Fyght4Cal said:
I didn't like the Monty hiring for 2 reasons:
1. I thought it was a retread hire, his best day were behind him, and at his age, his Cal tenure would be short. I wanted a younger, up-and-comer.
2. I didn't think it was possible to recreate his Stanford success at Cal. Because Cal.
3. But I really like Monty. I wish we had 10-20 years of a coach like him.
The Martin hire pushed all of my skepticism buttons.
1. Why would he want to come to Cal?
2. Does he understand the recruitment and retention challenges here?
3. What if all the criticism of his Tennessee tenure were true?
After her arrived, I found:
1. His Xs & Os and in-game coaching were as bad as advertised. His substitution patterns induced seizures.
2. He brought in some great individual recruits, but unbalanced classes. He swung for the fences and missed, a lot.
3. His coach-speak was indecipherable. I could never get a clear bead on what he was after.
4. Based on his road record, I feel the home unbeaten streak happened in spite of him.
5. He dropped us like a hot rock, and left the program 5 years behind. It was sneaky and underhanded. It was timed to inflict maximum damage. I will hate him forever.
I will be the first to admit that my brain works weirdly. But sometimes the skepticism and paranoia are justified. And sometimes they're overwrought. Such is life.
I was no Cuonzo Martin fan at all, but I think it is a little harsh to blame the unbalance of his roster entirely on him. This started back in the Ben Braun era. Ben left Montgomery a very good roster, but it was loaded with juniors who were his best players at the end of his tenure. What this did was allow Montgomery to win a PAC10 championship, but after that championship, all those players would graduate, and Montgomery was then faced with rebuilding the roster. It took a while, but three years later he would come up with his best recruiting class, and he would leave a pretty balanced roster for Cuonzo, a senior, 2 juniors and 4 sophs. After one season only the senior graduated, and once he added Rabb and Brown, 2016 became a good roster. He knew he would have a good season, but he should have known that they were one-and-dones, and he would begin to be in real trouble in for the 2017 season. Again he landed a good grad transfer in Mullins, but he would be done in a year too. His mistake, if any, was to recruit one-and-dones, because they can kill any chance you have at roster balance. They got the fan base excited, but then they were gone, Brown in one and Rabb in two years (Rabb's mistake). Once those guys and Mullins were gone, it was going to take another 3 years to rebuild the roster. I think we should focus on the good recruits who will stay in school. When and if we start to win, then we can look to the big star recruits. So if a new coach inherits a good roster, but it is seniors and juniors, in 2 years he will have to start rebuilding again. It happened to Montgomery, to Cuonzo, and a little worse to Wyking, as he lost all Cuonzo's players after one year, so I was expecting last season to be worse than Wyking's first. And it almost was.
Everything else you said I'd agree with.
SFCityBear