We all know this. The players know it. Fox himself knows it.
What is Jimbo waiting for?
dimitrig said:
We all know this. The players know it. Fox himself knows it.
What is Jimbo waiting for?
Probably the investigative report on Teri McKeever and whether an investigation could be launched on a complaint of his failure to act when confronted with serious allegations of University policy. He's waiting to see if he himself will be canned. That's my hope.dimitrig said:
We all know this. The players know it. Fox himself knows it.
What is Jimbo waiting for?
Yep. I scrub through the games in that amount of time hoping to see our young players score some buckets. Alas, that doesn't happen very often.HearstMining said:
How many of you record Cal bball games and then only watch 10-15 minutes before deleting the rest? I've gotten to that point.
I don't even bother watching anymore unless there is absolutely nothing for me to do.HearstMining said:
How many of you record Cal bball games and then only watch 10-15 minutes before deleting the rest? I've gotten to that point.
KoreAmBear said:Probably the investigative report on Teri McKeever and whether an investigation could be launched on a complaint of his failure to act when confronted with serious allegations of University policy. He's waiting to see if he himself will be canned. That's my hope.dimitrig said:
We all know this. The players know it. Fox himself knows it.
What is Jimbo waiting for?
you wanna know the truth, dimtrig?dimitrig said:
We all know this. The players know it. Fox himself knows it.
What is Jimbo waiting for?
bearister said:
These were the buyout terms in his original contract prior to extension:
If he were to be fired without cause, he would receive 100% of his salary the contract year he was fired and the year after. If more than two years remain on the contract, the percentage shrinks to 75%, then 50%, and then 25% for each subsequent year.
https://www.californiagoldenblogs.com/platform/amp/2019/7/23/20706539/california-golden-bears-basketball-mark-fox-pac-12
Unfortunately "cause" in most employment contracts requires some violation of University policy or some bad act besides historic ineptitude.dimitrig said:bearister said:
These were the buyout terms in his original contract prior to extension:
If he were to be fired without cause, he would receive 100% of his salary the contract year he was fired and the year after. If more than two years remain on the contract, the percentage shrinks to 75%, then 50%, and then 25% for each subsequent year.
https://www.californiagoldenblogs.com/platform/amp/2019/7/23/20706539/california-golden-bears-basketball-mark-fox-pac-12
I think going 0-fer-whatever it ends up being is a good cause for firing.
Shocky1 said:
ab, chancellor christ has done more for cal athletics than any chancellor in modern times, she made 1 mistake when knowlton lied to her about the northwestern athletic director job search & she extended him until 2029
carol is not the problem, the next chancellor will 99% be less supportive of athletics than her
the problem is the con man, this is really not that complicated
dimitrig said:bearister said:
These were the buyout terms in his original contract prior to extension:
If he were to be fired without cause, he would receive 100% of his salary the contract year he was fired and the year after. If more than two years remain on the contract, the percentage shrinks to 75%, then 50%, and then 25% for each subsequent year.
https://www.californiagoldenblogs.com/platform/amp/2019/7/23/20706539/california-golden-bears-basketball-mark-fox-pac-12
I think going 0-fer-whatever it ends up being is a good cause for firing.
Good, I hope the next chancellor is not as supportive of athletics. I hope the next chancellor is the one brave enough to finally cut a large portion of our cash-burning varsity sports that don't even sniff a chance of a championshipShocky1 said:
ab, chancellor christ has done more for cal athletics than any chancellor in modern times, she made 1 mistake when knowlton lied to her about the northwestern athletic director job search & she extended him until 2029
carol is not the problem, the next chancellor will 99% be less supportive of athletics than her
the problem is the con man, this is really not that complicated
bearister said:dimitrig said:bearister said:
These were the buyout terms in his original contract prior to extension:
If he were to be fired without cause, he would receive 100% of his salary the contract year he was fired and the year after. If more than two years remain on the contract, the percentage shrinks to 75%, then 50%, and then 25% for each subsequent year.
https://www.californiagoldenblogs.com/platform/amp/2019/7/23/20706539/california-golden-bears-basketball-mark-fox-pac-12
I think going 0-fer-whatever it ends up being is a good cause for firing.
Under the Code of Honor we live our lives by for sure, but not under standard law governing this issue.
