It looks like Cal is going to fire Mark Fox, but it'll need to do far more than that to clean up this mess. Here's my look at the Bears' path forward: https://t.co/bymZXh5ubP
— Connor Letourneau (@Con_Chron) March 9, 2023
It looks like Cal is going to fire Mark Fox, but it'll need to do far more than that to clean up this mess. Here's my look at the Bears' path forward: https://t.co/bymZXh5ubP
— Connor Letourneau (@Con_Chron) March 9, 2023
chron writer must troll BIphilbert said:
Pretty solid and brutally honest take.It looks like Cal is going to fire Mark Fox, but it'll need to do far more than that to clean up this mess. Here's my look at the Bears' path forward: https://t.co/bymZXh5ubP
— Connor Letourneau (@Con_Chron) March 9, 2023
He used to be the Cal beat writer for the Comicle.HoopDreams said:chron writer must troll BIphilbert said:
Pretty solid and brutally honest take.It looks like Cal is going to fire Mark Fox, but it'll need to do far more than that to clean up this mess. Here's my look at the Bears' path forward: https://t.co/bymZXh5ubP
— Connor Letourneau (@Con_Chron) March 9, 2023
philbert said:He used to be the Cal beat writer for the Comicle.HoopDreams said:chron writer must troll BIphilbert said:
Pretty solid and brutally honest take.It looks like Cal is going to fire Mark Fox, but it'll need to do far more than that to clean up this mess. Here's my look at the Bears' path forward: https://t.co/bymZXh5ubP
— Connor Letourneau (@Con_Chron) March 9, 2023
stu said:
This paragraph says it all:
It should begin by wishing Fox the best, then ensuring that athletic director Jim Knowlton isn't around to make the next hire. His record with his coaches has been less than stellar. After an eight-month, $2 million investigation, the Bears finally fired swim coach Terri McKeever in late January.
Summary: Fox is not the only problem at Cal, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah.socaltownie said:
Paywall. Summary?
Fox is the biggest immediate problem for the hoops program, but an AD who either couldn't be bothered or isn't competent to conduct a legitimate search for a coach and just paid a bunch of money to a firm to recommend an old retread is also a very real problem. And coaches don't control the budgeting or the attitude that making money by being sub-par is cool. If that's the guy selling your program, good like finding a coach with the ability to change things.sluggo said:Summary: Fox is not the only problem at Cal, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah.socaltownie said:
Paywall. Summary?
My response: Fox is the biggest problem at Cal. Fix that problem and we can see how much the other problems matter, plus some of the other problems will be possible to be addressed with a new coach, such as fans and money.
I can't believe I am typing this - and I really do NOT like JK - but I DO think that if I was his boss I would withhold judgement on his inability to hire until after THIS round. The whole Jones/Fox thing was hard. Firiging after 2 years. Not your guy. You yourself relatively new (wasn't JK just ojn board for less than a year) to the university. Etc. etc.bluesaxe said:Fox is the biggest immediate problem for the hoops program, but an AD who either couldn't be bothered or isn't competent to conduct a legitimate search for a coach and just paid a bunch of money to a firm to recommend an old retread is also a very real problem. And coaches don't control the budgeting or the attitude that making money by being sub-par is cool. If that's the guy selling your program, good like finding a coach with the ability to change things.sluggo said:Summary: Fox is not the only problem at Cal, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah.socaltownie said:
Paywall. Summary?
My response: Fox is the biggest problem at Cal. Fix that problem and we can see how much the other problems matter, plus some of the other problems will be possible to be addressed with a new coach, such as fans and money.
No, they hired him because Knowlton let the search firm (Collegiate Sports Associates) do the heavy lifting.https://t.co/zGd4Pu4UBo https://t.co/hUKyHlsZl7
— Jon Wilner (@wilnerhotline) March 9, 2023
This is what should scare the crap out of you (and I've been trying to tell you this since Wyking):philbert said:
Pretty solid and brutally honest take.It looks like Cal is going to fire Mark Fox, but it'll need to do far more than that to clean up this mess. Here's my look at the Bears' path forward: https://t.co/bymZXh5ubP
— Connor Letourneau (@Con_Chron) March 9, 2023
UCLA is a basketball school and has a lot more support from students and alums. The question isn't whether Cal will increase revenue by spending more, which every post here seems to focus on. It is whether they will increase net revenue which no one seems to want to deal with because they don't like the answer. If Cal spends that $4.4M will they make $4.4M more? I doubt it, but more importantly, Cal doubts it. That is the issue.Quote:
According to JohnCanzano.com, an independent sports columnist, last season's empty seats and 12-20 record didn't keep Cal from generating $153,000 more in revenue than a UCLA team that reached the Sweet 16. That's because the Bears skimped on travel expenses, coaching salaries and game-day costs, spending just $7.5 million on the entire program $4.4 million less than the Bruins.
