Thanks
Go Bears!
stu said:
Do *any* coaches plan on coming back?
FIFY
Econ141 said:stu said:
Do *any* coaches plan on coming back?
FIFY
Fox definitely does. Where else do you get paid over $400,000 per win?
Econ141 said:stu said:
Do *any* coaches plan on coming back?
FIFY
Fox definitely does. Where else do you get paid over $400,000 per win?
Smart as a fox.calumnus said:Econ141 said:stu said:
Do *any* coaches plan on coming back?
FIFY
Fox definitely does. Where else do you get paid over $400,000 per win?
With the buyout Fox will probably end up getting paid over $5 million for the 3 wins this season.
stu said:
Do *any* coaches plan on coming back?
FIFY
Yes, and if anything I think the next coach and/or prospective coaches will likely want more roster flexibility to mould it more in their likingBig C said:
Everybody's a wit. Okay, I get it: gallows humor.
Brown: I believe he is graduating from Haas. Will be a big success in life.
Lars. Is likely graduating and moving on. Will be able to play at some level in Europe, if he wants.
Kuany: Similar to Lars. Will be able to play somewhere else. Possible grad transfer.
Clayton: Has used up his eligibility.
Hyder: I believe he is graduating. Almost certainly moving on.
So, no, I doubt any of the seniors are staying, unless the new staff convinces them to continue here.
This is just my general sense of the situation. The new coach is basically going to be starting fresh, which is do-able in this day and age.
can clayton play because he played in so few games this year?Big C said:
Everybody's a wit. Okay, I get it: gallows humor.
Brown: I believe he is graduating from Haas. Will be a big success in life.
Lars. Is likely graduating and moving on. Will be able to play at some level in Europe, if he wants.
Kuany: Similar to Lars. Will be able to play somewhere else. Possible grad transfer.
Clayton: Has used up his eligibility.
Hyder: I believe he is graduating. Almost certainly moving on.
So, no, I doubt any of the seniors are staying, unless the new staff convinces them to continue here.
This is just my general sense of the situation. The new coach is basically going to be starting fresh, which is do-able in this day and age.
Big C said:
Yeah, pretty sure Clayton has already used the injured-most-of-the-year year. He's 25 or something. Glad he came to Cal. Hope he gains something academically that helps him in his future. Too bad he was injured most of the year, but he'll always have that game against Furd to tell his kids about!
Big C said:
Everybody's a wit. Okay, I get it: gallows humor.
Brown: I believe he is graduating from Haas. Will be a big success in life.
Lars. Is likely graduating and moving on. Will be able to play at some level in Europe, if he wants.
Kuany: Similar to Lars. Will be able to play somewhere else. Possible grad transfer.
Clayton: Has used up his eligibility.
Hyder: I believe he is graduating. Almost certainly moving on.
So, no, I doubt any of the seniors are staying, unless the new staff convinces them to continue here.
This is just my general sense of the situation. The new coach is basically going to be starting fresh, which is do-able in this day and age.
eastcoastcal said:Yes, and if anything I think the next coach and/or prospective coaches will likely want more roster flexibility to mould it more in their likingBig C said:
Everybody's a wit. Okay, I get it: gallows humor.
Brown: I believe he is graduating from Haas. Will be a big success in life.
Lars. Is likely graduating and moving on. Will be able to play at some level in Europe, if he wants.
Kuany: Similar to Lars. Will be able to play somewhere else. Possible grad transfer.
Clayton: Has used up his eligibility.
Hyder: I believe he is graduating. Almost certainly moving on.
So, no, I doubt any of the seniors are staying, unless the new staff convinces them to continue here.
This is just my general sense of the situation. The new coach is basically going to be starting fresh, which is do-able in this day and age.
Anyone have an idea about Celestine? He is good enough to possibly have an opportunity on another team but of course the injury may complicate that. He also might just want a change of scenery, Anyone know?
HoopDreams said:
Based on what I saw last night at the game the 5 seniors played their last home game in Haas.
2K could transfer to another P6 team with his defense and offense. He still has things to work on ( pull up jumper and tighten his handle ) but he continues to have the most potential
Brown improved so much as a senior and with his defense could probably transfer to a good mid major.
