Does anyoe know why JK/Monty didn't like AAR? Feels like he had STRONG backing from a bunch of our recent grads.
socaltownie said:
Lots of Monty deep sixing Joe P because of NikeGate/Arizona recruiting.
Does anyoe know why JK/Monty didn't like AAR? Feels like he had STRONG backing from a bunch of our recent grads.
Pittstop said:
Since when do programs (ANY program) report on why candidates who WEREN'T hired didn't get the job? Posters and writers "speculate", but they don't know either. They tell us what they THINK, or "feel", or "believe". And that's about it.
ManBearLion123 said:
tbh, there are A LOT of question marks around AAR.
Kennesaw's season was a great story but that was his first winning season as a HC (in a very bad conference).
He also has minimal West Coast ties and, though he seems charismatic from what I've seen, he feels more like a slow, long term team builder than a guy who can turn things around in a couple seasons through elite recruiting.
If his last name wasn't Abdur-Rahim, he probably wouldn't even be considered.
South Florida is expected to hire Kennesaw State's Amir Abdur-Rahim as its next head coach, sources told ESPN. Led one of the biggest rebuilds in college basketball, going from winning one game in 2019-20 to winning the ASUN regular-season and tournament titles this season.
— Jeff Borzello (@jeffborzello) March 29, 2023
who says he didn't like himsocaltownie said:
Lots of Monty deep sixing Joe P because of NikeGate/Arizona recruiting.
Does anyoe know why JK/Monty didn't like AAR? Feels like he had STRONG backing from a bunch of our recent grads.
I saw "big donor support" connected to JP, but I only saw "Shareef and Jaylen endorse" attached to AAR. Did AAR have a group of donors backing him?rfmason44 said:
Think it's pretty obvious- JP and AAR had significant donor support and Knowlton wanted to show he was the boss.
Looks like we could have had him if we wanted. I guess he "didn't interview well" over Teams. Knowlton is such an azz.BC Calfan said:
And there it is...South Florida is expected to hire Kennesaw State's Amir Abdur-Rahim as its next head coach, sources told ESPN. Led one of the biggest rebuilds in college basketball, going from winning one game in 2019-20 to winning the ASUN regular-season and tournament titles this season.
— Jeff Borzello (@jeffborzello) March 29, 2023
No way. MM and AAR are a step above Stan Johnson, who has 0 tourny appearances (neither does Madsen, but at least a deep run in NIT), a losing record in conference, and never finished higher than 3rd (once, at 7-5). Madsen's star is rising, Stan is flatlining.Big C said:
Yes, why MM over AAR (or even Stan Johnson, for that matter)? The three of those guys all had fairly similar resumes, IMO.
Obviously, Knowlton will never tell...
That's really ignoring Madsen's years in the league (I call that graduate school) and then his years as an assistant in the league.Big C said:
Yes, why MM over AAR (or even Stan Johnson, for that matter)? The three of those guys all had fairly similar resumes, IMO.
Obviously, Knowlton will never tell...
mbBear said:That's really ignoring Madsen's years in the league (I call that graduate school) and then his years as an assistant in the league.Big C said:
Yes, why MM over AAR (or even Stan Johnson, for that matter)? The three of those guys all had fairly similar resumes, IMO.
Obviously, Knowlton will never tell...
The other guys may have had more years on the recruiting trail, but Madsen has been around a lot more great minds of basketball X and O's....
Let's get real here: AAR was considered as a courtesy to his brother and Jaylen Brown, maybe a couple of others. In what other universe is Cal considering a coach from a small D-1 school and conference east of the Mississippi?
I'm not starting (or extending) the argument that he would have worked out great, that he has a great ceiling etc...but he had zero ties to the West Coast recruiting scene.....
KoreAmBear said:Looks like we could have had him if we wanted. I guess he "didn't interview well" over Teams. Knowlton is such an azz.BC Calfan said:
And there it is...South Florida is expected to hire Kennesaw State's Amir Abdur-Rahim as its next head coach, sources told ESPN. Led one of the biggest rebuilds in college basketball, going from winning one game in 2019-20 to winning the ASUN regular-season and tournament titles this season.
— Jeff Borzello (@jeffborzello) March 29, 2023
uh, Ben Braun comes to mind (unless you think Eastern Michigan to be a big D-1 school).mbBear said:That's really ignoring Madsen's years in the league (I call that graduate school) and then his years as an assistant in the league.Big C said:
Yes, why MM over AAR (or even Stan Johnson, for that matter)? The three of those guys all had fairly similar resumes, IMO.
