stu said:
Spoiler for those who don't like to scroll: At the bottom, filed under "The Head-Scratcher".
One positive: "There's basically nowhere to go but up, at least."
Robocheme said:
I believe we ended up in the *** category
https://www.si.com/college-basketball
Well other than Kyle Smith to Wasu. He's an up & comer because he beat Stanfurd? Heck, Jones beat Stanfurd...at Stanfurd...twice!HKBear97! said:Robocheme said:
I believe we ended up in the *** category
https://www.si.com/college-basketball
Thanks for sharing. Every single hire on that listed sounded better than ours.
Civil Bear said:Well other than Kyle Smith to Wasu. He's an up & comer because he beat Stanfurd? Heck, Jones beat Stanfurd...at Stanfurd...twice!HKBear97! said:Robocheme said:
I believe we ended up in the *** category
https://www.si.com/college-basketball
Thanks for sharing. Every single hire on that listed sounded better than ours.
Call me when he makes it to the NIT.tsubamoto2001 said:
Not saying Smith is going to succeed at Wazzu (it's a coaches graveyard for almost everyone...which goes to show you how special Tony Bennett is), but he's a reasonably good hire for them.
Since USF started up their program again in the '80's, no one was been able to have much success there. Jim Brovelli, Phil Mathews, Jessie Evans, Rex Walters...all of them failed. Remember, USF has a great basketball history prior to the early '80's, when they self-imposed the Dealth Penalty on their program. They had gone to 8 NCAA's in 11 seasons prior to shutting down. And Smith winning 20 games 3 seasons in a row is no small feat, especially with the WCC as strong as it has ever been.
And at Columbia, Smith had been their most successful coach in a long time. They've only won more than 20 games in a season twice since 1970, and both of them were under Smith.
So while lot has to go right for him to succeed at Wazzu, I think he's a comparatively better hire for them than Fox is for us.Civil Bear said:Well other than Kyle Smith to Wasu. He's an up & comer because he beat Stanfurd? Heck, Jones beat Stanfurd...at Stanfurd...twice!HKBear97! said:Robocheme said:
I believe we ended up in the *** category
https://www.si.com/college-basketball
Thanks for sharing. Every single hire on that listed sounded better than ours.
Three stars, that's pretty good right ? smhRobocheme said:
I believe we ended up in the *** category
https://www.si.com/college-basketball
Quote:
Anderson was fired by Arkansas last month after eight seasons as head coach of the Razorbacks. During his time in Fayetteville, Anderson led Arkansas to the NCAA tournament three times. Prior to taking over at Arkansas, Anderson spent five seasons at Missouri, with which he went to three NCAA tournaments -- including an Elite Eight run in 2009. Anderson also was the head coach at UAB for four seasons, winning at least 20 games in all four seasons and advancing to the NCAA tournament three times.
tsubamoto2001 said:stu said:
Spoiler for those who don't like to scroll: At the bottom, filed under "The Head-Scratcher".
One positive: "There's basically nowhere to go but up, at least."
"Head-Scratcher" is a pretty accurate description for this mess. Jim "Search Firm" Knowlton should be put on notice if this hire bombs.
BearSD said:
Here's another hire that makes Knowlton's hire look worse:
St. John's is also about to hire a coach who was recently fired from an SEC head coaching job.
But the guy they are going to hire, Mike Anderson, has had much more coaching success at the top level than Mark Fox...Quote:
Anderson was fired by Arkansas last month after eight seasons as head coach of the Razorbacks. During his time in Fayetteville, Anderson led Arkansas to the NCAA tournament three times. Prior to taking over at Arkansas, Anderson spent five seasons at Missouri, with which he went to three NCAA tournaments -- including an Elite Eight run in 2009. Anderson also was the head coach at UAB for four seasons, winning at least 20 games in all four seasons and advancing to the NCAA tournament three times.
Fox's last five seasons at Georgia: NIT, NCAA, NIT, NIT, no postseason.KoreAmBear said:His run at Arkansas seems very similar to Fox' run at Georgia. Both were trending down, and both were fired, although our man didn't have a college job for a year.BearSD said:
Here's another hire that makes Knowlton's hire look worse:
St. John's is also about to hire a coach who was recently fired from an SEC head coaching job.
