bearchamp;842824950 said:
I doubt anyone on this Board knows anything about how ready Jones is to be head coach. The whining about "lackluster" hire is just self-indulgent baloney. Jones may be John Wooden re-incarnated for all we know. No one knew Bill Walsh was going to be a great football head coach before he got to the 49ers. Jones may not be the big splash coach that people here seem to need to feed their egos, but he may be a great coach, and if so, a brilliant hire. Can we please stop the uninformed hysteria.
I agree that most fans here don't know how ready Wyking Jones is for the head coaching job at Cal. Clearly, he has paid his dues, and some of those dues were paid under a very good coach, Rick Pitino. He has put in enough years to be named head coach somewhere, but we should have a little concern that he has been hired as head coach of a program with some great history like Cal and a strong conference like the PAC12. For a coach without experience in a job like this, it takes perhaps about 5 years to judge him. I watched Cuonzo for three years and could not find a lot to like about his teams, but I couldn't find enough bad to want his resignation either. I was willing to wait a year or two more to judge. With Wyking, he needs time, and if not our support, at least willing to wait and see how he does.
Aside from that, the statement about John Wooden is really not applicable, in the sense that Wooden was never an assistant coach, like Wyking. A three-time All-American as a player, Wooden began his coaching career as a head high school coach, where he coached for 11 years. He then got the head coaching job at Indiana State, where he coached for two seasons before landing the head Coaching job at UCLA, where he was an immediate success, winning the PCC Southern Division 4 years straight, with two trips to the NCAA regionals. In 1956, Wooden and UCLA took 3rd place in the NCAA regional. Still, Wooden did not win his first NCAA title until 1964, sixteen years after landing the head coaching job at UCLA. Wyking may become as successful as Wooden, but I doubt that many Cal fans would be willing to wait that long for anyone to win the NCAA or make a run in that tournament. I know I'm not.
This underscores my contention that the best fit for Cal would be someone with head coaching experience. Wooden had 13 years of that experience before he was given the UCLA job, and it still took many years more for him to become great. We can't set the bar too high for Wyking. If he is any good, he will learn and grow with the program and the game, and hopefully become successful.