Uh wouldn't we take a "Ben Braun hire" all over again if we could? You wouldn't want to replicate Braun's first 6-years after the last two?
I can understand the points you are trying to make, but now you want to bring Ben Braun into the discussion, and that is a whole different subject. I think the Cal Admin did not hire Braun primarily to resurrect a losing program, but to resurrect the University's reputation by running a squeaky clean program without a hint of impropriety. If we won big under Braun, that would only be icing on the cake. The current admin wants primarily to reestablish Cal's basketball reputation, which had not been a losing one for many years until the arrival of Wyking Jones.calumnus said:
All I am saying is that as a coach, he reminds me of Ben Braun, not the Ben Braun we hired, the one we fired and Rice hired. Why compare him to Johnson? Did you hear me say we should hire Johnson? I just said that Fox's best results were with Fox's recruits and trended downward after, in a similar way Braun's best results were with Bozeman's recruits and trended down after. That 2006 Nevada team started 3 seniors and 2 juniors, with the next 2 off the bench also juniors, ie all Johnson recruits/signees.
Everything you say about Fox can be said double about Braun. Braun had FOURTEEN 20 win seasons under his belt. He took Eastern Michigan to the Sweet 16. He took Cal the Sweet 16 his first year after losing our prolific primary scorer. He won the NIT with a bunch of JC transfers. He had a winning Pac10/12 conference record and had Cal in the postseason 8 out of 12 years (I have no idea how many PAC-12 tournament games Braun won).
You complained a lot about Cuonzo's offense as I remember. Have you ever seen Fox's Georgia teams play? Again, he reminds me of Braun.
Both Braun and Fox were once hot coaching commodities, having won a lot of games in weaker leagues.
Braun accomplished a lot more at a power conference level. After being fired by Cal, he was hired by Rice for the next season.
There is a reason Fox had zero offers for a year after getting fired.
For many reasons I think it was a bad hire. That said, it is done and we will all hope for the best. He is definitely competent and people can learn and grow at any stage of their career. I am glad you are so optimistic, I hope you prove to be right on this.
SFCityBear said:I can understand the points you are trying to make, but now you want to bring Ben Braun into the discussion, and that is a whole different subject. I think the Cal Admin did not hire Braun primarily to resurrect a losing program, but to resurrect the University's reputation by running a squeaky clean program without a hint of impropriety. If we won big under Braun, that would only be icing on the cake. The current admin wants primarily to reestablish Cal's basketball reputation, which had not been a losing one for many years until the arrival of Wyking Jones.calumnus said:
All I am saying is that as a coach, he reminds me of Ben Braun, not the Ben Braun we hired, the one we fired and Rice hired. Why compare him to Johnson? Did you hear me say we should hire Johnson? I just said that Fox's best results were with Fox's recruits and trended downward after, in a similar way Braun's best results were with Bozeman's recruits and trended down after. That 2006 Nevada team started 3 seniors and 2 juniors, with the next 2 off the bench also juniors, ie all Johnson recruits/signees.
Everything you say about Fox can be said double about Braun. Braun had FOURTEEN 20 win seasons under his belt. He took Eastern Michigan to the Sweet 16. He took Cal the Sweet 16 his first year after losing our prolific primary scorer. He won the NIT with a bunch of JC transfers. He had a winning Pac10/12 conference record and had Cal in the postseason 8 out of 12 years (I have no idea how many PAC-12 tournament games Braun won).
You complained a lot about Cuonzo's offense as I remember. Have you ever seen Fox's Georgia teams play? Again, he reminds me of Braun.
Both Braun and Fox were once hot coaching commodities, having won a lot of games in weaker leagues.
Braun accomplished a lot more at a power conference level. After being fired by Cal, he was hired by Rice for the next season.
There is a reason Fox had zero offers for a year after getting fired.
For many reasons I think it was a bad hire. That said, it is done and we will all hope for the best. He is definitely competent and people can learn and grow at any stage of their career. I am glad you are so optimistic, I hope you prove to be right on this.
I compared Fox to Johnson, because I was talking about Fox at Nevada, and he had a much better record at Nevada than Johnson did. I think you meant to say, "Fox's best results were with Johnson's recruits," not with Fox's recruits. From here on, you confused me. I was talking about 2005, Fox's 1st season's roster, compared to Johnson's 2004 roster, but you want to talk about Fox's 2006 roster. Very well, let's do that: Fox's starters in 2006, his second season at Nevada, according to sports-reference.com, were Fazekas (JR), Shiloh (JR), Charlo (JR), Sessions (FR), and Kemp (SO). The rest of an 8-man rotation was Johnson (JR, a JC transfer), Bell (JR), and Burleson (SO). Fazekas, Shiloh, Kemp, and Bell were Johnson recruits. Kemp did not play for Fox in 2005, due to injury or eligiblity. The only seniors on the 2006 team were Charlo, who was a Fox recruit out of JC, and Bell, a Johnson recruit, a 7 footer who averaged 3 points and 3 rebounds and looks like he was almost irrelevant. So 3 starters were Johnson recruits, 2 were Fox's recruits, and of the rotation, Johnson and Burleson were Fox recruits and Bell a Johnson recruit.