But the guy they are going to hire, Mike Anderson, has had much more coaching success at the top level than Mark Fox...Quote:
Anderson was fired by Arkansas last month after eight seasons as head coach of the Razorbacks. During his time in Fayetteville, Anderson led Arkansas to the NCAA tournament three times. Prior to taking over at Arkansas, Anderson spent five seasons at Missouri, with which he went to three NCAA tournaments -- including an Elite Eight run in 2009. Anderson also was the head coach at UAB for four seasons, winning at least 20 games in all four seasons and advancing to the NCAA tournament three times.
Agree that you can't have it both ways. Personally, I would like a coach that plays by the same rules as their peers, not any more of a risk taker and not any less. As I see it, if everyone playing a game is "cheating" besides you, then you're just the idiot that hasn't been able to adapt to the new way of playing the game.socaltownie said:
OK. Look. Bottom line is that Fox "fits" the vision that some (many?) have for Cal. It isn't binary but it is close - do you want a coach that wins or do you want a coach that plays within the rules and gets the kids to graduate? I am frankly sick and tired of Cal fans thinking that you can have both.
If the shoe scandal (and the North Carolina debacle) have proven anything it is that the MODERN era (aka if I hear about Pete Newel's 1960 team I may throw my laptop through the wall) most of the kids that get you over the hump don't really CARE about a Bachelors degree. Some of the most important parts of the machine don't really want to be in college ANYWAY - forced to be there for the NCAA rule.
And honestly we know that (or you should) because of what Coach K. has done. For a WHILE he rejected the idea of one and dones. He was going to "do it the Duke way." But because he is a lot smarter about basketball than any of us he understood the talent vs. coached up dynamic as well as what these kids really wanted. Ergo Duke becoming, along with Kentucky, a one and done machine.
Now honestly am not sure where I come down on this spectrum. As a "townie" I am not emotionally invested as some of you in the ideal vision of Cal as a pristine bastion in a world of corruption. But I get that if you want a program that will not cheat and get the kids through school and likely finish 7 and 11 every year in conference Fox is your man.
#teamhope
tsubamoto2001 said:
Jim "Search Firm" Knowlton
Yeah.pierrezo said:tsubamoto2001 said:
Jim "Search Firm" Knowlton
Ha. Love the nickname.
You do realize that while that might be the job description of most AD's it isn't the description of the Cal AD. There are clearly people with juice (read $$$) that care deeply about "aquatics" and are very pleased that the AD focuses attention there. C'est la vi.stu said:Yeah.pierrezo said:tsubamoto2001 said:
Jim "Search Firm" Knowlton
Ha. Love the nickname.
IMHO the AD's responsibilities break down approximately:
60% make sure football is doing well
30% make sure men's basketball is doing well
5% make sure women's basketball is doing well
5% make sure everything else is doing well
So I'd say relying on a search firm to pick your short list is abdicating the most important part of 30% of your job.
There's your 5%.socaltownie said:You do realize that while that might be the job description of most AD's it isn't the description of the Cal AD. There are clearly people with juice (read $$$) that care deeply about "aquatics" and are very pleased that the AD focuses attention there. C'est la vi.stu said:Yeah.pierrezo said:tsubamoto2001 said:
Jim "Search Firm" Knowlton
Ha. Love the nickname.
IMHO the AD's responsibilities break down approximately:
60% make sure football is doing well
30% make sure men's basketball is doing well
5% make sure women's basketball is doing well
5% make sure everything else is doing well
So I'd say relying on a search firm to pick your short list is abdicating the most important part of 30% of your job.
As in 95% for aquatics and 5% for everything else?bluesaxe said:There's your 5%.socaltownie said:
You do realize that while that might be the job description of most AD's it isn't the description of the Cal AD. There are clearly people with juice (read $$$) that care deeply about "aquatics" and are very pleased that the AD focuses attention there. C'est la vi.
tsubamoto2001 said:
Not saying Smith is going to succeed at Wazzu (it's a coaches graveyard for almost everyone...which goes to show you how special Tony Bennett is), but he's a reasonably good hire for them.
Since USF started up their program again in the '80's, no one was been able to have much success there. Jim Brovelli, Phil Mathews, Jessie Evans, Rex Walters...all of them failed. Remember, USF has a great basketball history prior to the early '80's, when they self-imposed the Dealth Penalty on their program. They had gone to 8 NCAA's in 11 seasons prior to shutting down. And Smith winning 20 games 3 seasons in a row is no small feat, especially with the WCC as strong as it has ever been.
