballs that you can hit out of the park, and in exchange would you write more good encouraging thoughts about Cal players? The daily drumbeat of criticism, right or not, is really depressing.


Actually, I think what he did in the past is give an honest assessment of Fox's crappy record and total lack of qualifications for this job and you stuck you fingers in your ears and screamed "I can't hear you!"

The results of the Fox regime were entirely predictable, made obvious by the fact that many predicted it.

The mistake that many make is thinking that hiring a coach with mediocre past results gives you a high floor and low ceiling. This has been proven false countless times, Walt Harris, Ty Willingham, and Mark Fox are just a few examples. And actually Braun after he left here. Most guys have windows. You have that many years of mediocrity and the window closes and the crash is ready to follow.

I would have thought that the generation that complains of snowflakes and participation trophies would have been against blowing sunshine up people's butts about the skill levels of players. Fox's recruiting sucks. If the players don't like honesty, prove everyone wrong by playing better. You don't support them by patting them on the head, handing them an orange slice and telling them they are wonderful.

From what I can see you have essentially accused calumnus of stating two opinions that have been proven one million percent correct. I would call them prophetic but it didn't take no prophet to nail those predictions.
I have no objection to firing Mark Fox. What I object to is smearing a Cal coach for almost 4 years now with distortion of his history prior to coming to Cal, among other things. All this to prove he is right about his prediction. With his prediction and $5 he can get a cup of coffee somewhere in Berkeley.

Mark Fox's record at Georgia was not "crappy". "Crappy" means "bad" or "terrible". Fox's record at Cal has been "crappy". Maybe you got the two records mixed up. Later on in your post, twice you called Fox's record at Georgia "mediocre". "Mediocre" means "average", which is what it was (actually slightly above average). That was correct. Here is the actual record of Mark Fox as head coach of Georgia, from sports-reference.com, not the description which was given to you by calumnus:

Overerall record, wins and losses: 163-133, a .551 win percentage, which is a little above average. SEC Conference record, wins and losses: 77-79, a .494 win percentage, very slightly below average. If he had won one of the games he lost, he would have had a .500 percentage, which by definition is "average". A basketball game is sometimes lost on one bad call, or one missed shot.

Wins: 163 (3rd all-time among 25 Georgia head coaches.)
Games: 296 (4th all-time at Georgia)
NCAA Appearances: 2 (tied for 2nd all-time at Georgia)
Career Won-Loss Percentage: .551 (4th all-time among 14 coaches who have coached 100 games, and 7th all-time among 11 coaches who have coached 4 years or more)

Certainly, Fox's record at Georgia was not "crappy. Fox was successful at Georgia, up to a point. Georgia had hired a famous coach, Jim Harrick, in 1999, and he coached 4 decent seasons until his son, an assistant, was caught in some NCAA infractions. Georgia fired Herrick. Dennis Felton was hired to replace Herrick, and Felton went on to have an abysmal record, a .480 overall winning percentage, and a pretty bad .310 record in the SEC over six seasons. Then Georgia hired Mark Fox to reverse the trend, to make Georgia better. Under Fox Georgia became an average program, but a winning program again. It took time to dig Georgia out of the hole. Fox's career at Georgia can be seen as two distinct periods. The first 4 years were not pretty, as Fox had only one winning season. His win percentage was .508, and .424 in the SEC. The next 5 seasons were different, with a .576 win percentage, and .544 in the SEC. I'll bet you didn't know Fox's last 5 seasons at Georgia were all winning seasons, did you? 5 in a row.

Georgia fired Mark Fox, and hired Tom Crean, who had a record that Cal fans, including me, were impressed. Crean had managed to rebuild both Marquette and Indiana, and was known as a fine recruiter and a sharp coach. Mark Fox left Crean two top 100 recruits, along with Nicholas Claxton who would leave for the NBA after a year with Crean, but Crean's first team went 11-21. In his second season, Crean landed Anthony Edwards, the #4 recruit in the nation, along with three other top 100 prospects. That team went 16-16. By Crean's 3rd season, he still had 4 top 100 players, but his team was only 14-12. The following year, all his top 100 players had departed, but Crean was able to land one, Jabri Abdur-Rahim. Even so, Crean's team finished 6-26. Georgia then fired Tom Crean. He finished with a 4 year record of .385 winning percentage, .208 in the SEC. Fox's first 4 years at Georgia: .508 winning percentage, .424 in conference. I guess Crean missed your "window" altogether, going from very good to failure. Not everyone has a window. Some coaches stay mediocre forever. And some go through your window and get better, I'd guess. The Georgia record shows that Fox had a much better record at Georgia than Felton, the coach he succeeded, and Crean, the coach who succeeded Fox at Georgia.