Yes. But isn't that a seperate argument and one that also involves football?BearlyCareAnymore said:This is what should scare the crap out of you (and I've been trying to tell you this since Wyking):philbert said:
Pretty solid and brutally honest take.It looks like Cal is going to fire Mark Fox, but it'll need to do far more than that to clean up this mess. Here's my look at the Bears' path forward: https://t.co/bymZXh5ubP
— Connor Letourneau (@Con_Chron) March 9, 2023UCLA is a basketball school and has a lot more support from students and alums. The question isn't whether Cal will increase revenue by spending more, which every post here seems to focus on. It is whether they will increase net revenue which no one seems to want to deal with because they don't like the answer. If Cal spends that $4.4M will they make $4.4M more? I doubt it, but more importantly, Cal doubts it. That is the issue.Quote:
According to JohnCanzano.com, an independent sports columnist, last season's empty seats and 12-20 record didn't keep Cal from generating $153,000 more in revenue than a UCLA team that reached the Sweet 16. That's because the Bears skimped on travel expenses, coaching salaries and game-day costs, spending just $7.5 million on the entire program $4.4 million less than the Bruins.
Cal will fire Fox because the buyout isn't that large, they'll get some donor to pay it, and not firing Fox will be an open and very public white flag that will cost it more in support than paying the buyout. Those that always see losing as a coaching issue will be appeased (a group that is dwindling, but Cal is just trying to hang on as long as they can to a donor base that is aging out anyway).
Fox was a terrible hire and what many of us said at the time has quickly become obvious. He needs to be fired. It is unlikely (not impossible - you have to try - but unlikely) that a new coach is going to resolve things unless Cal changes and Cal is unlikely to change because they have no incentive to. Blaming Cal's fortunes on coaching is like blaming Old Yeller's death on a gunshot to the head. Yeah, the gunshot polished him off, but the rabies wasn't going away.
You got that right.PtownBear1 said:
As this was (hopefully) his last interview, I would have loved for someone to ask him why he's such a bitter a-hole when he's getting paid guaranteed millions for being the worst coach of all time. Anyone else in his position would be over the moon grateful. What a horrible representative of the university. I hope I never have to see his face anywhere again.
Thanks for posting. As I read that, a few things stood out:oskidunker said:
<a href="https://ibb.co/80sZfbq"><img src="" alt="EFE569-B5-B9-CC-48-B0-AF28-C9-E3-F65-F7918" border="0"></a>
<a href="https://ibb.co/S0Ngh4v"><img src="" alt="197-AAC56-6699-45-EB-9-DB6-00-B544094-D4-E" border="0"></a>
<a href="https://ibb.co/vmDPvy9"><img src="" alt="1-CC43-E25-B96-F-447-F-A716-4697-A5-C44-AB6" border="0"></a>
<a href="https://ibb.co/8zDNpHv"><img src="" alt="DCD57727-7-B73-4-CAA-AEEC-BA75-AF5-F5569" border="0"></a>
Wilner is simply wrong.philbert said:No, they hired him because Knowlton let the search firm (Collegiate Sports Associates) do the heavy lifting.https://t.co/zGd4Pu4UBo https://t.co/hUKyHlsZl7
— Jon Wilner (@wilnerhotline) March 9, 2023
SJS vs Nevada-at 2:30 today cbs college sports, 221 on Direct TV. Given a 27% chance of winning. Might be interesting to watch the style of offense.HKBear97! said:Thanks for posting. As I read that, a few things stood out:oskidunker said:
<a href="https://ibb.co/80sZfbq"><img src="" alt="EFE569-B5-B9-CC-48-B0-AF28-C9-E3-F65-F7918" border="0"></a>
<a href="https://ibb.co/S0Ngh4v"><img src="" alt="197-AAC56-6699-45-EB-9-DB6-00-B544094-D4-E" border="0"></a>
<a href="https://ibb.co/vmDPvy9"><img src="" alt="1-CC43-E25-B96-F-447-F-A716-4697-A5-C44-AB6" border="0"></a>
<a href="https://ibb.co/8zDNpHv"><img src="" alt="DCD57727-7-B73-4-CAA-AEEC-BA75-AF5-F5569" border="0"></a>
1. Fox when asked if he would have done anything differently and he says nothing stands out? Wow, just wow. What a terrible hire.