Obviously, Knowlton will never tell...
The other guys may have had more years on the recruiting trail, but Madsen has been around a lot more great minds of basketball X and O's....
Let's get real here: AAR was considered as a courtesy to his brother and Jaylen Brown, maybe a couple of others. In what other universe is Cal considering a coach from a small D-1 school and conference east of the Mississippi?
I'm not starting (or extending) the argument that he would have worked out great, that he has a great ceiling etc...but he had zero ties to the West Coast recruiting scene.....
Big Dog said:uh, Ben Braun comes to mind (unless you think Eastern Michigan to be a big D-1 school).mbBear said:That's really ignoring Madsen's years in the league (I call that graduate school) and then his years as an assistant in the league.Big C said:
Yes, why MM over AAR (or even Stan Johnson, for that matter)? The three of those guys all had fairly similar resumes, IMO.
Obviously, Knowlton will never tell...
The other guys may have had more years on the recruiting trail, but Madsen has been around a lot more great minds of basketball X and O's....
Let's get real here: AAR was considered as a courtesy to his brother and Jaylen Brown, maybe a couple of others. In what other universe is Cal considering a coach from a small D-1 school and conference east of the Mississippi?
I'm not starting (or extending) the argument that he would have worked out great, that he has a great ceiling etc...but he had zero ties to the West Coast recruiting scene.....
But wrt to AAR, if I'm him, I strongly consider the lack of a qualified AD, and with my SE-only connections, consider other opportunities.
Yeah, but BB was coming off a fresh Duke victory on the way to the Sweet 16. He had Coach K and Bob Huggins thinking he was some kind of offensive mastermind.Big Dog said:uh, Ben Braun comes to mind (unless you think Eastern Michigan to be a big D-1 school).mbBear said:That's really ignoring Madsen's years in the league (I call that graduate school) and then his years as an assistant in the league.Big C said:
Yes, why MM over AAR (or even Stan Johnson, for that matter)? The three of those guys all had fairly similar resumes, IMO.
Obviously, Knowlton will never tell...
The other guys may have had more years on the recruiting trail, but Madsen has been around a lot more great minds of basketball X and O's....
Let's get real here: AAR was considered as a courtesy to his brother and Jaylen Brown, maybe a couple of others. In what other universe is Cal considering a coach from a small D-1 school and conference east of the Mississippi?
I'm not starting (or extending) the argument that he would have worked out great, that he has a great ceiling etc...but he had zero ties to the West Coast recruiting scene.....
But wrt to AAR, if I'm him, I strongly consider the lack of a qualified AD, and with my SE-only connections, consider other opportunities.
Braun inherited a team with talent. What we needed was someone who coach them up and he seemed to fit the bill. In retrospect, he was a good fit at the time. Now we need someone who can hit the ground and recruit immediately. We have 2-3 legitimate Pac-12 players. that's it. We have hit an unprecedented low, with a program on life support. We need a coach who can do it all: recruit talent, fundraise, and coach talent.Civil Bear said:Yeah, but BB was coming off a fresh Duke victory on the way to the Sweet 16. He had Coach K and Bob Huggins thinking he was some kind of offensive mastermind.Big Dog said:uh, Ben Braun comes to mind (unless you think Eastern Michigan to be a big D-1 school).mbBear said:That's really ignoring Madsen's years in the league (I call that graduate school) and then his years as an assistant in the league.Big C said:
Yes, why MM over AAR (or even Stan Johnson, for that matter)? The three of those guys all had fairly similar resumes, IMO.
Obviously, Knowlton will never tell...
The other guys may have had more years on the recruiting trail, but Madsen has been around a lot more great minds of basketball X and O's....
Let's get real here: AAR was considered as a courtesy to his brother and Jaylen Brown, maybe a couple of others. In what other universe is Cal considering a coach from a small D-1 school and conference east of the Mississippi?
I'm not starting (or extending) the argument that he would have worked out great, that he has a great ceiling etc...but he had zero ties to the West Coast recruiting scene.....
But wrt to AAR, if I'm him, I strongly consider the lack of a qualified AD, and with my SE-only connections, consider other opportunities.
KoreAmBear said:Looks like we could have had him if we wanted. I guess he "didn't interview well" over Teams. Knowlton is such an azz.BC Calfan said:
And there it is...South Florida is expected to hire Kennesaw State's Amir Abdur-Rahim as its next head coach, sources told ESPN. Led one of the biggest rebuilds in college basketball, going from winning one game in 2019-20 to winning the ASUN regular-season and tournament titles this season.