And at Columbia, Smith had been their most successful coach in a long time. They've only won more than 20 games in a season twice since 1970, and both of them were under Smith.
So while lot has to go right for him to succeed at Wazzu, I think he's a comparatively better hire for them than Fox is for us.Civil Bear said:Well other than Kyle Smith to Wasu. He's an up & comer because he beat Stanfurd? Heck, Jones beat Stanfurd...at Stanfurd...twice!HKBear97! said:Robocheme said:
I believe we ended up in the *** category
https://www.si.com/college-basketball
Thanks for sharing. Every single hire on that listed sounded better than ours.
Almost all coaches that get fired are trending down, but he was far more successful than Fox. Not a good comparison at all.KoreAmBear said:BearSD said:
Here's another hire that makes Knowlton's hire look worse:
St. John's is also about to hire a coach who was recently fired from an SEC head coaching job.
But the guy they are going to hire, Mike Anderson, has had much more coaching success at the top level than Mark Fox...Quote:
Anderson was fired by Arkansas last month after eight seasons as head coach of the Razorbacks. During his time in Fayetteville, Anderson led Arkansas to the NCAA tournament three times. Prior to taking over at Arkansas, Anderson spent five seasons at Missouri, with which he went to three NCAA tournaments -- including an Elite Eight run in 2009. Anderson also was the head coach at UAB for four seasons, winning at least 20 games in all four seasons and advancing to the NCAA tournament three times.
His run at Arkansas seems very similar to Fox' run at Georgia. Both were trending down, and both were fired, although our man didn't have a college job for a year.
? I can't believe I'm making a case for the guy, but didn't Fox do just that at Georgia before plateauing?calumnus said:tsubamoto2001 said:
Not saying Smith is going to succeed at Wazzu (it's a coaches graveyard for almost everyone...which goes to show you how special Tony Bennett is), but he's a reasonably good hire for them.
Since USF started up their program again in the '80's, no one was been able to have much success there. Jim Brovelli, Phil Mathews, Jessie Evans, Rex Walters...all of them failed. Remember, USF has a great basketball history prior to the early '80's, when they self-imposed the Dealth Penalty on their program. They had gone to 8 NCAA's in 11 seasons prior to shutting down. And Smith winning 20 games 3 seasons in a row is no small feat, especially with the WCC as strong as it has ever been.
And at Columbia, Smith had been their most successful coach in a long time. They've only won more than 20 games in a season twice since 1970, and both of them were under Smith.
So while lot has to go right for him to succeed at Wazzu, I think he's a comparatively better hire for them than Fox is for us.Civil Bear said:Well other than Kyle Smith to Wasu. He's an up & comer because he beat Stanfurd? Heck, Jones beat Stanfurd...at Stanfurd...twice!HKBear97! said:Robocheme said:
I believe we ended up in the *** category
https://www.si.com/college-basketball
Thanks for sharing. Every single hire on that listed sounded better than ours.
Smith is a program builder. Columbia (my other alma mater) was horrible forever. USF has been since they revived the basketball program from self imposed death. He is a great tactician and motivator. He has not yet had the chance to coach at a Cal or a Georgia, so you cannot make an apples to apples comparison. However there is nothing in Fox's resume that suggests he can take over a team at the bottom of the conference and get them to the top half of the conference.
I'd rather take a chance on an up and coming possible great coach than settle for a coach that has so far given a lot of evidence over many years he is not. However, there is still s chance he will exceed his past. I will be rooting for him to.
Socaltownie,socaltownie said:
OK. Look. Bottom line is that Fox "fits" the vision that some (many?) have for Cal. It isn't binary but it is close - do you want a coach that wins or do you want a coach that plays within the rules and gets the kids to graduate? I am frankly sick and tired of Cal fans thinking that you can have both.
If the shoe scandal (and the North Carolina debacle) have proven anything it is that the MODERN era (aka if I hear about Pete Newel's 1960 team I may throw my laptop through the wall) most of the kids that get you over the hump don't really CARE about a Bachelors degree. Some of the most important parts of the machine don't really want to be in college ANYWAY - forced to be there for the NCAA rule.
And honestly we know that (or you should) because of what Coach K. has done. For a WHILE he rejected the idea of one and dones. He was going to "do it the Duke way." But because he is a lot smarter about basketball than any of us he understood the talent vs. coached up dynamic as well as what these kids really wanted. Ergo Duke becoming, along with Kentucky, a one and done machine.
