BearlyCareAnymore said:
Cal8285 said:
It doesn't seem so obvious to me that JP is better than MM. I would take MM over JP EXCEPT for the fact that JP would have pre-promised big NIL money (at least in theory). Throw that out, and I'd take MM, in spite of your arguments. I'll start with one thing. MM had better overall seasons than JP both of the last two years if you look at the statistic based rankings (KenPom and a half dozen others).
It is interesting, there are donors who had personal interactions with JP who apparently liked him and supported him. There are many who interacted with him who don't like him.
In some ways, I go back to Gladstone, who talked about leadership qualities being more important than other things. My gut is that MM is a better guy than JP to lead a program. Other than having big money donors who support him for no rational reason, I'll take MM.
I absolutely hated the Jones and Fox hires, they were both horrific. If MM is the guy, the only reason I have a problem with it is the NIL question. Given the realistic options we had, that's it, that's my only problem.
I agree that the process was flawed. I'm not sure I'm more in love with the process that gives the job to the guy who has the most money willing to support him, even if there may be some sense in the real world to that process. If we had a process that was proper yet ignored who had the most "donor" money ready to support him, MM might (or might not) have gotten the job.
In my view, it really is the process and not the outcome that was the problem.
I think it is fair that you come to a different conclusion than I do. I think that with the case that can be made on paper it is very problematic that a major member of the process had obvious conflicts.
I am going to say this on yours and others citing KenPom. I just don't think that is persuasive. The job is not to have the highest KenPom rating. It is to win. And for most, that means to win in your conference because those are your peers. If I didn't have things like conference records to look at, KenPom is a lot ore valuable. But to me that is akin to saying Team X is better than Team Y when Team Y just beat Team X because Team X has a better KenPom rating. We don't determine success by algorithm. If we did, you can bet everyone would change their style of play to game the algorithm.
Also, when we, as a high major team (hahahahaha!) look at things like Sagarin and KenPom it makes more sense because we are at the top of the food chain. In a division with hundreds of teams with conferences that vary wildly in resources and recruiting pool, these become far more problematic. You cannot, for instance expect Dennis Gates to go to Cleveland State and be able to compete in the same manner in national statistics that he does at Missouri. What you can do is basically say he was hired to win games and his ability to do that against similarly situated teams (his conference) is a pretty big indicator.
JP took over a last place team and has finished 2nd, 2nd, 2nd, 1st, 5th, and 1st. He has won two conference tournaments and been to 2 NCAA tourneys. MM took over a second place team and went 8th, 1st, 7th, 1st with zero conference tourney championships or tourney appearances. They don't hang KenPom banners. I don't see how the actual results are close. Better conference finishes. Actual conference tourney championships and with that NCAA tourney appearances.
Most of the statistical models are far too biased in favor of high major teams, but a) there isn't much bias in favor of the Mountain West over the Big West, and b) they all are an attempt to measure winning in light of strength of schedule. The biggest flaw, IMO, is that if you lose to enough good teams, it can really help your rankings. I care about how good a team is, which include winning and who you beat and who you lost to, which the statistical models, flawed as they are, do their best to consider.
If we're looking at 2022-23, both won a conference, MM didn't win his conference tourney, but I do care about winning and losing and beating good teams. This season, MM beat Oregon in Eugene. He beat BYU in Provo. He took Wake Forest to OT in Winston-Salem. JP didn't have any wins (or losses) that impress me. I don't know all the circumstances that led to 7th in 2021-22, but I will never pin anything on one disappointing year.
I want some proof you can compete with (and if you are a mid-major, sometimes punch up and beat) the power conference teams. MM has shown me that. Not so sure about JP. I think there are plenty of people who would look at 2022-23 and prefer MM's results to JP's, and not just because of KenPom, Sagarin, et al.
Look, my point isn't that MM is the better choice, my point is that you say, "I just don't see any way if you compare their resumes that 8 out of 10 people with no dog in the fight don't come out with Pasternack." If you are just comparing resumes, and ignoring donor/NIL issues, I disagree. I think that if we're looking at JP versus MM, it is closer to 5 out of 10 people with no dog in the fight who come out JP.
Me, I have biases against both JP and MM (part of the reason I probably would have chosen AAR, assuming he would have come), but based on resumes alone, I pick MM, and it goes beyond KenPom, ESPN power ratings, Sagarin, etc.
And look, now we're arguing about 3 out of 10 people, does this really tell that MM
clearly has the inferior resume?
I agree that the process was flawed, it absolutely appears that Montgomery had too much say in it. Knowlton is a moron, so he recognized he doesn't know enough to make the hire and seems to have been a moron and chosen someone to maybe totally rely on who is probably out of touch with what Cal needs, plus had some conflicts. It sucks.
I probably would have held my nose and picked JP if AAR wouldn't come because of the importance of the donor/NIL issues. I can't fault JK TOO much if he decided to ignore donor/NIL issues in making the hire (although he needed to do a MUCH, MUCH better job of massaging donors and trying to smooth a route for MM to get donor/NIL funds), even though I would have held my nose and considered those issues. It was definitely NOT okay to ignore donor/NIL issues in terms of the need to maintain donor relations in making a hire that didn't have pre-promised donor/NIL backing.
But outside of the need for maintaining relations, IF it was okay for the process to ignore donor/NIL issues in making the choice, then I can't say the outcome was clearly wrong. Ignoring donor/NIL issues, I would have had AAR as first choice, MM second, and I'm not sure if I would have had Johnson or JP third, but I just don't think it is clear cut, and (again, ignoring donor/NIL issues), I can't say who I would have chosen if I had been part of the process.
I don't think you need to suggest that MM is so clearly worse on paper to say the process was crap, and I don't think MM is clearly worse on paper (ignoring donor/NIL issues). If MM is indeed coming here, I'm okay with it IF MM/Cal manages to get NIL backing for the MBB program. But that's a big IF.