Calumnus has his own definition of failure, and he has high standards when it comes to some coaches. It includes every aspect of a coach's pedigree, where the coach played his basketball, learned his ball, where he coached, what his offense is, his defense, how he acts on the court, whether he yells at players or referees, what his gestures and facial expressions are, and what his practice philosophy is like, how well he can recruit, how well he can develop his players, what his press conferences are like. He has been more thoroughly hard on Mark Fox, than on any other modern Cal coach. But shouldn't a coach be fired for cause, not for his past history at previous schools? Predictions like this are worthless, unless you can get the ear of the AD and convince him to take action.

I hope I'm wrong, but perhaps both Georgia and now Cal are very tough places to build a winning program.





Your analysis above is a great example of why there are good ADs and bad ADs. ADs like Knowlton who has no business hiring a head coach likely came to the same conclusion you did. For those who understand the college game, they recognized the downward trend at Nevada and that he failed at Georgia - he was fired after all. He was out of work for a year and no Power Five program was going to hire him until Knowlton and the search firm came along. The hire was not well received from the get go and what's occurred since then has been entirely predictable.
BeachedBear
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HKBear97! said:

SFCityBear said:

BearlyCareAnymore said:

SFCityBear said:

calumnus said:

SFCityBear said:

calumnus said:

SFCityBear said:

concernedparent said:

4thGenCal said:

calumnus said:

Looking at Wrenn Robinson videos, he is a great shooter with good length (6'2" 6'5 wingspan). Top JC player (PG on championship team), had full eligibility out of HS (St. Ignatius) so was able to be added in season and is only a sophomore.

He has looked great in limited minutes, IMO he needs to start getting ALOT of minutes and if his excellent play continues start supplanting Brown, but also backing up Askew.

Totally agree but Fox has said that Wrenn "is under sized"! ridiculous because though He is really just 6'1" in shoes (stood next to him)He is physically strong and has good handles and a nice smooth shot. Fox did say that He will be a contributing player for the next 2 seasons. Its almost as though bringing in a walk on via Paris Austin recommendation, is an affront to the staff and they are only playing him if absolutely necessary. Wrenn has confidence and has bball savvy, hope he gets more minutes.
Fox also did Paris Austin dirty. His obsession with defensive potential over actual basketball skill is why we're the worst offense in the P5. The 1 is the least consequential spot on defense. You need someone who can run an offense or make something happen.
I think Mike Montgomery and a host of other coaches would disagree with you on this. Monty often talked about how important it is to stop the ball at point of attack, which is typically the point guard's responsibility. He had it with Jorge, and with Cobbs. Jason Kidd could interrupt an entire offense, with his defense of opposing guards trying to penetrate Cal's defense. The weakness of the 2016 team, other than depth, was at point guard. Wallace was a very good player, essential to the team's success, but he was not great at stopping the ball at point of attack.

You do have a good point with the current roster, because the worst part about this team is the offense. We could score 10-12 more points per game with a decent point guard, and that would be enough to give us a chance to win some games. So we need someone who can run a team right now, not a top defender at point guard. Right now, the only player on this team who has had proven point guard success, both passing and scoring (albeit at a lower college level than the PAC12) is Clayton, and he sits on the bench, injured. He hasn't played a single minute yet.


Wrenn Robinson (the topic of this thread) won a championship at SFCC last year. Great 3 pt shooter, good shooter off the dribble and good on ball defender. He should not be dismissed just because he came to Cal as a walk-on.
Where did I dismiss Robinson? I've never seen Robinson play, and have no idea whether he can play point and run a team at PAC12 or P5 level, and no one here knows that for sure either, because he has not yet done it for an appreciable number of games. Most of what I have read about here is about his shooting. We don't need shooters, we need scorers. There is a difference. I wrote about Coleman, about whom I know very little, except his stats, because he has played several seasons in Division 1. If Robinson can do the job of running the team at point, I'm behind him 100%. If we only had a point guard, that would free up Askew to operate and focus on getting open, because he and Lars are the team's only dependable scorers. We haven't had a skilled point guard since I can't remember when.


