In addition to some true facilitating/distributing donors.Shocky1 said:
the flawed search process
so past resentments (and other conflicts of interest) against pasternack played a key role in him getting passed up by for mark madsen who is by all accounts a good coach who will elevate the program if he can find a true facilitating/distributing point guard between now & the 1st day of classes this fall
Shocky1 said:
the flawed search process
https://bearinsider.com/forums/2/topics/110786/replies/2151796
What heat? Doesn't his contract run till 2029?GoCal80 said:
Seems to me the process was fine. JK listened to different constituents with different views, which he apparently did not do last time around. In the end, he's the boss and it is up to him to decide based on the varied input he received. It is not a democratic process wherein votes are tallied. As a result, he's also the one who takes the heat if it does not work out.
GoCal80 said:Shocky1 said:
the flawed search process
https://bearinsider.com/forums/2/topics/110786/replies/2151796
Seems to me the process was fine. JK listened to different constituents with different views, which he apparently did not do last time around. In the end, he's the boss and it is up to him to decide based on the varied input he received. It is not a democratic process wherein votes are tallied. As a result, he's also the one who takes the heat if it does not work out.
He didn't listen to different constituents. He didn't take varied input. That seems to be what you are missing.GoCal80 said:Shocky1 said:
the flawed search process
https://bearinsider.com/forums/2/topics/110786/replies/2151796
Seems to me the process was fine. JK listened to different constituents with different views, which he apparently did not do last time around. In the end, he's the boss and it is up to him to decide based on the varied input he received. It is not a democratic process wherein votes are tallied. As a result, he's also the one who takes the heat if it does not work out.
agreed bearly, knowlton didn't listen to his constituents including doug goldman who wanted joe pasternack, he didn't take varied input but rather only the predictable agenda driven advice of jj & monty and cal is now singing the panic at the disco song in tryna raise nil dollars for the basketball program when there wuz millions on the table with joe pasternack as the head coachBearlyCareAnymore said:
He didn't listen to different constituents. He didn't take varied input. That seems to be what you are missing.
Shocky1 said:agreed bearly, knowlton didn't listen to his constituents including doug goldman who wanted joe pasternack, he didn't take varied input but rather only the predictable agenda driven advice of jj & monty and cal is now singing the panic at the disco song in tryna raise nil dollars for the basketball program when there wuz millions on the table with joe pasternack as the head coachBearlyCareAnymore said:
He didn't listen to different constituents. He didn't take varied input. That seems to be what you are missing.
Major donors should have their chance to provide input into the process, but they do not make hiring decisions. If it ever gets to the point when donors are making major hiring decisions and not Cal's administrators and faculty, the university will have sold out and lost its soul. The faculty and administrators are responsible for setting priorities and standards in a manner consistent with the Cal's values and mission. Neither I nor any of you knows who was allowed to give input into the decision. In the end, it is the athletic director's job to make coach hiring decisions. The AD weighs all the input and decides on the hire based an assessment of which advice aligns with the university's philosophy and values. Pasternak was not universally favored. He carries baggage from his association with a corrupt University of Arizona basketball program, and some find his personality to be somewhat irritating and his ego to be large. If Mark Masden ends up being our coach, I hope the Cal alumni and donors will unite around him. He is a high caliber person with signs of an upward coaching trajectory, and he is admired by those who have played with him, those who have coached with him, and those who have been coached by him.Shocky1 said:agreed bearly, knowlton didn't listen to his constituents including doug goldman who wanted joe pasternack, he didn't take varied input but rather only the predictable agenda driven advice of jj & monty and cal is now singing the panic at the disco song in tryna raise nil dollars for the basketball program when there wuz millions on the table with joe pasternack as the head coachBearlyCareAnymore said:
He didn't listen to different constituents. He didn't take varied input. That seems to be what you are missing.