Lars likely will play pro in the EU
Without those three our defense will drop substantially
Clayton out of eligibility and Hyder has been injured so much that maybe he retires from basketball
I posted this before her last second shot. Insanecal83dls79 said:
Can we somehow get Caitlin Clark? That might solidify our PG position.
Agree with all, though his 2pt and 3pt shooting percentages are just not what you want from a starter. If the new coach could significantly upgrade the scoring talent with new additions, then I think Brown, Kuany, and Lars would be nice experienced pieces to have in supplemental roles.BC Calfan said:
I think Kuany would be a nice piece to have if he decides to return next season. While his improvement has been incremental, it's visible. With a new, capable coach I think he can be put in a better position to flourish. His confidence is there, his shooting touch has improved, instincts are good, he's a solid team player. If his game is fine tuned a little I think he would be a reliable contributor. Plus he seems like a fantastic teammate!
BC Calfan said:
I think Kuany would be a nice piece to have if he decides to return next season. While his improvement has been incremental, it's visible. With a new, capable coach I think he can be put in a better position to flourish. His confidence is there, his shooting touch has improved, instincts are good, he's a solid team player. If his game is fine tuned a little I think he would be a reliable contributor. Plus he seems like a fantastic teammate!
I would add that Kuany's defense has improved dramatically. He arrived with the length and athleticism, but he has improved his footwork, positioning and defensive teamwork in the the last two seasons particularly. And much of that is adopting counter intuitive defensive behaviors which takes effort. As much as I bash Fox - he might deserve some of the credit for this. But Kuany deserves MOST of the credit for putting in the work and changing his defensive behaviors to improve.HoopDreams said:
Agree, and I always think too many people discount or don't even consider defense
He's a very good defenderBC Calfan said:
I think Kuany would be a nice piece to have if he decides to return next season. While his improvement has been incremental, it's visible. With a new, capable coach I think he can be put in a better position to flourish. His confidence is there, his shooting touch has improved, instincts are good, he's a solid team player. If his game is fine tuned a little I think he would be a reliable contributor. Plus he seems like a fantastic teammate!
BeachedBear said:I would add that Kuany's defense has improved dramatically. He arrived with the length and athleticism, but he has improved his footwork, positioning and defensive teamwork in the the last two seasons particularly. And much of that is adopting counter intuitive defensive behaviors which takes effort. As much as I bash Fox - he might deserve some of the credit for this. But Kuany deserves MOST of the credit for putting in the work and changing his defensive behaviors to improve.HoopDreams said:
Agree, and I always think too many people discount or don't even consider defense
He's a very good defenderBC Calfan said:
I think Kuany would be a nice piece to have if he decides to return next season. While his improvement has been incremental, it's visible. With a new, capable coach I think he can be put in a better position to flourish. His confidence is there, his shooting touch has improved, instincts are good, he's a solid team player. If his game is fine tuned a little I think he would be a reliable contributor. Plus he seems like a fantastic teammate!
1) Fox leaves and all seniors leave (i love the guys but we need to upgrade in talent and give next coach roster flexibility)3Cats4CAL said:
Ok rank the best scenarios:
1) Fox leaves and all seniors return.
2) Fox stays and all seniors return.
3) Fox leaves and all seniors leave.
4) Fox stays and all seniors leave.
BeachedBear said:I would add that Kuany's defense has improved dramatically. He arrived with the length and athleticism, but he has improved his footwork, positioning and defensive teamwork in the the last two seasons particularly. And much of that is adopting counter intuitive defensive behaviors which takes effort. As much as I bash Fox - he might deserve some of the credit for this. But Kuany deserves MOST of the credit for putting in the work and changing his defensive behaviors to improve.HoopDreams said:
Agree, and I always think too many people discount or don't even consider defense
He's a very good defenderBC Calfan said:
I think Kuany would be a nice piece to have if he decides to return next season. While his improvement has been incremental, it's visible. With a new, capable coach I think he can be put in a better position to flourish. His confidence is there, his shooting touch has improved, instincts are good, he's a solid team player. If his game is fine tuned a little I think he would be a reliable contributor. Plus he seems like a fantastic teammate!
