socaltownie said:
bluesaxe said:
socaltownie said:
bluesaxe said:
There's a big difference between a team with second tier players who are experienced and in depth vs. a team with one or two players who have "serious talent" but not the experience or depth. A good coach can take the first and make it seriously competitive. A bad coach will waste the second, and probably won't manage to keep adding the same kinds of players as they leave in one or two years. It's not like we have the choice between building up a program with more talent, more depth and more experience or just going with five stars. The first path is about our only hope right now to fix this program. It takes patience that obviously is in short supply these days.
No one is arguing for your last example. And I'm not arguing that we got the right guy, but given that we got that guy I think that's the path forward that has a chance of reviving this corpse.
That just is so not generally true in the P5. Sure. on RARE occasions you get a virginia. Many years you do not - instead watching teams with Soph and Frosh that are NBA talent make it to the second weekend.
Look, I GET that this narrative is really frustrating for the blue haired cal fans to lean into. But it is the bitter reality of the modern game. You gotta have kids that are capable of getting drafted to be able to get over the hump.
(And back away from your keyboard before you type "But what about Butler!!!" The issue is the P5. You gotta go, a MINIMUM of 12 and 4 in conference to get off the seeds of death and, in the modern world of the pods, a really crappy draw where you play the 1-4 on their home turf. The Butlers of the world can steal a game or 2 in december to get their RPI up and then dominate leagues WITHOUT NBA talent. P5s, however, play nearly every week a team (or 2) with at least 1-2 kids on the opposing roster who have a shot at the show.......well, except if you are playing the Bears this year ;-)
I think you're confusing what I said with something you thought I said. We aren't trying to get over a hump here. We're trying to get out of a hole. This isn't a question of getting to the second weekend, it's how to even get to the point where there's a shot at the tourney. Do you really think you can just hire a coach who will bring in some NBA level freshmen and make magic happen immediate? This program has had two consecutive 8-win seasons and was left with a bare roster. Again. There's no practice facility. The student body isn't engaged, attendance is pathetic. Academics are required. And even if such a miracle occurred wouldn't that same coach end up leaving?
We have the coach we have for at least three years most likely. We need a foundation for someone to build on and to recognize that there are no quick fixes here. So getting guys who aren't headed to the NBA as freshmen or sophs but who might get there or play pro ball internationally after three or four years with good coaching seems like a more realistic path for now. And you can win 20+ games and get into the tournament with those types of players, which puts you in position to make a more legit pitch to select high-level talent who might have a reason to want to go to Cal, particularly local kids like Kidd and Rabb or guys who don't mind leaving the beaten path. But you don't go from nowhere to being top level in a year or two.
I guess I could mention that we had four NBA draft picks and a bad game coach in 2016 and still didn't get past game one of the tourney. And two NBA draft picks in 2017 with a bad game coach and couldn't even win one damned NIT game.
I have no idea why you brought up Butler. I'd be more inclined to use Villanova or Wisconsin or Michigan State as models, programs that were built on a particular philosophy and regional but not always top tier talent. You might call the latter two programs old school but Villanova isn't, and Villanova became a power by recruiting very carefully, looking for a certain type of player who fit their ethic, and built a program with continuity while gradually getting better players to come in. They went 10 seasons only one player being drafted by the NBA and yet made the tourney 7 times in that stretch including a Final Four, before they started pulling in top tier talent more consistently.
And finally, you can **** off with that blue-hair comment. This isn't about modern game vs. old school. This is about facing reality and understanding what you're working with. Until we have an AD who knows what he's doing, a practice facility, and a program strong enough to at least play post-season and maybe draw a crowd to Haas what you're talking about is a pipe dream.
1) Talent (and actual statistics)
Welll....lets look at the schools you mentioned (the challenge of Bear's fans is that they have a pretty limited understanding of the NBA and the other schools in the NCAA
Nova - 2 players drafted in 2016
1 in 2017
4 in 2018
1 in 2019
Michigan state -
4 in 2016
2 in 2018
Wisky
3 - in 2015
1 in 2016
1 in 2017
For the Bears?
Wallace, Rabb, Brown and Bird since 2016. Only 1 of them currently has "stuck"
Yes - some VERY strange circumstances led to that loss to Hawaii as a 4....but by far our highest bid EVER.
(https://basketball.realgm.com/ncaa/conferences/Big-East-Conference/59/Villanova/76/nba-players)
2) "Realistic path" vs. how it actually works.
No. This is, again, Bears with a lot more gray hair than I talking. Again, it is EXTREMELY rare anymore than you can get off the seeds of death (7 through 10) playing in a P5 if you don't win AT LEAST 13 games in conference. Sure. You might sneak in as an 8/9. Guess what? You get the recruiting "fun" of playing Kentucky in Memphis and losing by 30 as a function of the pod system. I am NOT convinced that actually helps rather than hurts your program because it underscores for the recruits just how much of a gap there is between you and the blue bloods that are competing for their talent.