You say you didn't dismiss him, then you proceed to dismiss him? But "dismiss" was too strong for your original post, I should have said "when evaluating the roster, don't sleep on Robinson, the subject of this thread."

He averaged 25 points a game with his AAU team. He is a MUCH better scorer than Brown. He is more than a catch and shoot guy, he can score off the dribble and has a nice step back three. Plays good defense too from what I've seen. Most importantly he would better compliment Askew and make him more effective as a scorer, since currently Brown's guy can sag off him and provide help defense on Askew when he drives.


This is a favorite tactic. Accuse a poster of something he never said or implied, even making something up, in order to discredit the poster instead of answering his initial post. Politicians do this for a living.

Actually, I really liked your post other than the opening personal shot at me. I l liked it because it was something positive, something to give us as glimmer of hope. You spend countless hours of dreaming up new ways to trash the Cal coach, and you have helped convince the few fans left in our forum to follow suit. It has been a long time since you have said anything positive or encouraging about a current Cal player. I remember you begrudgingly admit that Lars had improved some, but other than that I remember you trashing Fox's record of recruiting, going all the way back to Nevada, on almost a daily basis, while at the same time stating that you support the Cal players. How can you say that a player is not a good recruit, and at the same time turn around and say you support the player? Isn't that hypocrisy?

In any case, it seems as though my post may have caused you to come out in full support of Robinson, touting his previous record, and his skills, and how he might be able to help this team score more if he were given more minutes. I loved it, and I'd like you to do more of it.

With that being said, I too, am interested in seeing what this young man can do, believe it or not. But we need to get real for a moment, too. You touted his high school numbers, 26 points a game in high school and AAU, which is also high school, although at a slightly higher level. Division 1 rosters are full of kids who had great high school records. Usually, it is the best of the best in high school who make a splash in D1/P5, and usually not right away. Robinson has had a year in Junior College ball at CCSF, and it was a good year, and he was a big factor in CCSF's championship run. You may not have noticed, but the Robinson had a big dropoff in scoring during his junior college year, averaging less than 10 points a game at CCSF. Players have to prove themselves at each level, and Robinson will have to prove himself at Cal. Was Robinson participating in practice since Cal's 3rd game? If so, then Fox has a pretty good idea of what Robinson can do against players like Brown and Askew by now. Askew has a good deal of size over Robinson, and Brown as a defender is a load for any guard he faces. It will be good experience for Robinson to go against those two veterans in practice, and by now Fox should have a pretty good idea of what Robinson can do. And hopefully Robinson is progressing individually and as a member of the team. I was also very hopeful about Clayton, because he had 5 years in Division 1, with good success, but that was in a relatively weaker conference. Clayton, as well as Robinson, would have to prove himself at D1, P5 conference level, no small task.

So I have a proposition for you: If my writing something that annoys you will lead you to writing something positive about a Cal player, then what I can do is post some slow-pitch softballs that you can hit out of the park, and in exchange would you write more good encouraging thoughts about Cal players? The daily drumbeat of criticism, right or not, is really depressing.


Actually, I think what he did in the past is give an honest assessment of Fox's crappy record and total lack of qualifications for this job and you stuck you fingers in your ears and screamed "I can't hear you!"

The results of the Fox regime were entirely predictable, made obvious by the fact that many predicted it.

The mistake that many make is thinking that hiring a coach with mediocre past results gives you a high floor and low ceiling. This has been proven false countless times, Walt Harris, Ty Willingham, and Mark Fox are just a few examples. And actually Braun after he left here. Most guys have windows. You have that many years of mediocrity and the window closes and the crash is ready to follow.

I would have thought that the generation that complains of snowflakes and participation trophies would have been against blowing sunshine up people's butts about the skill levels of players. Fox's recruiting sucks. If the players don't like honesty, prove everyone wrong by playing better. You don't support them by patting them on the head, handing them an orange slice and telling them they are wonderful.

From what I can see you have essentially accused calumnus of stating two opinions that have been proven one million percent correct. I would call them prophetic but it didn't take no prophet to nail those predictions.
I have no objection to firing Mark Fox. What I object to is smearing a Cal coach for almost 4 years now with distortion of his history prior to coming to Cal, among other things. All this to prove he is right about his prediction. With his prediction and $5 he can get a cup of coffee somewhere in Berkeley.