Big C said:BeachedBear said:I would add that Kuany's defense has improved dramatically. He arrived with the length and athleticism, but he has improved his footwork, positioning and defensive teamwork in the the last two seasons particularly. And much of that is adopting counter intuitive defensive behaviors which takes effort. As much as I bash Fox - he might deserve some of the credit for this. But Kuany deserves MOST of the credit for putting in the work and changing his defensive behaviors to improve.HoopDreams said:
Agree, and I always think too many people discount or don't even consider defense
He's a very good defenderBC Calfan said:
I think Kuany would be a nice piece to have if he decides to return next season. While his improvement has been incremental, it's visible. With a new, capable coach I think he can be put in a better position to flourish. His confidence is there, his shooting touch has improved, instincts are good, he's a solid team player. If his game is fine tuned a little I think he would be a reliable contributor. Plus he seems like a fantastic teammate!
BeachedBear and Hoop Dreams: What are you looking for when you assess 2K's defense? Is it more perimeter or interior defense (or both)? I am not disputing your assertion by any means, but when I look at our defense, in the aggregate, we really suck this season. We leave 3-point shooters open, opponents score around the basket and they rebound with impunity.
Joel Brown is, I guess, a good on-ball defender, but the rest of them all seem to have one or more flaws in their defensive game. In general, besides our glaring lack of shooting, this just seems to be a low "hoops IQ" group, rarely making the winning-basketball move on either end of the court.
I love Kuany's free throw stroke (also Lars'). Smooth, sound and confident. I believe he's shooting above 80% from the line.
If any of these guys could be convinced to return, I think that would be good (not great). One way or another, there will be plenty of open roster spots for the new coach to fill with better talent.
Kuanys free throw stroke cost us a win on the road at Washington where he missed both. Of course Brown also missed hisHoopDreams said:
First thing I look for in a defender is lateral quickness
How well can he stay in front of his man, and if he gets beat on a drive, or gets shaked on a step back, cross-over or hesi, how wellcan he recover
Without that fundamental quickness, athleticism it's tough for any player to be a good defender, although gaining low body strength helps people move better with a lower defensive stance
also defensive skills such as stance in relationship to other player, keep the right distance, knowing how to defend a shot vs a cross over, etc etc etc
One simple example is a ball handler is coached to attack the defenders high foot, so knowing how to counter or make sure there is help side
Understanding defensive principals. Basically being in the right place and knowing your assignments. This includes not over helping, understanding when to go over or under a screen, when to double, how to defend a pick and roll, when to switch, etc, etc, etc
Physical characteristics such as length, strength, jumping ability, and timing of block attempts. This and lateral quickness is what makes 2K a good defender
Also overall hoops IQ. I usually spot high hoops IQ with being a good passer and being able to jump passes for a steal (e.g. Jorge)
Not making bad fouls is another thing to watch. Good example is Lars. As a freshmen he made many dumb fouls but he cleaned that up
So much more but a sampleBig C said:BeachedBear said:I would add that Kuany's defense has improved dramatically. He arrived with the length and athleticism, but he has improved his footwork, positioning and defensive teamwork in the the last two seasons particularly. And much of that is adopting counter intuitive defensive behaviors which takes effort. As much as I bash Fox - he might deserve some of the credit for this. But Kuany deserves MOST of the credit for putting in the work and changing his defensive behaviors to improve.HoopDreams said:
Agree, and I always think too many people discount or don't even consider defense
He's a very good defenderBC Calfan said:
I think Kuany would be a nice piece to have if he decides to return next season. While his improvement has been incremental, it's visible. With a new, capable coach I think he can be put in a better position to flourish. His confidence is there, his shooting touch has improved, instincts are good, he's a solid team player. If his game is fine tuned a little I think he would be a reliable contributor. Plus he seems like a fantastic teammate!
BeachedBear and Hoop Dreams: What are you looking for when you assess 2K's defense? Is it more perimeter or interior defense (or both)? I am not disputing your assertion by any means, but when I look at our defense, in the aggregate, we really suck this season. We leave 3-point shooters open, opponents score around the basket and they rebound with impunity.
Joel Brown is, I guess, a good on-ball defender, but the rest of them all seem to have one or more flaws in their defensive game. In general, besides our glaring lack of shooting, this just seems to be a low "hoops IQ" group, rarely making the winning-basketball move on either end of the court.