2. Fox saying to the reporters they are not "on the inside. They don't know the things you have to deal with." So tired of this excuse. As others pointed out, the program has had success in the past. It is possible to win at Cal. What a terrible hire.
3. Obvious nearby coaching candidates include Tim Miles? Can someone do their homework? As multiple posters here have pointed out, that would be a terrible hire.
4. Knowlton sent a letter - A LETTER?!! - to the swim team to apologize for what they had to endure. How freaking tone deaf is he? What a terrible hire.
Common theme? Cal made terrible hires and these results have been entirely predictable.
I think that football and basketball are a different proposition at Cal. I think that investing money in football gives a better return than basketball. Cal still sees football as the key to funding all sports and Cal still wants to maintain its non-revenue sports programs. It is very possible that one or both of those variables could change in the near future, but they haven't yet, so while Cal isn't willing to break the bank on football, they will spend more. Your second paragraph is exactly right and it is what I have been saying for a long time. Cal doesn't really need revenue sports anymore and few of its applicants care enough to ding Cal for being bad, and Cal doesn't need more applicants. If you have high schoolers recently you would know that UC's do very little marketing compared to other schools. I think my kid got more marketing from Alabama than then UC's. UCLA has the most applicants of any school. The UC's don't care. Apply or don't. And if they cared, frankly, among their demographic, old school revenue sports is not where it is at.socaltownie said:Yes. But isn't that a seperate argument and one that also involves football?BearlyCareAnymore said:This is what should scare the crap out of you (and I've been trying to tell you this since Wyking):philbert said:
Pretty solid and brutally honest take.It looks like Cal is going to fire Mark Fox, but it'll need to do far more than that to clean up this mess. Here's my look at the Bears' path forward: https://t.co/bymZXh5ubP
— Connor Letourneau (@Con_Chron) March 9, 2023UCLA is a basketball school and has a lot more support from students and alums. The question isn't whether Cal will increase revenue by spending more, which every post here seems to focus on. It is whether they will increase net revenue which no one seems to want to deal with because they don't like the answer. If Cal spends that $4.4M will they make $4.4M more? I doubt it, but more importantly, Cal doubts it. That is the issue.Quote:
According to JohnCanzano.com, an independent sports columnist, last season's empty seats and 12-20 record didn't keep Cal from generating $153,000 more in revenue than a UCLA team that reached the Sweet 16. That's because the Bears skimped on travel expenses, coaching salaries and game-day costs, spending just $7.5 million on the entire program $4.4 million less than the Bruins.
Cal will fire Fox because the buyout isn't that large, they'll get some donor to pay it, and not firing Fox will be an open and very public white flag that will cost it more in support than paying the buyout. Those that always see losing as a coaching issue will be appeased (a group that is dwindling, but Cal is just trying to hang on as long as they can to a donor base that is aging out anyway).
Fox was a terrible hire and what many of us said at the time has quickly become obvious. He needs to be fired. It is unlikely (not impossible - you have to try - but unlikely) that a new coach is going to resolve things unless Cal changes and Cal is unlikely to change because they have no incentive to. Blaming Cal's fortunes on coaching is like blaming Old Yeller's death on a gunshot to the head. Yeah, the gunshot polished him off, but the rabies wasn't going away.
Cal (and a number of other UCs) are fairly unique creatures - unlike most other P5s there is NO compelling business case to be made for being good in sports. Cal AGAIN saw a record number of applicants this fall. They do not NEED additional selectivity to juice rankings. Indeed, given the pressure from Sacramento you could make an argument that sports success HURTS cal because getting more applicants from students looking for successful athletic teams further decreases admission rates and pisses off those in Sacto more (look at UCLA right now and the political pressure they are under on admissions).
But if you don't spend $ you can still be better than this. THere are minimal costs in finding an energic coach who will embrace east bay hoops and make cal the "local team". Indeed, such an approach WOULD solve a serious problem Cal faces - lack of diversity and the political pressures that it faces on that front.
