SFCityBear said:
wifeisafurd said:
SFCityBear said:
Bobodeluxe said:
Judging by the comments here on another thread, Bozeman would get a lot of support from this site if he came back and continued his realistic methods.
So illegal and unethical behavior in a coach is now called "realistic"? As a society, we can't sink much lower than that. I hope it never returns to Cal. I really did not enjoy seeing my University on probation. I'll leave that to the USC's of the world.
The top four Pac programs in recent years, UofA, Oregon, UCLA and USC, all cheat, and take kids with backgrounds schools that schools like Udub, Cal or Furd would never take. Bottom line is this is a **** hole confence that doesn't attract talent anymore (we don't pay well) and the only way to compete is cheat, or in the case of Udub, Cal (under Martin) or Utah, land the occasional future NBA player. The portal and 1 year rule don't help. The days of Monty ball, where you can have a bunch of veteran players who play sophisticated basketball and win are long gone for this conferencre. Yes it can work in the ACC, for a lot of reasons. But not in the Pac. If you want sustained winning, better be like those four programs.
I disagree totally with your conclusion. Basketball history, both modern and ancient, is littered with examples of teams winning with less talent over the highly talented teams. Recruits are not robots that you can plug into the five slots on a team and expect them to play as well as a team as they are ranked individually. In fact it can be more challenging for a coach with 5 prima donna one and dones to get them to play together and not try to do it all by themselves. There is only one basketball in a game at a time, and it has to be shared. I only need to point you to this year's NCAA Final. Virginia with Tony Bennett coaching a roster with very good players, but zero one and dones, and Chris Beard with only one top 100 player on his roster, and him not even a starter, both battling for the title, with all the teams with all the one and dones in the entire country, Kentucky, Duke, Kansas, North Carolina all sitting on the sidelines as spectators. I would also mention that the year before, Villanova had a single one and done, Omari Spellman, but the other teams in the Final Four, Kansas, Michigan, and Loyola had none. I can't remember the last time Loyola had a top 100 recruit, let alone had a one and done. In 2017, UNC won with a ton of ranked players, but only a single one and done, Tony Bradley. Of the Final 4, Gonzaga had a single one and done, Zach Collins, and neither South Carolina nor Oregon had a single one and done player.
As to the PAC12, this year Washington won it, and they did not have a single one and done. ASU finished 2nd without a one and done. In 2018, Arizona won it, and had a single one and done, Andre Ayton. USC finished 2nd without a one and done. In 2017, Arizona won, and both Markkanan and Simmons were one and dones. Oregon finished 2nd, without a single one and done. In 2016, Oregon won the title, without a single one and done. Utah finished 2nd without a single one and done. This is a small sample, and all I can glean from it is that in the PAC12, maybe Sean Miller usually can't win the PAC12 without one and dones, but the other coaches seemed to find a way to do it without one and dones. If I have time, I'll do more research on this.
Basketball success might actually be moving more away from the scenario you described, and moving more toward sharp coaching with less talent. At least I hope this year's NCAA final was not a fluke.
You seem to be looking at this as one and done issue. That is not what I said, The programs that have sustained winning are the one's that cheat generally, and that the exceptions (like Udub last year as many top players are no longer considering the Pac) or Utah when they hit on the occasional big man lottery pick. I think you proved my point, by following my lead with Virginia (which I called out in the previous post, and naming Bennett. You stated with calling out teams off the top of your head about what they were and how they finished in the Pac. I think a more detailed and systematic look at the Pac champions might be more instructive (leaving out last season where other than Bol Bol there was really no five star talent as the Pac becomes a second level conference):
UofA 2017-8: 1st in conference. Starters:
Ristic: 3 star guy that actually graduated
Ayton: 5 stars one and done and 1st pick in draft
Akins: Akins 5 star who left for the NBA after the season.
Alonzo Trier: 5 star who left early. Spent most of his time on academic probation that UofA covered up by citing his disqualification time as related to injury or whatever.
Jackson-Cartwright: a 4 star who played in his senior year.
2016-7 UofA finishes first in conference. The starting line-up:
Markkanen: 5 star most rating agencies who left after the season, his second, for the NBA
Ristic: a 3 star guy that actually graduated,
Atkins: a five star who opted for the draft after his first year, came back and then left for the draft his second year
Kobe Simmons: a 5 star one and done
Kadeem Allen: a four star transfer that lasted two years
Basically the 7 foot Ristic is the only guy who played 4 years in the starters for both seasons.
Was any team not among the 4 cheaters ever in the mix for any of these guys over then maybe the 7 foot Ristic? Are any of these teams even close to any team in recent years of Cal (maybe the Brown year), Utah, Udub, ASU, OSU, WSU, Furd, Colorado? Sure, UCLA, Oregon, and USC have had similar talent levels.
2015-6 Oregon first in Pac: Starters (primary starters as Altman moved around the roster):
Bell: high 4 star, no. 100 player, left for NBA after junior season
Brooks: high 4 star, no. 59 player, left after 3 seasons
Dorsey: high 4 star and in 3 years left for the NBA
Bouchard: National JC Player of the year, 4 star and graduated to the NBA
Cook: low 4 star transfer, who graduated and played in the NBA.
Number of players that played four years at Oregon: zero. All the starters left for the NBA.
Is this team even close to any team in recent years of Cal (maybe the Brown year), Utah, Udub, ASU, OSU, WSU, Furd, Colorado? Sure, UCLA, Oregon, and USC have had similar talent levels
2014-5 UofA won the Pac. Starters:
Tarczweski: 5 star that stayed 4 years.
Ashely: mostly 5 stars and left for the NBA after 3 years.
Hollis-Jefferson: 5 stars and left in 2 years to the NBA
Johnson: 5 stars and one and done
McConnel: a transfer who played two years at UofA and then played in the NBA
How many players were at UofA for 4 years: one. Repeat the paragraphs from above.
2013-4 UCLA won with its all AAU team. Repeat and rinse the discussion of starters.
2012-3 UCLA with its all AAU team. Repeat and rinse the discussion of starters.