Mark Fox's record at Georgia was not "crappy". "Crappy" means "bad" or "terrible". Fox's record at Cal has been "crappy". Maybe you got the two records mixed up. Later on in your post, twice you called Fox's record at Georgia "mediocre". "Mediocre" means "average", which is what it was (actually slightly above average). That was correct. Here is the actual record of Mark Fox as head coach of Georgia, from sports-reference.com, not the description which was given to you by calumnus:

Overerall record, wins and losses: 163-133, a .551 win percentage, which is a little above average. SEC Conference record, wins and losses: 77-79, a .494 win percentage, very slightly below average. If he had won one of the games he lost, he would have had a .500 percentage, which by definition is "average". A basketball game is sometimes lost on one bad call, or one missed shot.

Wins: 163 (3rd all-time among 25 Georgia head coaches.)
Games: 296 (4th all-time at Georgia)
NCAA Appearances: 2 (tied for 2nd all-time at Georgia)
Career Won-Loss Percentage: .551 (4th all-time among 14 coaches who have coached 100 games, and 7th all-time among 11 coaches who have coached 4 years or more)

Certainly, Fox's record at Georgia was not "crappy. Fox was successful at Georgia, up to a point. Georgia had hired a famous coach, Jim Harrick, in 1999, and he coached 4 decent seasons until his son, an assistant, was caught in some NCAA infractions. Georgia fired Herrick. Dennis Felton was hired to replace Herrick, and Felton went on to have an abysmal record, a .480 overall winning percentage, and a pretty bad .310 record in the SEC over six seasons. Then Georgia hired Mark Fox to reverse the trend, to make Georgia better. Under Fox Georgia became an average program, but a winning program again. It took time to dig Georgia out of the hole. Fox's career at Georgia can be seen as two distinct periods. The first 4 years were not pretty, as Fox had only one winning season. His win percentage was .508, and .424 in the SEC. The next 5 seasons were different, with a .576 win percentage, and .544 in the SEC. I'll bet you didn't know Fox's last 5 seasons at Georgia were all winning seasons, did you? 5 in a row.

Georgia fired Mark Fox, and hired Tom Crean, who had a record that Cal fans, including me, were impressed. Crean had managed to rebuild both Marquette and Indiana, and was known as a fine recruiter and a sharp coach. Mark Fox left Crean two top 100 recruits, along with Nicholas Claxton who would leave for the NBA after a year with Crean, but Crean's first team went 11-21. In his second season, Crean landed Anthony Edwards, the #4 recruit in the nation, along with three other top 100 prospects. That team went 16-16. By Crean's 3rd season, he still had 4 top 100 players, but his team was only 14-12. The following year, all his top 100 players had departed, but Crean was able to land one, Jabri Abdur-Rahim. Even so, Crean's team finished 6-26. Georgia then fired Tom Crean. He finished with a 4 year record of .385 winning percentage, .208 in the SEC. Fox's first 4 years at Georgia: .508 winning percentage, .424 in conference. I guess Crean missed your "window" altogether, going from very good to failure. Not everyone has a window. Some coaches stay mediocre forever. And some go through your window and get better, I'd guess. The Georgia record shows that Fox had a much better record at Georgia than Felton, the coach he succeeded, and Crean, the coach who succeeded Fox at Georgia.

Calumnus has his own definition of failure, and he has high standards when it comes to some coaches. It includes every aspect of a coach's pedigree, where the coach played his basketball, learned his ball, where he coached, what his offense is, his defense, how he acts on the court, whether he yells at players or referees, what his gestures and facial expressions are, and what his practice philosophy is like, how well he can recruit, how well he can develop his players, what his press conferences are like. He has been more thoroughly hard on Mark Fox, than on any other modern Cal coach. But shouldn't a coach be fired for cause, not for his past history at previous schools? Predictions like this are worthless, unless you can get the ear of the AD and convince him to take action.

I hope I'm wrong, but perhaps both Georgia and now Cal are very tough places to build a winning program.





Your analysis above is a great example of why there are good ADs and bad ADs. ADs like Knowlton who has no business hiring a head coach likely came to the same conclusion you did. For those who understand the college game, they recognized the downward trend at Nevada and that he failed at Georgia - he was fired after all. He was out of work for a year and no Power Five program was going to hire him until Knowlton and the search firm came along. The hire was not well received from the get go and what's occurred since then has been entirely predictable.
But it's much worse than that. Our AD is an ostrich. Under Fox, year 1 was sadly underwhelming. Following Jones (who had never been head coach anywhere), at least there seemed to be some form of organization, but it also seemed outdated and poorly executed. It was like going from an F- to an F (but failing nonetheless). At the end of year 1, Dramatic improvement was desperately needed.

