calumnus said:
Northside91 said:
stu said:
In my minimally informed opinion Bradley is our only high major talent. Brown and Thorpe could be, or not, too soon to tell. It's tough to evaluate the three international freshies but it didn't seem like we were competing with top programs for them. Harris-Dyson and Gordon are still mysteries. To me the others look like mid major talents.
Anyone want to predict how much is Fox likely to get out of this level of talent?
If his name were Wilcox, Cal fans would be extolling his virtues in the face of marginal results and mediocre recruiting. Looks and personality probably have something to do with it, but the opposing group think on these two men strikes me as odd.
Wouldn't be at all surprised if Fox exceeds expectations in his first season, while Wilcox falls short. Also wouldn't be surprised that, if after all that, fan opinion on these two men remains more or less the same.
The difference between hiring a young, up and coming assistant coach and hiring the long term coach of another program where he was fired for producing mediocre to poor results and spent a year unemployed. Though the level of fandom for Wilcox approaches early Tedford, while his record so far is more like Holmoe, I am reminded of how strongly Holmoe was supported on these boards. Fox is probably more analogous to Dykes, or when Rice hired Braun. With the older guy you expect similar results as his track record suggests. With the younger guy you can expect/hope he corrects mistakes and improves. Of course, it doesn't have to be that way. Young guys can be stubborn and old guys can change.
I don't disagree with your analogies, but I do have a problem with the implications in your characterization of Mark Fox. I think you make out Fox to be worse than he was. He did have some success at Georgia, not consistently (not many coaches are consistent these days, because so much depends on recruiting and chemistry), but the success was there at times. First of all, Fox took over a team that was 12-20, an awful season, and he took over for Dennis Felton. The last time Georgia was any good was under Jim Harrick in his last two seasons (out of 4 seasons) one of which where he won the SEC East. Felton took over and had a losing record 84-91 over 6 seasons. He would have lost more, except he was fired mid-season in 2009. He never produced one nationally ranked team, but he made the NCAA once.
Fox took over Felton's 12-20 team, a team that lost two starters to graduation, including the team's leading scorer, recruited no top 100 ranked recruits, but still managed to achieve a 21-12 record in his second season, a national ranking (24), and an NCAA bid, his first of two at Georgia. He turned the program around in two seasons. That is exactly what I expect him to do at Cal, based on his prior history.
The following years at Georgia were up and down for Fox. He recruited only 3 or 4 top 100 ranked recruits over the next 7 seasons, which is not enough to make serious noise in the SEC. Even so, he did have three 20-win seasons in a row from 2014 to 2016, and a 19 win season in 2017.
If you look at the SEC teams in Fox's last season before he was fired, they place EIGHT teams in the NCAA tournament, while Georgia finished 11th. If you look at top 100 recruits, most of the teams in the SEC had several of them on the roster that year, while Fox had only the soph Hammonds and the freshman Crump, and Crump did not play a lot. Those SEC teams that year were loaded. Auburn and Tennessee tied for the regular season champion, and Kentucky won the SEC tournament. That is what Fox had to go up against. The PAC12 is not that strong a league right now, so I expect Fox to exceed expectations at Cal.
It would appear that Fox's problem at Georgia might have been his recruiting. Maybe Georgia is a tough place to recruit, or Georgia the school might not be a desirable destination for recruits. Harrick and Felton did not do much better than Fox in that regard at Georgia. Tom Crean, a well-respected coach took over Fox's 2018 team (18-15) which lost two starters, including the leading scorer, but still had two top 100 recruits, and Crean's 2019 team went 11-21 and finished 13th in the SEC. Crean has landed the best recruiting class in Georgia school history, so we shall see how he does in the years ahead. Clearly, Fox has to raise his success level with recruits. Hopefully, more good players will want to come to Cal than came to Georgia when Fox was there.
But to characterize Fox as mediocre to poor, well, I can see the mediocre or a kinder word is average, but poor? I just wouldn't go that far. I also don't think that being unemployed for a year may be a negative. Lots of coaches have had that happen, and still turn out to be OK when they returned to the game. It could be that no one wanted him, or no really attractive offer appeared, or maybe he just wanted time off from the pressure cooker that is the life of an NCAA coach. Time to think things over, what he did wrong and right, and what to do differently, if anything. I think Montgomery was unemployed as a coach when Cal hired him. Initially, I think Fox will be all right for Cal, because we can't go much lower, the league is not strong, and he can coach, as shown in his winning seasons at Georgia and Nevada.
SFCityBear