Now honestly am not sure where I come down on this spectrum. As a "townie" I am not emotionally invested as some of you in the ideal vision of Cal as a pristine bastion in a world of corruption. But I get that if you want a program that will not cheat and get the kids through school and likely finish 7 and 11 every year in conference Fox is your man.
#teamhope
Civil Bear said:? I can't believe I'm making a case for the guy, but didn't Fox do just that at Georgia before plateauing?calumnus said:tsubamoto2001 said:
Not saying Smith is going to succeed at Wazzu (it's a coaches graveyard for almost everyone...which goes to show you how special Tony Bennett is), but he's a reasonably good hire for them.
Since USF started up their program again in the '80's, no one was been able to have much success there. Jim Brovelli, Phil Mathews, Jessie Evans, Rex Walters...all of them failed. Remember, USF has a great basketball history prior to the early '80's, when they self-imposed the Dealth Penalty on their program. They had gone to 8 NCAA's in 11 seasons prior to shutting down. And Smith winning 20 games 3 seasons in a row is no small feat, especially with the WCC as strong as it has ever been.
And at Columbia, Smith had been their most successful coach in a long time. They've only won more than 20 games in a season twice since 1970, and both of them were under Smith.
So while lot has to go right for him to succeed at Wazzu, I think he's a comparatively better hire for them than Fox is for us.Civil Bear said:Well other than Kyle Smith to Wasu. He's an up & comer because he beat Stanfurd? Heck, Jones beat Stanfurd...at Stanfurd...twice!HKBear97! said:Robocheme said:
I believe we ended up in the *** category
https://www.si.com/college-basketball
Thanks for sharing. Every single hire on that listed sounded better than ours.
Smith is a program builder. Columbia (my other alma mater) was horrible forever. USF has been since they revived the basketball program from self imposed death. He is a great tactician and motivator. He has not yet had the chance to coach at a Cal or a Georgia, so you cannot make an apples to apples comparison. However there is nothing in Fox's resume that suggests he can take over a team at the bottom of the conference and get them to the top half of the conference.
I'd rather take a chance on an up and coming possible great coach than settle for a coach that has so far given a lot of evidence over many years he is not. However, there is still s chance he will exceed his past. I will be rooting for him to.
Take a chance on an up and coming great coach? Wouldn't an up and coming great coach have gotten to at least to the NIT in his 9-year career? There couldn't be many other hires that would have upset me more than the Fox hire, but Smith would have been one of them.
Here is why I think this fails the logic test.SFCityBear said:Socaltownie,socaltownie said:
OK. Look. Bottom line is that Fox "fits" the vision that some (many?) have for Cal. It isn't binary but it is close - do you want a coach that wins or do you want a coach that plays within the rules and gets the kids to graduate? I am frankly sick and tired of Cal fans thinking that you can have both.
If the shoe scandal (and the North Carolina debacle) have proven anything it is that the MODERN era (aka if I hear about Pete Newel's 1960 team I may throw my laptop through the wall) most of the kids that get you over the hump don't really CARE about a Bachelors degree. Some of the most important parts of the machine don't really want to be in college ANYWAY - forced to be there for the NCAA rule.
And honestly we know that (or you should) because of what Coach K. has done. For a WHILE he rejected the idea of one and dones. He was going to "do it the Duke way." But because he is a lot smarter about basketball than any of us he understood the talent vs. coached up dynamic as well as what these kids really wanted. Ergo Duke becoming, along with Kentucky, a one and done machine.
Now honestly am not sure where I come down on this spectrum. As a "townie" I am not emotionally invested as some of you in the ideal vision of Cal as a pristine bastion in a world of corruption. But I get that if you want a program that will not cheat and get the kids through school and likely finish 7 and 11 every year in conference Fox is your man.
#teamhope
You are one of our best posters, so I hate seeing you start to go all cynical about basketball and Cal basketball. I understand it. The game itself has (IMO) been greatly affected by the money which can be generated off the names of players and hoopla of the NCAA. Coaching contracts and sports equipment contracts, and more all leads toward more schools chasing the players who can bring them dollars.