I love Kuany's free throw stroke (also Lars'). Smooth, sound and confident. I believe he's shooting above 80% from the line.
If any of these guys could be convinced to return, I think that would be good (not great). One way or another, there will be plenty of open roster spots for the new coach to fill with better talent.
That covers it, but I would expand the bolded section that this is where coaching scheme comes in. Making sure everyone is on the same page. And it is on Kuany (or any defender) to make sure they are doing the right thing at the right time. Especially if the coach changes up the defense. Two great examples are covering the low post (who doubles and who helps) as well as screening (if everyone is supposed to hedge, but you cover underneath - that gives someone an open lane. Similarly - you're playing a poor shooting team with dominant bigs - coach may want to give up pressure at the 3pt line to deny the interior passing lanes. More typically, you're playing a good shooting team, but the player is giving up open threes to protect the key - when not needed.HoopDreams said:
First thing I look for in a defender is lateral quickness
How well can he stay in front of his man, and if he gets beat on a drive, or gets shaked on a step back, cross-over or hesi, how wellcan he recover
Without that fundamental quickness, athleticism it's tough for any player to be a good defender, although gaining low body strength helps people move better with a lower defensive stance
also defensive skills such as stance in relationship to other player, keep the right distance, knowing how to defend a shot vs a cross over, etc etc etc
One simple example is a ball handler is coached to attack the defenders high foot, so knowing how to counter or make sure there is help side
Understanding defensive principals. Basically being in the right place and knowing your assignments. This includes not over helping, understanding when to go over or under a screen, when to double, how to defend a pick and roll, when to switch, etc, etc, etc
Physical characteristics such as length, strength, jumping ability, and timing of block attempts. This and lateral quickness is what makes 2K a good defender
Also overall hoops IQ. I usually spot high hoops IQ with being a good passer and being able to jump passes for a steal (e.g. Jorge and the ultimate.... Kidd)
Not making bad fouls is another thing to watch. Good example is Lars. As a freshmen he made many dumb fouls but he cleaned that up
So much more but a sampleBig C said:BeachedBear said:I would add that Kuany's defense has improved dramatically. He arrived with the length and athleticism, but he has improved his footwork, positioning and defensive teamwork in the the last two seasons particularly. And much of that is adopting counter intuitive defensive behaviors which takes effort. As much as I bash Fox - he might deserve some of the credit for this. But Kuany deserves MOST of the credit for putting in the work and changing his defensive behaviors to improve.HoopDreams said:
Agree, and I always think too many people discount or don't even consider defense
He's a very good defenderBC Calfan said:
I think Kuany would be a nice piece to have if he decides to return next season. While his improvement has been incremental, it's visible. With a new, capable coach I think he can be put in a better position to flourish. His confidence is there, his shooting touch has improved, instincts are good, he's a solid team player. If his game is fine tuned a little I think he would be a reliable contributor. Plus he seems like a fantastic teammate!
BeachedBear and Hoop Dreams: What are you looking for when you assess 2K's defense? Is it more perimeter or interior defense (or both)? I am not disputing your assertion by any means, but when I look at our defense, in the aggregate, we really suck this season. We leave 3-point shooters open, opponents score around the basket and they rebound with impunity.
Joel Brown is, I guess, a good on-ball defender, but the rest of them all seem to have one or more flaws in their defensive game. In general, besides our glaring lack of shooting, this just seems to be a low "hoops IQ" group, rarely making the winning-basketball move on either end of the court.
I love Kuany's free throw stroke (also Lars'). Smooth, sound and confident. I believe he's shooting above 80% from the line.