Year 2. The dramatic improvement did not happen and no changes or adjustments were made at all. After year 2, Fox should have been fired or changes to staff and outreach should have been made immediately. But nothing was done.

Year 3. No excuses - it just got worse and nothing was done by the staff or the AD.

OK the hire was a bust. But putting your head in the sand and ignoring it for three years is gross negligence, incompetence and fraud.
calumnus
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BeachedBear said:

HKBear97! said:

SFCityBear said:

BearlyCareAnymore said:

SFCityBear said:

calumnus said:

SFCityBear said:

calumnus said:

SFCityBear said:

concernedparent said:

4thGenCal said:

calumnus said:

Looking at Wrenn Robinson videos, he is a great shooter with good length (6'2" 6'5 wingspan). Top JC player (PG on championship team), had full eligibility out of HS (St. Ignatius) so was able to be added in season and is only a sophomore.

He has looked great in limited minutes, IMO he needs to start getting ALOT of minutes and if his excellent play continues start supplanting Brown, but also backing up Askew.

Totally agree but Fox has said that Wrenn "is under sized"! ridiculous because though He is really just 6'1" in shoes (stood next to him)He is physically strong and has good handles and a nice smooth shot. Fox did say that He will be a contributing player for the next 2 seasons. Its almost as though bringing in a walk on via Paris Austin recommendation, is an affront to the staff and they are only playing him if absolutely necessary. Wrenn has confidence and has bball savvy, hope he gets more minutes.
Fox also did Paris Austin dirty. His obsession with defensive potential over actual basketball skill is why we're the worst offense in the P5. The 1 is the least consequential spot on defense. You need someone who can run an offense or make something happen.
I think Mike Montgomery and a host of other coaches would disagree with you on this. Monty often talked about how important it is to stop the ball at point of attack, which is typically the point guard's responsibility. He had it with Jorge, and with Cobbs. Jason Kidd could interrupt an entire offense, with his defense of opposing guards trying to penetrate Cal's defense. The weakness of the 2016 team, other than depth, was at point guard. Wallace was a very good player, essential to the team's success, but he was not great at stopping the ball at point of attack.

You do have a good point with the current roster, because the worst part about this team is the offense. We could score 10-12 more points per game with a decent point guard, and that would be enough to give us a chance to win some games. So we need someone who can run a team right now, not a top defender at point guard. Right now, the only player on this team who has had proven point guard success, both passing and scoring (albeit at a lower college level than the PAC12) is Clayton, and he sits on the bench, injured. He hasn't played a single minute yet.


Wrenn Robinson (the topic of this thread) won a championship at SFCC last year. Great 3 pt shooter, good shooter off the dribble and good on ball defender. He should not be dismissed just because he came to Cal as a walk-on.
Where did I dismiss Robinson? I've never seen Robinson play, and have no idea whether he can play point and run a team at PAC12 or P5 level, and no one here knows that for sure either, because he has not yet done it for an appreciable number of games. Most of what I have read about here is about his shooting. We don't need shooters, we need scorers. There is a difference. I wrote about Coleman, about whom I know very little, except his stats, because he has played several seasons in Division 1. If Robinson can do the job of running the team at point, I'm behind him 100%. If we only had a point guard, that would free up Askew to operate and focus on getting open, because he and Lars are the team's only dependable scorers. We haven't had a skilled point guard since I can't remember when.


You say you didn't dismiss him, then you proceed to dismiss him? But "dismiss" was too strong for your original post, I should have said "when evaluating the roster, don't sleep on Robinson, the subject of this thread."

He averaged 25 points a game with his AAU team. He is a MUCH better scorer than Brown. He is more than a catch and shoot guy, he can score off the dribble and has a nice step back three. Plays good defense too from what I've seen. Most importantly he would better compliment Askew and make him more effective as a scorer, since currently Brown's guy can sag off him and provide help defense on Askew when he drives.


This is a favorite tactic. Accuse a poster of something he never said or implied, even making something up, in order to discredit the poster instead of answering his initial post. Politicians do this for a living.