But you have lived long enough to know that most things in life are not night and day, or black and white, with only two possible choices. Much of basketball is not an either/or choice either you go all in for one and dones, or you accept mediocrity and go more for coaching players to get better and put a decent product on the floor, while (in Cal's case) maintaining a stellar academic reputation, with an eye to student athletes being held to an academic standard. Recruiting violations not tolerated.
The area in between these two approaches is gray. Several different shades of gray. And that is where most teams find themselves. There would be many Cal fans who insist that Mark Fox is at the low end of gray. The question is: Can coaches and programs from the gray area win? I think you just saw it last month: Two teams who are not Duke or Kentucky teed it up for the National Championship. Neither team had even ONE single one-and-done player on their roster. Each team had only one freshman who got major minutes during the season. Tech had Kyler Edwards, a frosh who was 7th man, in terms of minutes. Tech had only two top 100 ranked recruits, one who did not play and Brandone Francis #32 who was their 6th man, in terms of minutes, and did not start.
Virginia had 5 top 100 rated recruits, but none was rated higher than #30, and none was a freshman. Only one freshman, Kihei Clark a 3-star recruit, ranked #324 by 247 Sports, did get major minutes, and an argument could be made that he was their best player. (By the way, where was Wyking Jones on this kid, who was from SoCal? Clark did not receive a single offer from the PAC12!) Yes, a number of Virginia players have declared for the draft, but none were freshman one-and-dones.
And just how good were Kentucky and Duke, with all their one-and-dones? In the last 20 years, Duke made the NCAA Final only 3 times, winning all 3. Kentucky made the final only 2 times, winning one title. That is a lot of investment and a lot of one-and-dones for not a great result. Most of the time, these teams get into the tournament, win a few games, and go home. Most of the time, you get to see your one-and-done players play for you, but you don't win a championship, which for me is what basketball is, or should be all about. Players playing together to win a championship. The only thing that counts for me is the NCAA title, the PAC12 regular season title, and the PAC12 tournament title, in that order. Everything short of that is a loss of some kind. I would much rather see Cal coach and play like Tony Bennett's or Chris Beard's teams, emphasize defense, recruit top 100 players like they do, with an eye to finding 4-star and 3-stars like Kihei Clark, than I would see Cal invest a ton in a coach who focuses on offense and chasing one-and-dones on the recruiting trail. Something about underdogs I like, and the way basketball is going now, I'm not sure Virginia and Texas Tech and more like them are not the wave of the future.
Socal. I'm rapidly approaching 50. I was born into a Cal family and have followed Cal sports since before I was 5. All of my life, when we suck I have heard the "we can't compete with the big boys, they cheat, different priorities, blah, blah blah." Yet, on the rare occasion when the athletic department is not run by morons or the morons luck into hiring the right guy to run our football or basketball program, we succeed. Are we ever going to be Alabama in football or Duke in basketball? Almost assuredly not. Can we be Monty led Cal in basketball and Tedford led Cal in football? Undoubtedly yes. Many hoped that Tedford demonstrated that the right leadership could lead to success. They swore up and down that we would never go back to the old Cal way of thinking now that it was demonstrated we could succeed. Yet we hit some adversity and boom, back to same arguments from the 70's, 80's and 90's. They were bullshyte excuses then and they are bullshyte excuses now.socaltownie said:Here is why I think this fails the logic test.SFCityBear said:Socaltownie,socaltownie said:
OK. Look. Bottom line is that Fox "fits" the vision that some (many?) have for Cal. It isn't binary but it is close - do you want a coach that wins or do you want a coach that plays within the rules and gets the kids to graduate? I am frankly sick and tired of Cal fans thinking that you can have both.
If the shoe scandal (and the North Carolina debacle) have proven anything it is that the MODERN era (aka if I hear about Pete Newel's 1960 team I may throw my laptop through the wall) most of the kids that get you over the hump don't really CARE about a Bachelors degree. Some of the most important parts of the machine don't really want to be in college ANYWAY - forced to be there for the NCAA rule.
And honestly we know that (or you should) because of what Coach K. has done. For a WHILE he rejected the idea of one and dones. He was going to "do it the Duke way." But because he is a lot smarter about basketball than any of us he understood the talent vs. coached up dynamic as well as what these kids really wanted. Ergo Duke becoming, along with Kentucky, a one and done machine.
Now honestly am not sure where I come down on this spectrum. As a "townie" I am not emotionally invested as some of you in the ideal vision of Cal as a pristine bastion in a world of corruption. But I get that if you want a program that will not cheat and get the kids through school and likely finish 7 and 11 every year in conference Fox is your man.