"Termination for cause is an easier decision in many ways than firing a coach for other reasons because the decision is clear. The coach has crossed a well-defined linehe or she has broken rules, committed a felony, violated a contract, or committed some other such action."
https://us.humankinetics.com/blogs/excerpt/rare-advice-helps-athletic-directors-handle-coach-termination
bearister said:
These were the buyout terms in his original contract prior to extension*:
If he were to be fired without cause, he would receive 100% of his salary the contract year he was fired and the year after. If more than two years remain on the contract, the percentage shrinks to 75%, then 50%, and then 25% for each subsequent year.
https://www.californiagoldenblogs.com/platform/amp/2019/7/23/20706539/california-golden-bears-basketball-mark-fox-pac-12
*Fox got a 1 year extension through 2024-2025 season.
During the SC game I paid close attention to the coachescalumnus said:bearister said:
These were the buyout terms in his original contract prior to extension*:
If he were to be fired without cause, he would receive 100% of his salary the contract year he was fired and the year after. If more than two years remain on the contract, the percentage shrinks to 75%, then 50%, and then 25% for each subsequent year.
https://www.californiagoldenblogs.com/platform/amp/2019/7/23/20706539/california-golden-bears-basketball-mark-fox-pac-12
*Fox got a 1 year extension through 2024-2025 season.
If that is true then:
If Knowlton waits until March to fire Fox then he will have paid him for 2022-23 and will owe him 100% for both 2023-24 and 2024-25.
However if Knowlton fires Fox mid-season he would owe him for the rest of 2022-23, 100% of 2023-24 but only 75% of 2024-2025.
Thus, it appears we could save about $500,000 by firing Fox midseason rather than waiting until the end of the season to do it.
Seems like a no-brainer to me.
Maybe let Fox get the loss record. Promote Andrew Francis to interim. Begin assembling an advisory committee of Cal basketball alums to conduct the next search.
HoopDreams said:During the SC game I paid close attention to the coachescalumnus said:bearister said:
These were the buyout terms in his original contract prior to extension*:
If he were to be fired without cause, he would receive 100% of his salary the contract year he was fired and the year after. If more than two years remain on the contract, the percentage shrinks to 75%, then 50%, and then 25% for each subsequent year.
https://www.californiagoldenblogs.com/platform/amp/2019/7/23/20706539/california-golden-bears-basketball-mark-fox-pac-12
*Fox got a 1 year extension through 2024-2025 season.
If that is true then:
If Knowlton waits until March to fire Fox then he will have paid him for 2022-23 and will owe him 100% for both 2023-24 and 2024-25.
However if Knowlton fires Fox mid-season he would owe him for the rest of 2022-23, 100% of 2023-24 but only 75% of 2024-2025.
Thus, it appears we could save about $500,000 by firing Fox midseason rather than waiting until the end of the season to do it.
Seems like a no-brainer to me.
Maybe let Fox get the loss record. Promote Andrew Francis to interim. Begin assembling an advisory committee of Cal basketball alums to conduct the next search.
Didn't see any abusive behavior or over the top yelling from any of the coaches. Basically all business. But the coaches pretty much kept to themselves during the warm ups and game. The coach I saw engaging the players the most was Francis. My take is he has the best communications with the players, while the others aren't really relationship people
1. I don't think that is true. Most of our successful programs have pretty strong donor support (like swimming and rowing, for instance.diva1 said:
Most of the successful Cal Athletic programs are the ones it appears most of you want axed.
Then Cal would really be nothing on the athletic side of the equation.
University of Chicago model here we come!
BearlyCareAnymore said:1. I don't think that is true. Most of our successful programs have pretty strong donor support (like swimming and rowing, for instance.diva1 said:
Most of the successful Cal Athletic programs are the ones it appears most of you want axed.
Then Cal would really be nothing on the athletic side of the equation.
University of Chicago model here we come!
2. Nobody is talking about going to the University of Chicago model. They are talking about diverting the investment to football, which can actually make a fiscal difference, and if it makes enough of a difference, maybe some of those sports can come back. Or not. Focusing on the one sport that brings in significant revenue, even if you lose at it is definitely not Chicago model
3. You are basically talking about PRESERVING an Ivy model. For instance, in rowing, instead of doing what we used to do, which is recruiting mostly from the student body and coaching them up, we are largely giving scholarships to rich, foreign kids from elite private high schools or rich American kids whose parents steer them to rowing because there are literally not enough kids participating in rowing in high school to fill all the college slots and they know that it is extremely easy to at minimum get a rowing slot at a Division III, elite private school. We recruit these mostly foreign kids so that we can beat the likes of Brown for a top ranking. Cal doesn't need to be good at a sport that Brown is good at. I pick on rowing because it is such a complete boondoggle at most schools, but at Cal because we essentially have a century of tradition competing and strong donor support, there is at least a point to it. My issue that I would take up with donors is wouldn't it be better to run the team how we traditionally have and provide that experience for Californians, rather than go get ringers from Britain and Australia so we can say we won. That being said, the donors are the donors and they provide a lot of support, so I'm just going to have to live with it. But let's be clear, in most of those sports, we succeed because there are few other schools that want to.