— Jeff Borzello (@jeffborzello) March 29, 2023
From first reports, I thought Knowlton was handling JP poorly, without respect, and basically blew the opportunity. IF in fact someone got in his ear about "ethical" concerns regarding JP, then it makes a little more sense that he never felt comfortable making an offer.Big C said:mbBear said:That's really ignoring Madsen's years in the league (I call that graduate school) and then his years as an assistant in the league.Big C said:
Yes, why MM over AAR (or even Stan Johnson, for that matter)? The three of those guys all had fairly similar resumes, IMO.
Obviously, Knowlton will never tell...
The other guys may have had more years on the recruiting trail, but Madsen has been around a lot more great minds of basketball X and O's....
Let's get real here: AAR was considered as a courtesy to his brother and Jaylen Brown, maybe a couple of others. In what other universe is Cal considering a coach from a small D-1 school and conference east of the Mississippi?
I'm not starting (or extending) the argument that he would have worked out great, that he has a great ceiling etc...but he had zero ties to the West Coast recruiting scene.....
Believe me, I have leaped onto the Mad Dog Train today! Let's go!!!
(still fair to discuss Knowlton and his hiring process... two separate issues)
Pete Carroll strongly agrees.mbBear said:From first reports, I thought Knowlton was handling JP poorly, without respect, and basically blew the opportunity. IF in fact someone got in his ear about "ethical" concerns regarding JP, then it makes a little more sense that he never felt comfortable making an offer.Big C said:mbBear said:That's really ignoring Madsen's years in the league (I call that graduate school) and then his years as an assistant in the league.Big C said:
Yes, why MM over AAR (or even Stan Johnson, for that matter)? The three of those guys all had fairly similar resumes, IMO.
Obviously, Knowlton will never tell...
The other guys may have had more years on the recruiting trail, but Madsen has been around a lot more great minds of basketball X and O's....
Let's get real here: AAR was considered as a courtesy to his brother and Jaylen Brown, maybe a couple of others. In what other universe is Cal considering a coach from a small D-1 school and conference east of the Mississippi?
I'm not starting (or extending) the argument that he would have worked out great, that he has a great ceiling etc...but he had zero ties to the West Coast recruiting scene.....
Believe me, I have leaped onto the Mad Dog Train today! Let's go!!!
(still fair to discuss Knowlton and his hiring process... two separate issues)
Not to say that I agree with Knowlton's decision at all...and the process could still be flawed if a couple of people had way too much input...and honestly, I don't need a patron saint as a head coach. But you are right, let's go!!!! (we have a long ways to go.....)
The people that recommended Madsen had way too much input and those that recommended someone else got dissed. It's a story as old as time.mbBear said:From first reports, I thought Knowlton was handling JP poorly, without respect, and basically blew the opportunity. IF in fact someone got in his ear about "ethical" concerns regarding JP, then it makes a little more sense that he never felt comfortable making an offer.Big C said:mbBear said:That's really ignoring Madsen's years in the league (I call that graduate school) and then his years as an assistant in the league.Big C said:
Yes, why MM over AAR (or even Stan Johnson, for that matter)? The three of those guys all had fairly similar resumes, IMO.
Obviously, Knowlton will never tell...
The other guys may have had more years on the recruiting trail, but Madsen has been around a lot more great minds of basketball X and O's....
Let's get real here: AAR was considered as a courtesy to his brother and Jaylen Brown, maybe a couple of others. In what other universe is Cal considering a coach from a small D-1 school and conference east of the Mississippi?
I'm not starting (or extending) the argument that he would have worked out great, that he has a great ceiling etc...but he had zero ties to the West Coast recruiting scene.....
Believe me, I have leaped onto the Mad Dog Train today! Let's go!!!
(still fair to discuss Knowlton and his hiring process... two separate issues)
Not to say that I agree with Knowlton's decision at all...and the process could still be flawed if a couple of people had way too much input...and honestly, I don't need a patron saint as a head coach. But you are right, let's go!!!! (we have a long ways to go.....)
All that we can hope for is the wrong people being right then...or right for the wrong reasons perhaps?Civil Bear said:The people that recommended Madsen had way too much input and those that recommended someone else got dissed. It's a story as old as time.mbBear said:From first reports, I thought Knowlton was handling JP poorly, without respect, and basically blew the opportunity. IF in fact someone got in his ear about "ethical" concerns regarding JP, then it makes a little more sense that he never felt comfortable making an offer.Big C said:mbBear said:That's really ignoring Madsen's years in the league (I call that graduate school) and then his years as an assistant in the league.Big C said:
Yes, why MM over AAR (or even Stan Johnson, for that matter)? The three of those guys all had fairly similar resumes, IMO.