#teamhope
You are one of our best posters, so I hate seeing you start to go all cynical about basketball and Cal basketball. I understand it. The game itself has (IMO) been greatly affected by the money which can be generated off the names of players and hoopla of the NCAA. Coaching contracts and sports equipment contracts, and more all leads toward more schools chasing the players who can bring them dollars.
But you have lived long enough to know that most things in life are not night and day, or black and white, with only two possible choices. Much of basketball is not an either/or choice either you go all in for one and dones, or you accept mediocrity and go more for coaching players to get better and put a decent product on the floor, while (in Cal's case) maintaining a stellar academic reputation, with an eye to student athletes being held to an academic standard. Recruiting violations not tolerated.
The area in between these two approaches is gray. Several different shades of gray. And that is where most teams find themselves. There would be many Cal fans who insist that Mark Fox is at the low end of gray. The question is: Can coaches and programs from the gray area win? I think you just saw it last month: Two teams who are not Duke or Kentucky teed it up for the National Championship. Neither team had even ONE single one-and-done player on their roster. Each team had only one freshman who got major minutes during the season. Tech had Kyler Edwards, a frosh who was 7th man, in terms of minutes. Tech had only two top 100 ranked recruits, one who did not play and Brandone Francis #32 who was their 6th man, in terms of minutes, and did not start.
Virginia had 5 top 100 rated recruits, but none was rated higher than #30, and none was a freshman. Only one freshman, Kihei Clark a 3-star recruit, ranked #324 by 247 Sports, did get major minutes, and an argument could be made that he was their best player. (By the way, where was Wyking Jones on this kid, who was from SoCal? Clark did not receive a single offer from the PAC12!) Yes, a number of Virginia players have declared for the draft, but none were freshman one-and-dones.
And just how good were Kentucky and Duke, with all their one-and-dones? In the last 20 years, Duke made the NCAA Final only 3 times, winning all 3. Kentucky made the final only 2 times, winning one title. That is a lot of investment and a lot of one-and-dones for not a great result. Most of the time, these teams get into the tournament, win a few games, and go home. Most of the time, you get to see your one-and-done players play for you, but you don't win a championship, which for me is what basketball is, or should be all about. Players playing together to win a championship. The only thing that counts for me is the NCAA title, the PAC12 regular season title, and the PAC12 tournament title, in that order. Everything short of that is a loss of some kind. I would much rather see Cal coach and play like Tony Bennett's or Chris Beard's teams, emphasize defense, recruit top 100 players like they do, with an eye to finding 4-star and 3-stars like Kihei Clark, than I would see Cal invest a ton in a coach who focuses on offense and chasing one-and-dones on the recruiting trail. Something about underdogs I like, and the way basketball is going now, I'm not sure Virginia and Texas Tech and more like them are not the wave of the future.
Assumption: Duke can build its program anyway it wants to
Assumption: Coach K is smarter than either you or me when it comes to Basketball
Observation: Coach K has decided to go "one and dones" sprinkled with a few senior leaders
Conclusion: The best way to succeed in the modern environment is with one and dones.
The only thing the media and most people care about are:SFCityBear said:
The only thing that counts for me is the NCAA title, the PAC12 regular season title, and the PAC12 tournament title, in that order. Everything short of that is a loss of some kind.
Your definition of logic leaves out much, and you leave out assumptions that don't fit your conclusion.socaltownie said:Here is why I think this fails the logic test.SFCityBear said:Socaltownie,socaltownie said:
OK. Look. Bottom line is that Fox "fits" the vision that some (many?) have for Cal. It isn't binary but it is close - do you want a coach that wins or do you want a coach that plays within the rules and gets the kids to graduate? I am frankly sick and tired of Cal fans thinking that you can have both.
If the shoe scandal (and the North Carolina debacle) have proven anything it is that the MODERN era (aka if I hear about Pete Newel's 1960 team I may throw my laptop through the wall) most of the kids that get you over the hump don't really CARE about a Bachelors degree. Some of the most important parts of the machine don't really want to be in college ANYWAY - forced to be there for the NCAA rule.