3) The Enfeld data point
Most distressing should be right here at home. NO ONE is going to accuse Andy E. of being a great game coach. Ditto player development. You know what he does do? Recruit really really well. I leave it to you to figure out why but this is in a community where he is absolutely WAY down the pecking order of fan interest....at a place that is OVERWHELMININGLY a football school. For those playing at home USC has the number 1 recruit in the ****ING COUNTRY coming in next year This year they signed 2 fives, 2 fours, and 3 threes. https://247sports.com/college/usc/Season/2019-Basketball/Commits/ And it will be interesting to see how things go since they beat Harvard by 15 at there house. I wonder how much we lose to them at ours?
4) Lets really talk about Villanova.
It is important to note that they had a MUCH richer tradition than Cal with the Rolley teams. As you know, Jay Wright was an assistant under Rolley before going off to Hostra and then coming back (Can you say Travis? Cause I can). They also get the advantage of being the main school in Philly AND having generally limited (non-existent?) admin requirements as well as prep school pipeline from the East Coast Catholic schools. We should be so lucky. They have also been aided by the changes int he Big East in Basketball to become largely a Basketball only conference, removing challenging games like Syracuse,
Are we "stuck" with Mark Fox for three years? Yup. Will root for the bears and enjoy the journey.
But it is simply ludicrous to believe that "If we find a great teacher we can coach these kids into national champions." TALENT is king. You gotta be able to go get it, retain it, and use it. Sadly Cal is not committed to winning so we opt for door number 2 and alumns - some of them that resemble you - enable it because they don't appreciate that TALENT IS KING.
You could maybe be less condescending and have a real conversation here. I watch quite a bit of college basketball, actually. I'm pretty familiar with the idea that talent wins, though talent comes in a lot of different packages and doesn't always have to be NBA level to win at the college level. Perhaps we're simply not talking about the same things though. If your premise is that Cal will, for some reason that has no historical basis, decide that winning in sports is way more important than currently viewed, that donors will pony up huge amounts for basketball, build a lovely practice facility, pay for luxury travel, up the pay for assistants, get an AD who knows how to make all that stuff work, everything you need these days to get into recruiting wars with schools who have all that, then I'd say yeah, make a huge offer to a proven coach with recruiting chops and let's get on with it. I tend to think all this will happen when pigs fly, but I'd love to be proven wrong. Unfortunately, I can't make it happen.
But when the reality is that your program sucks to the point where it's moribund, you're light on amenities, and your athletic programs aren't revered like it's the only game in town, you can't somehow just magically snap fingers and acquire NBA players. You have to identify guys flying under the radar, develop them, develop a program culture, and build something from scratch. And if the same conditions exist once you've done that, you probably have to continue on that way. If things change for the better after a few years of incremental success and you can get a few more perks like the practice facility, maybe there's a leap you can take then. If you think that with the current AD, the current facilities, and the admission requirements we have now that you can skip that process and proceed directly to high seeds, please explain how.
On the topic of needing NBA talent to win, you're pointing to players from Villanova and MSU who got drafted the last few years. But in Wright's first 13 years at Nova he had a total of four players drafted and yet managed 8 tourney appearances and a Final Four. His best teams never had a top-25 recruiting class. It took him four years to make the tournament at Villanova. The next five seasons they never had a top 25 recruiting class, yet they went to the tourney all five years, ending with a Final Four appearance in 2009. Then he landed the No. 3 rated class in the country and the team got worse. The two teams that won the championship were built again without a single top-25 recruiting class. What Wright did well, and what good coaches whose schools don't just sell themselves to the McDonalds AAs, was identify the type of player he wanted, players with certain skillsets and a big drive to succeed. Where he is now, he can battle for the bluechips for players, but when he started he couldn't. That's why I used Nova as an example. They're glitzy now, but they weren't even when Rollie was coaching.
Another aside. I identified Wright as a coach Cal should go after when he was at Hofstra. I don't think Travis is going to be another Jay Wright, not even close.
Michigan State was an example of building off of regional recruiting and a defined philosophy. Izzo didn't get to the tourney until his third year at MSU. Izzo's recruiting model is taking less heralded players and developing the hell out of them, and especially local guys.
Wisconsin has had 6 guys drafted in the last 20 years. During that time they made 19 tournament appearances, three Final Fours, 6 Sweet 16s. Again, regional talent, identification of skills and toughness, a program identity and culture.
As an aside, both Brown and Wallace are currently in the NBA, so it's two who have stuck so far. Bird was looking like he'd stick until his mental issues. Not sure what your point is there. Yeah, that team had a high seed. It should have been a lot better, even given the injuries. Part of that problem was that Martin didn't recruit any depth, the second tier guys who could have stepped in and helped. And Martin had no clue how to develop Rabb or Brown, who alone should have been enough to win that game if they had any help from a very weak coaching staff.
But that's an aside. Where we are right now is no NBA players, not a chance of grabbing a top recruiting class, so the slow road is what it'll have to be to get anywhere. jmfo.