This is a quaint notion that was true at places like Cal pre-NIL. It has never been true at schools that actually have winning football and mens basketball programs - donors have significant input and impose the type of accountability that Cal has been sorely lacking for 50+ years.GoCal80 said:Major donors should have their chance to provide input into the process, but they do not make hiring decisions. If it ever gets to the point when donors are making major hiring decisions and not Cal's administrators and faculty, the university will have sold out and lost its soul. The faculty and administrators are responsible for setting priorities and standards in a manner consistent with the Cal's values and mission. Neither I nor any of you knows who was allowed to give input into the decision. In the end, it is the athletic director's job to make coach hiring decisions. The AD weighs all the input and decides on the hire based an assessment of which advice aligns with the university's philosophy and values. Pasternak was not universally favored. He carries baggage from his association with a corrupt University of Arizona basketball program, and some find his personality to be somewhat irritating and his ego to be large. If Mark Masden ends up being our coach, I hope the Cal alumni and donors will unite around him. He is a high caliber person with signs of an upward coaching trajectory, and he is admired by those who have played with him, those who have coached with him, and those who have been coached by him.Shocky1 said:agreed bearly, knowlton didn't listen to his constituents including doug goldman who wanted joe pasternack, he didn't take varied input but rather only the predictable agenda driven advice of jj & monty and cal is now singing the panic at the disco song in tryna raise nil dollars for the basketball program when there wuz millions on the table with joe pasternack as the head coachBearlyCareAnymore said:
He didn't listen to different constituents. He didn't take varied input. That seems to be what you are missing.
Shocky1 said:
econ, luv u man but we're covering the same ground again
it is not the job of the chancellor of the #1 ranked public university in the world to micromanage any coaching hires, ok?...that's not gonna happen in berkeley
carol made a mistake hiring/extending knowlton, she now knows she made a mistake, and she's tryna correct her mistake by terminating him via the mckeever investigation
we got nobel peace prize winners in berkeley, it is not my expectation for the chancellor to question the athletic director re: his selection process in depth
but 100% agree with u that we have to hope the con artist investigation is carried out competently by dan mogoluf and that knowlton is walked to his car and that we begin the andrew mcgraw era in berkeley with less than 20 sport teams that are expected to compete for championships particularly in the revenue sports while still graduating student athletes with berkeley degrees
railing on a 78 year old benevolent christ who has financially supported cal athletics more than any other chancellor in history seems pointless particularly as she's tryna fix her major personnel mistake before the next chancellor arrives in berkeley who will almost assuredly not be as supportive of sports as carol
chancellor christ is not perfect but she is not the problem, got it?
GoCal80 said:
Cal is not now and never will be a "win at all costs" institution. We are much closer to Stanford than Alabama in essentially ever way possible, including how we view athletics' role and centrality institutionally.
Who said win at all costs? I didn't.GoCal80 said:
Cal is not now and never will be a "win at all costs" institution. We are much closer to Stanford than Alabama in essentially ever way possible, including how we view athletics' role and centrality institutionally.
GoCal80 said:
The stars have aligned for them but they run a clean program and I've never heard of Stanford donors usurping the AD's authority.
BearGoggles said:GoCal80 said:
The stars have aligned for them but they run a clean program and I've never heard of Stanford donors usurping the AD's authority.
You didn't hear about it because at a private school - where donor support is critical - its a given that donors have huge impact. An AD at Furd would know better than to go rogue.
And if you have some time maybe google "Arrillaga" and "Stanford athletics". Based on your post, I think you'll be surprised what you read.
Stanford's success can quite literally be heavily attributed to a billionaire coming in and throwing his weight around and asking "what checks do I need to sign to make us competitive". Every single successful national program does this.GoCal80 said:
Cal is not now and never will be a "win at all costs" institution. We are much closer to Stanford than Alabama in essentially ever way possible, including how we view athletics' role and centrality institutionally.
GoCal80 said:BearGoggles said:GoCal80 said:
The stars have aligned for them but they run a clean program and I've never heard of Stanford donors usurping the AD's authority.
You didn't hear about it because at a private school - where donor support is critical - its a given that donors have huge impact. An AD at Furd would know better than to go rogue.
And if you have some time maybe google "Arrillaga" and "Stanford athletics". Based on your post, I think you'll be surprised what you read.
Of course I know about Arrillaga. I'm missing your point - did he choose Harbough? Montgomery?
eastcoastcal said:Stanford's success can quite literally be heavily attributed to a billionaire coming in and throwing his weight around and asking "what checks do I need to sign to make us competitive". Every single successful national program does this.GoCal80 said:
Cal is not now and never will be a "win at all costs" institution. We are much closer to Stanford than Alabama in essentially ever way possible, including how we view athletics' role and centrality institutionally.
I very much respect your ideals regarding donors not controlling the process, but that is what Cal has done for years and we suck because of it. No use beating around the bush. We suck because our athletic department is poorly run. We do not have a smart AD. We have many, many useless overpaid bureaucrats sitting in offices doing close to nothing all day. We cannot even get normal things to function, like cheerleaders for games, a dance team, the sound system to work evenly/consistently, etc. We even were so pathetic that we put up a graphic bemoaning how many games we lost due to injury this past year. That graphic had to pass at least 5 different AD folks' eyes before being approved. And yet, it was.