Obviously, Knowlton will never tell...
The other guys may have had more years on the recruiting trail, but Madsen has been around a lot more great minds of basketball X and O's....
Let's get real here: AAR was considered as a courtesy to his brother and Jaylen Brown, maybe a couple of others. In what other universe is Cal considering a coach from a small D-1 school and conference east of the Mississippi?
I'm not starting (or extending) the argument that he would have worked out great, that he has a great ceiling etc...but he had zero ties to the West Coast recruiting scene.....
Believe me, I have leaped onto the Mad Dog Train today! Let's go!!!
(still fair to discuss Knowlton and his hiring process... two separate issues)
Not to say that I agree with Knowlton's decision at all...and the process could still be flawed if a couple of people had way too much input...and honestly, I don't need a patron saint as a head coach. But you are right, let's go!!!! (we have a long ways to go.....)
Sure, even a broken clock is right twice a day. Although I'm not sure Monty would be considered as a wrong person. He is probably one of the most qualified to know what kind of person will be needed to succeed at Cal.mbBear said:All that we can hope for is the wrong people being right then...or right for the wrong reasons perhaps?Civil Bear said:The people that recommended Madsen had way too much input and those that recommended someone else got dissed. It's a story as old as time.mbBear said:From first reports, I thought Knowlton was handling JP poorly, without respect, and basically blew the opportunity. IF in fact someone got in his ear about "ethical" concerns regarding JP, then it makes a little more sense that he never felt comfortable making an offer.Big C said:mbBear said:That's really ignoring Madsen's years in the league (I call that graduate school) and then his years as an assistant in the league.Big C said:
Yes, why MM over AAR (or even Stan Johnson, for that matter)? The three of those guys all had fairly similar resumes, IMO.
Obviously, Knowlton will never tell...
The other guys may have had more years on the recruiting trail, but Madsen has been around a lot more great minds of basketball X and O's....
Let's get real here: AAR was considered as a courtesy to his brother and Jaylen Brown, maybe a couple of others. In what other universe is Cal considering a coach from a small D-1 school and conference east of the Mississippi?
I'm not starting (or extending) the argument that he would have worked out great, that he has a great ceiling etc...but he had zero ties to the West Coast recruiting scene.....
Believe me, I have leaped onto the Mad Dog Train today! Let's go!!!
(still fair to discuss Knowlton and his hiring process... two separate issues)
Not to say that I agree with Knowlton's decision at all...and the process could still be flawed if a couple of people had way too much input...and honestly, I don't need a patron saint as a head coach. But you are right, let's go!!!! (we have a long ways to go.....)
So, he isn't one of the ones who had too much input???Civil Bear said:Sure, even a broken clock is right twice a day. Although I'm not sure Monty would be considered as a wrong person. He is probably one of the most qualified to know what kind of person will be needed to succeed at Cal.mbBear said:All that we can hope for is the wrong people being right then...or right for the wrong reasons perhaps?Civil Bear said:The people that recommended Madsen had way too much input and those that recommended someone else got dissed. It's a story as old as time.mbBear said:From first reports, I thought Knowlton was handling JP poorly, without respect, and basically blew the opportunity. IF in fact someone got in his ear about "ethical" concerns regarding JP, then it makes a little more sense that he never felt comfortable making an offer.Big C said:mbBear said:That's really ignoring Madsen's years in the league (I call that graduate school) and then his years as an assistant in the league.Big C said:
Yes, why MM over AAR (or even Stan Johnson, for that matter)? The three of those guys all had fairly similar resumes, IMO.
Obviously, Knowlton will never tell...
The other guys may have had more years on the recruiting trail, but Madsen has been around a lot more great minds of basketball X and O's....
Let's get real here: AAR was considered as a courtesy to his brother and Jaylen Brown, maybe a couple of others. In what other universe is Cal considering a coach from a small D-1 school and conference east of the Mississippi?
I'm not starting (or extending) the argument that he would have worked out great, that he has a great ceiling etc...but he had zero ties to the West Coast recruiting scene.....
Believe me, I have leaped onto the Mad Dog Train today! Let's go!!!
(still fair to discuss Knowlton and his hiring process... two separate issues)
Not to say that I agree with Knowlton's decision at all...and the process could still be flawed if a couple of people had way too much input...and honestly, I don't need a patron saint as a head coach. But you are right, let's go!!!! (we have a long ways to go.....)