BTW, Fox did recruit some good players at Nevada: JaVale McGee, Ramon Sessions, Luke Babbitt, and Armon Johnson. Like many coaches, he gets some, but not enough.
I was critical of Cuonzo's offense, and I was critical of Braun's offense (and his defense) as well. I haven't seen Fox's Georgia teams play. You might like this Georgia grad's view of Fox: http://section925.com/sports/2019/3/30/a-georgia-grad-lends-his-insight-on-mark-fox-californias-new-basketball-coach
I wrote in another post about not considering only Fox's Georgia record, because even though Georgia is a member of the SEC conference, their record as a program is not even as good as WSU's record in the PAC12. Georgia is a perennial doormat in the SEC. Fox was asked to establish a winning program there when the school has a losing record over their history since joining the SEC. They stink, they have nearly always stunk. Places like Georgia and WSU can be a burial ground for coaches. In Georgia's case they have a few coaches who coached there, and never got hired to coach again, maybe like our Wyking will turn out, though I wish him the best in recovering his reputation. Fox will be starting at a school which has a good basketball reputation
How do you know that "Fox had zero offers for a year after getting fired"? Did he reveal that? Isn't it possible he wanted a year off from one of the most stressful professions to get away from the game, regain his energy and enthusiasm, and decide what he wants to do with the rest of his life?
I don't feel comfortable being optimistic about a coach I know nothing much about. I guess what I am is anti-pessimistic. I just don't want to bury this guy before he gets started, which is sort of what happened with Wyking. The only optimism surrounding him in the pre-season seemed to be the administration's and his own, and very little positive, and a whole lot negative coming from the fans, and I was guilty of that as well. I want to just wait and see.
I'd aim higherGBear4Life said:
Uh wouldn't we take a "Ben Braun hire" all over again if we could?
How can you just dismiss all the years of little or no success in Georgia's history just because they didn't accept black players during those years? For most of those same years, Cal didn't accept black players either and Cal won 8 Conference championships before Newell and the first black players arrived in 1954. And only one black player, Earl Robinson was a starter in just two of Newell's four conference championships. Bob Washington was a reserve on the '59 team. Cal won all the titles before Newell, plus a Final Four appearance in 1946 with only white players, just like Georgia (and probably Washington State) had on their rosters for the same years. BTW, in 1941, WSU was 26-6, won the PCC, and lost in the NCAA Final. (I couldn't believe it either.) Georgia did not have good coaching or good recruiting throughout much of their history. I just don't think Georgia is a popular place for a young Georgia high school star to go to college and play basketball. Fox's teams were loaded with Georgia players, but very few good ones, with Caldwell-Pope the exception.calumnus said:
Georgia is not Washington State. And you cannot look at their whole history. Georgia did not even allow African Americans as students until 1961. The first African American to play basketball in the SEC was 1 player for Vanderbilt in 1968. Ronnie Hogue in 1971 was the first African American player for Georgia, later that year 3 African Americans were signed to the football team for the first time ever.
However, at this point, USC is probably a better analogy. The state of Georgia, especially Atlanta, is one of the best recruiting home grounds in the SEC or the country. The 18 year span from 1979 to 1997 under Hugh Durham and especially Tubby Smith, Georgia's first African American coach, Georgia averaged more than 19 wins per season and made the post season regularly, with a Final Four in 1983 and a Sweet 16 in 1996 (beating #1 seed Purdue and losing to #4 Syracuse in OT).
Fox did not leave Crean much and the results show it, but Crean's first recruiting class was decent (two four star players 4 of 5 from Georgia) and his incoming class is ranked #10 in the country and features 5 star shooting guard Anthony Edwards out of Atlanta, the #2 ranked player in the country, plus four 4 star players. That is 5 players in the top 100.
It simply isn't true that Georgia hindered Fox in any way. People were successful there before and will be successful after. Don't let that change your optimism though. Just because he was not successful at Georgia does not mean he won't be at Cal.