If any of these guys could be convinced to return, I think that would be good (not great). One way or another, there will be plenty of open roster spots for the new coach to fill with better talent
HoopDreams said:
First thing I look for in a defender is lateral quickness
How well can he stay in front of his man, and if he gets beat on a drive, or gets shaked on a step back, cross-over or hesi, how wellcan he recover
Without that fundamental quickness, athleticism it's tough for any player to be a good defender, although gaining low body strength helps people move better with a lower defensive stance
also defensive skills such as stance in relationship to other player, keep the right distance, knowing how to defend a shot vs a cross over, etc etc etc
One simple example is a ball handler is coached to attack the defenders high foot, so knowing how to counter or make sure there is help side
Understanding defensive principals. Basically being in the right place and knowing your assignments. This includes not over helping, understanding when to go over or under a screen, when to double, how to defend a pick and roll, when to switch, etc, etc, etc
Physical characteristics such as length, strength, jumping ability, and timing of block attempts. This and lateral quickness is what makes 2K a good defender
Also overall hoops IQ. I usually spot high hoops IQ with being a good passer and being able to jump passes for a steal (e.g. Jorge and the ultimate.... Kidd)
Not making bad fouls is another thing to watch. Good example is Lars. As a freshmen he made many dumb fouls but he cleaned that up
So much more but a sampleBig C said:BeachedBear said:I would add that Kuany's defense has improved dramatically. He arrived with the length and athleticism, but he has improved his footwork, positioning and defensive teamwork in the the last two seasons particularly. And much of that is adopting counter intuitive defensive behaviors which takes effort. As much as I bash Fox - he might deserve some of the credit for this. But Kuany deserves MOST of the credit for putting in the work and changing his defensive behaviors to improve.HoopDreams said:
Agree, and I always think too many people discount or don't even consider defense
He's a very good defenderBC Calfan said:
I think Kuany would be a nice piece to have if he decides to return next season. While his improvement has been incremental, it's visible. With a new, capable coach I think he can be put in a better position to flourish. His confidence is there, his shooting touch has improved, instincts are good, he's a solid team player. If his game is fine tuned a little I think he would be a reliable contributor. Plus he seems like a fantastic teammate!
BeachedBear and Hoop Dreams: What are you looking for when you assess 2K's defense? Is it more perimeter or interior defense (or both)? I am not disputing your assertion by any means, but when I look at our defense, in the aggregate, we really suck this season. We leave 3-point shooters open, opponents score around the basket and they rebound with impunity.
Joel Brown is, I guess, a good on-ball defender, but the rest of them all seem to have one or more flaws in their defensive game. In general, besides our glaring lack of shooting, this just seems to be a low "hoops IQ" group, rarely making the winning-basketball move on either end of the court.
I love Kuany's free throw stroke (also Lars'). Smooth, sound and confident. I believe he's shooting above 80% from the line.
If any of these guys could be convinced to return, I think that would be good (not great). One way or another, there will be plenty of open roster spots for the new coach to fill with better talent.
Would it be fair to say that Fox has quietly lost the team?Big C said:
Bottom line: The guys are making an effort out there, but since it became very obvious that the season had gone down the toilet, their 100% is not the "110%" that we need. (over 100% is one of my pet peeves, too, sorry). To say they are "quiet quitting" would be unfair and way too harsh, but they have sort of quietly packed it in.
Here's to better times... soon!
stu said:Would it be fair to say that Fox has quietly lost the team?Big C said:
Bottom line: The guys are making an effort out there, but since it became very obvious that the season had gone down the toilet, their 100% is not the "110%" that we need. (over 100% is one of my pet peeves, too, sorry). To say they are "quiet quitting" would be unfair and way too harsh, but they have sort of quietly packed it in.
Here's to better times... soon!
I think this is it. All of the lads seem to have a lot of integrity - but my gut tells me they are playing for each other because they have to be on the court. I've coached teams that were totally outclassed in their league (like Cal this season) and most serious basketball players are going to leave it on the court.Big C said:stu said:Would it be fair to say that Fox has quietly lost the team?Big C said:
Bottom line: The guys are making an effort out there, but since it became very obvious that the season had gone down the toilet, their 100% is not the "110%" that we need. (over 100% is one of my pet peeves, too, sorry). To say they are "quiet quitting" would be unfair and way too harsh, but they have sort of quietly packed it in.
Here's to better times... soon!
Quietly, yes. The players aren't in open revolt, but are sort of subconsciously going through the motions. I feel like they're "trying to try", but have just been worn down. I don't even feel like they hate Fox (not that they love him), but they can see that it's all over.
Hence the recent blowouts. Games that used to be significantly closer. I feel bad for these guys. Maybe in the future, they can hold onto the Stanfurd home game from this season and repress most of the rest of it.