Actually, I really liked your post other than the opening personal shot at me. I l liked it because it was something positive, something to give us as glimmer of hope. You spend countless hours of dreaming up new ways to trash the Cal coach, and you have helped convince the few fans left in our forum to follow suit. It has been a long time since you have said anything positive or encouraging about a current Cal player. I remember you begrudgingly admit that Lars had improved some, but other than that I remember you trashing Fox's record of recruiting, going all the way back to Nevada, on almost a daily basis, while at the same time stating that you support the Cal players. How can you say that a player is not a good recruit, and at the same time turn around and say you support the player? Isn't that hypocrisy?

In any case, it seems as though my post may have caused you to come out in full support of Robinson, touting his previous record, and his skills, and how he might be able to help this team score more if he were given more minutes. I loved it, and I'd like you to do more of it.

With that being said, I too, am interested in seeing what this young man can do, believe it or not. But we need to get real for a moment, too. You touted his high school numbers, 26 points a game in high school and AAU, which is also high school, although at a slightly higher level. Division 1 rosters are full of kids who had great high school records. Usually, it is the best of the best in high school who make a splash in D1/P5, and usually not right away. Robinson has had a year in Junior College ball at CCSF, and it was a good year, and he was a big factor in CCSF's championship run. You may not have noticed, but the Robinson had a big dropoff in scoring during his junior college year, averaging less than 10 points a game at CCSF. Players have to prove themselves at each level, and Robinson will have to prove himself at Cal. Was Robinson participating in practice since Cal's 3rd game? If so, then Fox has a pretty good idea of what Robinson can do against players like Brown and Askew by now. Askew has a good deal of size over Robinson, and Brown as a defender is a load for any guard he faces. It will be good experience for Robinson to go against those two veterans in practice, and by now Fox should have a pretty good idea of what Robinson can do. And hopefully Robinson is progressing individually and as a member of the team. I was also very hopeful about Clayton, because he had 5 years in Division 1, with good success, but that was in a relatively weaker conference. Clayton, as well as Robinson, would have to prove himself at D1, P5 conference level, no small task.

So I have a proposition for you: If my writing something that annoys you will lead you to writing something positive about a Cal player, then what I can do is post some slow-pitch softballs that you can hit out of the park, and in exchange would you write more good encouraging thoughts about Cal players? The daily drumbeat of criticism, right or not, is really depressing.


Actually, I think what he did in the past is give an honest assessment of Fox's crappy record and total lack of qualifications for this job and you stuck you fingers in your ears and screamed "I can't hear you!"

The results of the Fox regime were entirely predictable, made obvious by the fact that many predicted it.

The mistake that many make is thinking that hiring a coach with mediocre past results gives you a high floor and low ceiling. This has been proven false countless times, Walt Harris, Ty Willingham, and Mark Fox are just a few examples. And actually Braun after he left here. Most guys have windows. You have that many years of mediocrity and the window closes and the crash is ready to follow.

I would have thought that the generation that complains of snowflakes and participation trophies would have been against blowing sunshine up people's butts about the skill levels of players. Fox's recruiting sucks. If the players don't like honesty, prove everyone wrong by playing better. You don't support them by patting them on the head, handing them an orange slice and telling them they are wonderful.

From what I can see you have essentially accused calumnus of stating two opinions that have been proven one million percent correct. I would call them prophetic but it didn't take no prophet to nail those predictions.
I have no objection to firing Mark Fox. What I object to is smearing a Cal coach for almost 4 years now with distortion of his history prior to coming to Cal, among other things. All this to prove he is right about his prediction. With his prediction and $5 he can get a cup of coffee somewhere in Berkeley.

Mark Fox's record at Georgia was not "crappy". "Crappy" means "bad" or "terrible". Fox's record at Cal has been "crappy". Maybe you got the two records mixed up. Later on in your post, twice you called Fox's record at Georgia "mediocre". "Mediocre" means "average", which is what it was (actually slightly above average). That was correct. Here is the actual record of Mark Fox as head coach of Georgia, from sports-reference.com, not the description which was given to you by calumnus:

Overerall record, wins and losses: 163-133, a .551 win percentage, which is a little above average. SEC Conference record, wins and losses: 77-79, a .494 win percentage, very slightly below average. If he had won one of the games he lost, he would have had a .500 percentage, which by definition is "average". A basketball game is sometimes lost on one bad call, or one missed shot.

