calumnus said:
I was happy with Cuonzo, loved the way he represented and sold Cal, loved the players on that team and loved going undefeated at Haas with big crowds and our highest seed in school history. Did not like the way he was treated. Love having a prominent Cal alumnus in the NBA.
Cuonzo Martin had a great and inspiring personal story, and I guess I expected better from him as a coach. By the time Cuonzo was hired at Cal, college basketball in general had become a rougher sport, going from a contact sport to a collision sport, and Cuonzo's primary offensive philosophy was "Take it to the rim", urging players to be more physical, more aggressive than their opponents, whether that be in games or scrimmages, apparently. Instead of trying to develop the talents of his roster and feature those talents, he tried to force players who were not gifted with skills or body type capable of sustaining many collisions, forcing them to take it to the rim. Trying to force Jordan Mathews, a great clutch perimeter shooter, to "take it to the rim", it only exposed Mathew's weaknesses in handling the ball, and his inablity to score inside. I first saw Jabari Bird in high school and in the SF Pro Am, and was really impressed with his abilities in the mid range game, including knifing and gliding between defenders in the paint. He had a dozen moves and shots to score from 5 or 6 feet out, and if he got the opening, he would go all the way and dunk it. He was not a good three point shot as a frosh. He proved to be a fragile athlete, getting injured every season at Cal, I believe. But Cuonzo took away his midrange game, forcing him to "take it to the rim, or shoot a three" changed Jabari's game entirely. Cuozo's disdain for the mid range shot really ruined Jabari. He did learn to be more aggressive, and he learned to be a much better three point shooter. But I also think with this newly found aggressiveness on the court, it may have made Jabari change his personal behavior, to the point where he tried to beat up his girlfriend. How did both Wallace and Jabari get injured before the Hawaii loss? I'd bet the barn that they both got injured in practice or from practice, by practicing too hard.
Why would a coach tell players who are not good free throw shooters to try and get to the line? Why would he tell players who can't shoot threes, like Jaylen Brown, Wallace, Domingo and Singer to shoot them, or allow them to even take them? One per game should be the limit, until they start making them.
You have railed at great length against authoritarian coaches, even accusing Mark Fox of being an authoritarian coach. You said he forced players "almost to vomit" (without naming a source, only writing "somebody told me") and that he forced players to play tough defense in practice, thereby resulting in injuries. Where is your evidence that practicing tough defense causes injuries? I don't think players even play tough D anymore, because the rules today don't allow it. They play help D. I think far more players get hurt trying too hard on offense, than get hurt trying to play "tough D". Modern players get injured more, because they are so athletic and will try to play faster, jump higher, collide harder than players of the past. I think they all try to play at 110% or more, while John Havlicek said he tried to play at 85%. And he seldom was injured had a lot longer career than most.
I also am at odds with those who think Cuonzo was a great recruiter, just because he signed Rabb and Brown. I have argued before that chasing the blue chip player is only effective if you can land a steady stream of them every year. They are one and done, or two and done, and after they are gone, then what do you do? You must get more of them. Getting one or two might help for that one season, but then what? I think it is far better to focus on landing the recruits with 4-stars and better 3-stars (or no stars, but good players, like Hawaii had) not 5 stars. They are more likely to stay in college longer, and their egos are more likely to accept coaching like you know, "sharing the ball". I would not start recruiting 5-stars until I already had a viable winning program built on 4-stars and 3-stars, as the final piece or pieces to become a top level program.
SFCityBear