Maybe your hero Pete Newell is a good example for optimism: successful at USF (70-37) then unsuccessful at Michigan State (45-42, his final year finishing 8th in the Big 10) then coming to Cal and having great success (after a horrible first year)?
BearNakedLadies said:I'd aim higherGBear4Life said:
Uh wouldn't we take a "Ben Braun hire" all over again if we could?
annarborbear said:
There was a long line of Hall of Fame coaches lined up outside of Haas wanting to take this job. I don't understand why we didn't pick one of them instead of Fox.
GBear4Life said:
When you ask Fox-haters what Cal should have done, their lips start to flap, and then they'll inevitably concede they want a mid-major "up and comer" who is too green to have much of a track record to speak of anyways. I wasn't opposed to that route, but it's a poor argument against Fox hire.
Good thought. He is obviously a great coach, but Cal would never hire him, I believe, because of all the scandals he was involved in at Louisville. We've been there, done that, with Todd Bozeman (minus the great coach part), and Cal was a long time recovering from that unfortunate hire. Cal is on thin ice when it comes to attracting great recruits, and any scandal would kill whatever chance we might have for future recruits for some time to come.GBear4Life said:
I don't get this hate for search firms. Should every AD, let alone a new one to a power conference possess an almost unlimited network of the best candidates in every sport?
The firm identifies candidates based on criteria the AD sets. It's all the AD from there in selecting candidates to interview and select etc.
Plus, it's Cal. Otherwise, for any AD the choice would have been obvious without any help of a search firm: Rick Pitino.
An accusation in the media is often believed by many, and that belief can last forever, even when it hasn't been proved. Also sad.GBear4Life said:
Nothing was ever proven against Pitino.
Nevertheless, Pitino would be on bended knee for Cal job, and the message could be sent home to him loud and clear. He agrees, everybody's comfortable, you move forward.
But yeah, a pipe dream at Cal. Sad.
Don't get me wrong, I still think Pitino is culpable (maybe responsible is a better word) even if he had zero knowledge of any of it. If your assistants are going behind your back to make bribes and violate NCAA rules, they either don't respect you, or you hire bad character people which reflects poorly on you, or you gave their behavior your tacit endorsement.SFCityBear said:An accusation in the media is often believed by many, and that belief can last forever, even when it hasn't been proved. Also sad.GBear4Life said:
Nothing was ever proven against Pitino.
Nevertheless, Pitino would be on bended knee for Cal job, and the message could be sent home to him loud and clear. He agrees, everybody's comfortable, you move forward.
But yeah, a pipe dream at Cal. Sad.
So, I have $100 to put on an investment. I have my eye on a company that has been in business a few years. They've grown a ton. Early days. They are about ready to really make a push into the national market with the big boys. It's really risky. They could hit the market and find they just don't have a national appeal or the competitors are too strong. But they also could be on the cusp of something really good. They've done a really good job setting up their business to this point. I can get the stock cheap because no one has heard of them yet.calumnus said:BearNakedLadies said:I'd aim higherGBear4Life said:
Uh wouldn't we take a "Ben Braun hire" all over again if we could?
Exactly. I'd rather take a chance and hire an up and comer which success at a lower level and hope they can do well at a higher level and achieve great things at Cal. Georgia took that chance when they hired Fox out of Nevada. After 9 years of never getting there they fired him. We aren't hiring the up and coming Fox out of Nevada, we are hiring him a year after getting fired after 9 years of mediocrity at Georgia. It is why it was called a "head scratcher" by the pundits. Instead Georgia hired a coach who has had success at a higher level, Tom Crean, who just brought in the #10 recruiting class in the country.
Just to set the record straight, I did not ever say or imply that Mark Fox had a "great" record at Georgia. I was trying to point out facts that would counter your claim that Fox "spent the last 9 years not achieving anything." I pointed out that Fox had achieved some things at Georgia, not enough things for you and me and many other fans, but they were achievements.calumnus said:annarborbear said:
There was a long line of Hall of Fame coaches lined up outside of Haas wanting to take this job. I don't understand why we didn't pick one of them instead of Fox.
I know you are being facetious, but who knows who we might have come up with if we actually did an extensive search instead of just hiring one of two (?) candidates presented by the search firm after a two day search?
Anyway, it is a done deal. No use arguing against the process and decision at this point. I'd rather be optimistic myself and don't like being on this side of the equation prior to the season so I will hold my tongue when SFCity and others defend the hire by pointing to his "great" record at Georgia given Georgia"s history before 1975 or how "at least he is better than Wyking" or "nobody better would ever come to Cal and take our $8.5 million plus incentives."
I will shut up until we have some actual results on the court to discuss.
Go Bears!