Wins: 163 (3rd all-time among 25 Georgia head coaches.)
Games: 296 (4th all-time at Georgia)
NCAA Appearances: 2 (tied for 2nd all-time at Georgia)
Career Won-Loss Percentage: .551 (4th all-time among 14 coaches who have coached 100 games, and 7th all-time among 11 coaches who have coached 4 years or more)

Certainly, Fox's record at Georgia was not "crappy. Fox was successful at Georgia, up to a point. Georgia had hired a famous coach, Jim Harrick, in 1999, and he coached 4 decent seasons until his son, an assistant, was caught in some NCAA infractions. Georgia fired Herrick. Dennis Felton was hired to replace Herrick, and Felton went on to have an abysmal record, a .480 overall winning percentage, and a pretty bad .310 record in the SEC over six seasons. Then Georgia hired Mark Fox to reverse the trend, to make Georgia better. Under Fox Georgia became an average program, but a winning program again. It took time to dig Georgia out of the hole. Fox's career at Georgia can be seen as two distinct periods. The first 4 years were not pretty, as Fox had only one winning season. His win percentage was .508, and .424 in the SEC. The next 5 seasons were different, with a .576 win percentage, and .544 in the SEC. I'll bet you didn't know Fox's last 5 seasons at Georgia were all winning seasons, did you? 5 in a row.

Georgia fired Mark Fox, and hired Tom Crean, who had a record that Cal fans, including me, were impressed. Crean had managed to rebuild both Marquette and Indiana, and was known as a fine recruiter and a sharp coach. Mark Fox left Crean two top 100 recruits, along with Nicholas Claxton who would leave for the NBA after a year with Crean, but Crean's first team went 11-21. In his second season, Crean landed Anthony Edwards, the #4 recruit in the nation, along with three other top 100 prospects. That team went 16-16. By Crean's 3rd season, he still had 4 top 100 players, but his team was only 14-12. The following year, all his top 100 players had departed, but Crean was able to land one, Jabri Abdur-Rahim. Even so, Crean's team finished 6-26. Georgia then fired Tom Crean. He finished with a 4 year record of .385 winning percentage, .208 in the SEC. Fox's first 4 years at Georgia: .508 winning percentage, .424 in conference. I guess Crean missed your "window" altogether, going from very good to failure. Not everyone has a window. Some coaches stay mediocre forever. And some go through your window and get better, I'd guess. The Georgia record shows that Fox had a much better record at Georgia than Felton, the coach he succeeded, and Crean, the coach who succeeded Fox at Georgia.

Calumnus has his own definition of failure, and he has high standards when it comes to some coaches. It includes every aspect of a coach's pedigree, where the coach played his basketball, learned his ball, where he coached, what his offense is, his defense, how he acts on the court, whether he yells at players or referees, what his gestures and facial expressions are, and what his practice philosophy is like, how well he can recruit, how well he can develop his players, what his press conferences are like. He has been more thoroughly hard on Mark Fox, than on any other modern Cal coach. But shouldn't a coach be fired for cause, not for his past history at previous schools? Predictions like this are worthless, unless you can get the ear of the AD and convince him to take action.

I hope I'm wrong, but perhaps both Georgia and now Cal are very tough places to build a winning program.





Your analysis above is a great example of why there are good ADs and bad ADs. ADs like Knowlton who has no business hiring a head coach likely came to the same conclusion you did. For those who understand the college game, they recognized the downward trend at Nevada and that he failed at Georgia - he was fired after all. He was out of work for a year and no Power Five program was going to hire him until Knowlton and the search firm came along. The hire was not well received from the get go and what's occurred since then has been entirely predictable.
But it's much worse than that. Our AD is an ostrich. Under Fox, year 1 was sadly underwhelming. Following Jones (who had never been head coach anywhere), at least there seemed to be some form of organization, but it also seemed outdated and poorly executed. It was like going from an F- to an F (but failing nonetheless). At the end of year 1, Dramatic improvement was desperately needed.

Year 2. The dramatic improvement did not happen and no changes or adjustments were made at all. After year 2, Fox should have been fired or changes to staff and outreach should have been made immediately. But nothing was done.

Year 3. No excuses - it just got worse and nothing was done by the staff or the AD.

OK the hire was a bust. But putting your head in the sand and ignoring it for three years is gross negligence, incompetence and fraud.


And this is year 4.
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