For basketball, they need to deal more honestly with the logistical issues related to people going. I would consider buying a season ticket that just covered weekend and holiday games, and perhaps all the games around Christmas and New Year's. But there's no point in buying a full season ticket when I know I can't make it to the weekday games because of the dates and times, which are driven by television.BearlyCareAnymore said:This is what should scare the crap out of you (and I've been trying to tell you this since Wyking):philbert said:
Pretty solid and brutally honest take.It looks like Cal is going to fire Mark Fox, but it'll need to do far more than that to clean up this mess. Here's my look at the Bears' path forward: https://t.co/bymZXh5ubP
— Connor Letourneau (@Con_Chron) March 9, 2023UCLA is a basketball school and has a lot more support from students and alums. The question isn't whether Cal will increase revenue by spending more, which every post here seems to focus on. It is whether they will increase net revenue which no one seems to want to deal with because they don't like the answer. If Cal spends that $4.4M will they make $4.4M more? I doubt it, but more importantly, Cal doubts it. That is the issue.Quote:
According to JohnCanzano.com, an independent sports columnist, last season's empty seats and 12-20 record didn't keep Cal from generating $153,000 more in revenue than a UCLA team that reached the Sweet 16. That's because the Bears skimped on travel expenses, coaching salaries and game-day costs, spending just $7.5 million on the entire program $4.4 million less than the Bruins.
Cal will fire Fox because the buyout isn't that large, they'll get some donor to pay it, and not firing Fox will be an open and very public white flag that will cost it more in support than paying the buyout. Those that always see losing as a coaching issue will be appeased (a group that is dwindling, but Cal is just trying to hang on as long as they can to a donor base that is aging out anyway).
Fox was a terrible hire and what many of us said at the time has quickly become obvious. He needs to be fired. It is unlikely (not impossible - you have to try - but unlikely) that a new coach is going to resolve things unless Cal changes and Cal is unlikely to change because they have no incentive to. Blaming Cal's fortunes on coaching is like blaming Old Yeller's death on a gunshot to the head. Yeah, the gunshot polished him off, but the rabies wasn't going away.
Yes, it seems like the goal with Fox was someone who won enough and did not cheat in recruiting (when that was a thing) so that the Knowlton could go back to playing solitaire on his computer.Cal8285 said:Wilner is simply wrong.philbert said:No, they hired him because Knowlton let the search firm (Collegiate Sports Associates) do the heavy lifting.https://t.co/zGd4Pu4UBo https://t.co/hUKyHlsZl7
— Jon Wilner (@wilnerhotline) March 9, 2023
He's right that Fox wasn't hired because Cal is cheap. After all, someone like Gates would have come as cheap as Fox. But he's completely wrong that Fox was hired because Knowlton let the search firm do the heavy lifting.
Fox was hired because he was the perfect fit for what Knowlton wanted. I don't know how much Knowlton let the search firm do all the heavy lifting, but in the brief window between Jones and the Fox hired, Knowlton was public about what he wanted in the MBB HC.
Fox checked all of Knowlton's boxes, more than any other available candidate. If Knowlton had hired me to identify a coach who checked all his boxes, I probably would have recommended Fox. The problem is that Knowlton's boxes were wrong.
The mistake of the Fox hire had nothing to do with hiring a search firm, and everything to do with what Knowlton was looking for in a head coach.
sluggo said:Yes, it seems like the goal with Fox was someone who won enough and did not cheat in recruiting (when that was a thing) so that the Knowlton could go back to playing solitaire on his computer.Cal8285 said:Wilner is simply wrong.philbert said:No, they hired him because Knowlton let the search firm (Collegiate Sports Associates) do the heavy lifting.https://t.co/zGd4Pu4UBo https://t.co/hUKyHlsZl7
— Jon Wilner (@wilnerhotline) March 9, 2023
He's right that Fox wasn't hired because Cal is cheap. After all, someone like Gates would have come as cheap as Fox. But he's completely wrong that Fox was hired because Knowlton let the search firm do the heavy lifting.
Fox was hired because he was the perfect fit for what Knowlton wanted. I don't know how much Knowlton let the search firm do all the heavy lifting, but in the brief window between Jones and the Fox hired, Knowlton was public about what he wanted in the MBB HC.
Fox checked all of Knowlton's boxes, more than any other available candidate. If Knowlton had hired me to identify a coach who checked all his boxes, I probably would have recommended Fox. The problem is that Knowlton's boxes were wrong.
The mistake of the Fox hire had nothing to do with hiring a search firm, and everything to do with what Knowlton was looking for in a head coach.
I would like someone who brings excitement. That means developing talent, playing good basketball, and recruiting at that the level that should be expected given Cal's resources and position in the world. The only coach going back to the 80s whose hire I liked was Monty. I don't expect a hall of fame coach like Monty to fall into Cal's laps, so I would like someone who shows characteristics such that my three goals will be met. Fox was zero for three.
He doesnt. I asked him in the mens room at Haas.udaman1 said:
what if Braun wanted back in?