And honestly we know that (or you should) because of what Coach K. has done. For a WHILE he rejected the idea of one and dones. He was going to "do it the Duke way." But because he is a lot smarter about basketball than any of us he understood the talent vs. coached up dynamic as well as what these kids really wanted. Ergo Duke becoming, along with Kentucky, a one and done machine.
Now honestly am not sure where I come down on this spectrum. As a "townie" I am not emotionally invested as some of you in the ideal vision of Cal as a pristine bastion in a world of corruption. But I get that if you want a program that will not cheat and get the kids through school and likely finish 7 and 11 every year in conference Fox is your man.
#teamhope
You are one of our best posters, so I hate seeing you start to go all cynical about basketball and Cal basketball. I understand it. The game itself has (IMO) been greatly affected by the money which can be generated off the names of players and hoopla of the NCAA. Coaching contracts and sports equipment contracts, and more all leads toward more schools chasing the players who can bring them dollars.
But you have lived long enough to know that most things in life are not night and day, or black and white, with only two possible choices. Much of basketball is not an either/or choice either you go all in for one and dones, or you accept mediocrity and go more for coaching players to get better and put a decent product on the floor, while (in Cal's case) maintaining a stellar academic reputation, with an eye to student athletes being held to an academic standard. Recruiting violations not tolerated.
The area in between these two approaches is gray. Several different shades of gray. And that is where most teams find themselves. There would be many Cal fans who insist that Mark Fox is at the low end of gray. The question is: Can coaches and programs from the gray area win? I think you just saw it last month: Two teams who are not Duke or Kentucky teed it up for the National Championship. Neither team had even ONE single one-and-done player on their roster. Each team had only one freshman who got major minutes during the season. Tech had Kyler Edwards, a frosh who was 7th man, in terms of minutes. Tech had only two top 100 ranked recruits, one who did not play and Brandone Francis #32 who was their 6th man, in terms of minutes, and did not start.
Virginia had 5 top 100 rated recruits, but none was rated higher than #30, and none was a freshman. Only one freshman, Kihei Clark a 3-star recruit, ranked #324 by 247 Sports, did get major minutes, and an argument could be made that he was their best player. (By the way, where was Wyking Jones on this kid, who was from SoCal? Clark did not receive a single offer from the PAC12!) Yes, a number of Virginia players have declared for the draft, but none were freshman one-and-dones.
And just how good were Kentucky and Duke, with all their one-and-dones? In the last 20 years, Duke made the NCAA Final only 3 times, winning all 3. Kentucky made the final only 2 times, winning one title. That is a lot of investment and a lot of one-and-dones for not a great result. Most of the time, these teams get into the tournament, win a few games, and go home. Most of the time, you get to see your one-and-done players play for you, but you don't win a championship, which for me is what basketball is, or should be all about. Players playing together to win a championship. The only thing that counts for me is the NCAA title, the PAC12 regular season title, and the PAC12 tournament title, in that order. Everything short of that is a loss of some kind. I would much rather see Cal coach and play like Tony Bennett's or Chris Beard's teams, emphasize defense, recruit top 100 players like they do, with an eye to finding 4-star and 3-stars like Kihei Clark, than I would see Cal invest a ton in a coach who focuses on offense and chasing one-and-dones on the recruiting trail. Something about underdogs I like, and the way basketball is going now, I'm not sure Virginia and Texas Tech and more like them are not the wave of the future.
Assumption: Duke can build its program anyway it wants to
Assumption: Coach K is smarter than either you or me when it comes to Basketball
Observation: Coach K has decided to go "one and dones" sprinkled with a few senior leaders
Conclusion: The best way to succeed in the modern environment is with one and dones.
I would argue as well that one of our problems is that we can't seem to make up our mind whether we should pursue the one and dones.SFCityBear said:
Cal's problem is not that we don't focus on one and dones, but that we don't do a good job of locating the Tony Bennetts and Chris Beards and hire them before someone else does.
Dude is a loose cannon. I still think Eran Ganot is a better coach than him. He just has a disadvantage in recruiting kids to Hawaii.SonomanA1 said:
I clicked on the SI link and another link in the article and saw this:
Replying to @johncanzanobft
Uc Irvine players confronted coach Turner this morning in the team hotel on the news he was a candidate for the opening at Cal. He responded "you think I'd leave Irvine for a crap hole like Berkeley?" Everyone laughed. A source tells Husky Sports Blog
4:13 PM - 24 Mar 2019
Maybe some coaches just don't like Berkeley.