If you want to live in the dream world where we can run our athletics programs the "right" way without donors really running the show, we will continue to be the laughingstock of the Pac and nation. It is pathetic that we only won 3 games last year. It is pathetic that we gave Wilcox a full guaranteed 25M extension after not once putting up a winning conference record (and I like Wilcox)! It is pathetic that we have a loser athletic director who has botched nearly every hiring process he has conducted, continues to try and prop up his fiscally irresponsible 30 sport empire, left our football team out to dry when COVID struck, refused to fire an obviously underperforming basketball coach, gave a public interview where he basically blamed most of our lack of success on Cal's shortcomings, blatantly ignored or shut down key donors, likely ignored criminal-level allegations of abuse at the hands of a coach, and generally has been one of, if not the worst athletics director in the nation. At any competently run athletic department, the past years' results and events get everyone involved fired. Notice how in all the efforts to balance the athletics budget, the administrative salaries don't seem to get touched? Notice how there's very little effort to rightsize the bloated departments or cut pay for the useless bureaucrats who do 1/5th of a job? That's because they will always protect their own, no matter how bad of a job they do.
The best thing that could happen to Cal would be our far smarter, much more capable donors taking a lead and getting this ship righted. Folks like 4thGen, Sebastabear, BG, to name a few (there are many more here) who have business and legal acumen, the funds to propel us forward, an insider knowledge of Cal, and a desire to win.
Again, I respect your desire to play cleanly and the right way. But let's be real; college athletics is a business. There is a lot of money involved. Every single program that wants to win has the big money donors calling the shots. That's just how it is. We either play to win in this environment or let's give up entirely, drop down to D3 and we can celebrate beating Caltech or some nonsense. I won't be around to watch, but maybe you can enjoy that.
Exactly. Cal's last two men's hoops coaches have been awful and fans are frustrated. When one or more donors push the narrative that a certain candidate is the answer to Cal's problems, the AD should listen. However, if that candidate carries ethical baggage and has annoyed people at Cal who know him, the AD is obligated to find someone who is a better fit and then rally as many donors and other alumni as possible around that candidate. I like everything I've read about Masden and hope people will enthusiastically support him.annarborbear said:
I worked for five years at Stanford. Many people I met thought that Arriaga and his family had far too much influence. They even had their own private office. I was also at Michigan. They have many large and influential donors. But I never heard of anyone dictating the selection of coaches. You still have to try to have a professionally-managed organization.
Did AAR carry ethical baggage?GoCal80 said:Exactly. Cal's last two men's hoops coaches have been awful and fans are frustrated. When one or more donors push the narrative that a certain candidate is the answer to Cal's problems, the AD should listen. However, if that candidate carries ethical baggage and has annoyed people at Cal who know him, the AD is obligated to find someone who is a better fit and then rally as many donors and other alumni as possible around that candidate. I like everything I've read about Masden and hope people will enthusiastically support him.annarborbear said:
I worked for five years at Stanford. Many people I met thought that Arriaga and his family had far too much influence. They even had their own private office. I was also at Michigan. They have many large and influential donors. But I never heard of anyone dictating the selection of coaches. You still have to try to have a professionally-managed organization.
BearGoggles said:Did AAR carry ethical baggage?GoCal80 said:Exactly. Cal's last two men's hoops coaches have been awful and fans are frustrated. When one or more donors push the narrative that a certain candidate is the answer to Cal's problems, the AD should listen. However, if that candidate carries ethical baggage and has annoyed people at Cal who know him, the AD is obligated to find someone who is a better fit and then rally as many donors and other alumni as possible around that candidate. I like everything I've read about Masden and hope people will enthusiastically support him.annarborbear said:
I worked for five years at Stanford. Many people I met thought that Arriaga and his family had far too much influence. They even had their own private office. I was also at Michigan. They have many large and influential donors. But I never heard of anyone dictating the selection of coaches. You still have to try to have a professionally-managed organization.
You're missing the point - this has very little to do with JP or for that matter Madsen. This has everything to do with building support for your program from key donors and former players which is critical for a variety of reasons including NIL and the practice facility.
With the right process, Knowlton could have hired Madsen and maintained that support. But he failed at that - again -- because he's incompetent and arrogant.