Study after study after study indicates that the socioeconomic disparity in admissions is bolstered by two main practices - 1. legacy admissions; and 2. Sports like the ones you are trying to protect. Cal doesn't do #1 in any meaningful way. Cal does #2 in a major way. I'm sorry, but these sports provide no entertainment or social value to the campus community. They provide value to their participants. And the biggest value they provide to their participants are admissions. AND RICH PARENTS KNOW THIS. That is the game. In any wealthy community, you have parents picking sports for their kids and paying for years of training to get them preferred admissions at schools that offer those sports. C'mon. What kid wakes up at eight years old and says "I know, I want to be a star lacrosse player!" Yeah, right. Cal should not be playing this game where even unathletic kids can train up in a sport no one plays and get preferred admissions or even schollies at a Division I.
Those are the sports we need to get rid of and I don't care if that means we can't beat Cornell at those anymore. If those are the only sports we can succeed in, then yeah, we need to question our athletic program. No one is talking about things like swimming and water polo (which have huge donor support and at this point are about the only thing that bring any notoriety to our athletics).
calumnus said:bearister said:
These were the buyout terms in his original contract prior to extension*:
If he were to be fired without cause, he would receive 100% of his salary the contract year he was fired and the year after. If more than two years remain on the contract, the percentage shrinks to 75%, then 50%, and then 25% for each subsequent year.
https://www.californiagoldenblogs.com/platform/amp/2019/7/23/20706539/california-golden-bears-basketball-mark-fox-pac-12
*Fox got a 1 year extension through 2024-2025 season.
If that is true then:
If Knowlton waits until March to fire Fox then he will have paid him for 2022-23 and will owe him 100% for both 2023-24 and 2024-25.
However if Knowlton fires Fox mid-season he would owe him for the rest of 2022-23, 100% of 2023-24 but only 75% of 2024-2025.
Thus, it appears we could save about $500,000 by firing Fox midseason rather than waiting until the end of the season to do it.
Seems like a no-brainer to me.
Maybe let Fox get the loss record. Promote Andrew Francis to interim. Begin assembling an advisory committee of Cal basketball alums to conduct the next search.
BearlyCareAnymore said:calumnus said:bearister said:
These were the buyout terms in his original contract prior to extension*:
If he were to be fired without cause, he would receive 100% of his salary the contract year he was fired and the year after. If more than two years remain on the contract, the percentage shrinks to 75%, then 50%, and then 25% for each subsequent year.
https://www.californiagoldenblogs.com/platform/amp/2019/7/23/20706539/california-golden-bears-basketball-mark-fox-pac-12
*Fox got a 1 year extension through 2024-2025 season.
If that is true then:
If Knowlton waits until March to fire Fox then he will have paid him for 2022-23 and will owe him 100% for both 2023-24 and 2024-25.
However if Knowlton fires Fox mid-season he would owe him for the rest of 2022-23, 100% of 2023-24 but only 75% of 2024-2025.
Thus, it appears we could save about $500,000 by firing Fox midseason rather than waiting until the end of the season to do it.
Seems like a no-brainer to me.
Maybe let Fox get the loss record. Promote Andrew Francis to interim. Begin assembling an advisory committee of Cal basketball alums to conduct the next search.
That isn't how it works. Cal doesn't save anything by firing him mid season
The contract year doesn't end at triple zero of the last game. Unless Cal were to be even more stupid than usual and wait too long, if they fire Fox at the end of the season, it will still be the same contract year as if they fire him in the middle of the season.bearister said:
He has explained better how it works that way than you have explained how it doesn't. Please explain the error of his ways.
BearlyCareAnymore said:The contract year doesn't end at triple zero of the last game. Unless Cal were to be even more stupid than usual and wait too long, if they fire Fox at the end of the season, it will still be the same contract year as if they fire him in the middle of the season.bearister said:
He has explained better how it works that way than you have explained how it doesn't. Please explain the error of his ways.