SFCityBear said:I couldn't find your link. I'll expand on the criteria in my spreadsheet for the one year, which was the class of 2009. I did the spreadsheet in 2015 or so, so it would track the full college career of all 100 players, which for some took 5 or 6 years to finish, due to injuries, redshirts, etc. I found that 60 players had had a successful career as individual players, but that only 40 players had actually helped their teams to some serious success. My criteria for a successful team would be achieving one of the following, by making a significant contribution as a member of the team's rotation (top 7 or 8 players in terms of minutes) for one of their seasons in college:socaltownie said:I linked above. One of the services went back. 5 stars have a 60% chance of being drafted; 4 stars about 20%; 3 stars 1 in 36. Data pulled from about 15 years of rating services.SFCityBear said:I wasn't arguing that at all. Of course stars matter, talented star players matter, much more so than subjective "star" ratings assigned by judges or panels of experts. As I posted a few years back a spreadsheet detailing the accomplishments of the top 100 RCSI Composite ranked players of one year for their 4 years of eligibility, and I found that only 40% of them either lived up to their ranking as an individual star, or helped their team to some real success in their college careers. 5-star players were a little more likely to live up to their ranking than 4-star players. That was just one class, and so it is anecdotal evidence. But until someone proves different, I'll believe that recruit rankings of the star players is maybe 40-50% accurate. Looking at that 2016 roster, 5 stars Rabb and Brown lived up to their recruit rankings as to individual performance, but Bird did not, IMO. 4-star Wallace lived up to his ranking, but Domingo did not. Mathews lived up to his 3-star ranking, or even a 4 star ranking, but Singer did not live up to his 3 star ranking, except defensively, where he became a tiger, again IMO. None of those players helped Cal to any great team success.socaltownie said:You do realize directly above SFB just essentially argued that stars do not matter.bluesaxe said:I'm done with this. You are venting gripes, not addressing anything I actually said and are attributing opinions to me that I don't hold and haven't expressed because apparently you're pissed at the world.socaltownie said:Fair enough. You ask about "What Fox can do right now."bluesaxe said:Oh JFC, get off your high horse dude. I never said anything close to "we just need to find a great teacher." I never said any of that. I'm pointing out that we aren't going to get the 5 stars, but that talent exists elsewhere that can be developed. I'm not saying that a good coach can take ****ty players and win. I'm saying that there is talent other than five stars that we need to find. I'm saying that because of WHERE THIS PROGRAM IS NOW we aren't going to be in a position to do anything but look for those gems in the rough for now. I asked if you can explain why that isn't true in another post. You didn't. I'm talking about what Fox can do right now to get THIS program into position to actually compete for some of that other talent. You don't seem to want to hear that. Again, explain why Juwan Howard at Michigan, a team that was in the national finals a couple of years ago, the Sweet 16 last year, and whose coach left for the NBA instead of being fired two of the worst years in history is particularly relevant to where we are now. Even Memphis, which has had a tourney drought, at least had winning records the last five years. And is very likely to end up in more NCAA trouble I predict.socaltownie said:Again, as I pointed out. 3 star players have a less than 1 in 35 chance of being drafted. 5 stars a 60% chance. You can name the one in 35. Good for you.bluesaxe said:I agree with most of what you're saying, but a couple of points.BeachedBear said:
I love the passion of OTB and SCT. However, their rant against Cal fans is misguided, albeit hilarious. Reminds me of the alcoholic father who screamed about his kids being losers. Was one kid a loser? Yes. Was he one of his kids? Yes. But all of the siblings suffered. That type of misplaced venom does more damage than good - so why do they do it? They are bright enough guys to call out indivuals (I have been their target before), without resorting to irrational generalizations. Please boys - use your power for good!
Having said that, I will reinforce some of their irrational generalizations, that I wholeheartedly agree with - at least wrt Basketball:
- Has the program lost their fans? Yes. I'm one of the die hards, but it is lonely and sad. We're all that's left. The numbers don't lie - 3,000 is being generous. Most of the young alum base and students are not interested. The fair weather fans also need to be brought back. There is only one long-term proven method. Winning. That's it folks.
- The administration has been a joke forever. This unfortunately is true. It goes beyond hiring (and keeping) coaches. I don't think it is intentional or institutionally structured - simply dysfunction of the highest order. The best we have is hope. Knowlton seems like the right direction, but he did not come from a proven P5 program with a record of strong hires. He IS doing a lot to address the dysfunction - and I don't think OTB or SCT give him enough or any credit for that.
- Talent is important. I find it hard to believe anyone is still arguing this point. Pac-12 is a 4 star league in Bball. That means an occasional 5 star and a couple 3 stars. Mostly 3-stars with a 2-star and occasional 4 star won't cut it. And yes, we all agree it needs to be coached. However, even those 100 3 stars that get coached up to the NBA come from a few programs that have proven staffs that can develop players. Cal hasn't had that level of player development EVER in my memory and doesn't hire coaches to do so. Seriously, most of those 3-stars powerhouses are in mid-major conferences, where it makes sense.
- Cal can't figure out what it wants. This is sort of true, but I don't think it is a simple as they want it to be. For example, Cal can't just drop out of P12 Basketball and remain in the other sports (many of which we compete at the highest level). However, as OTB points out, if Cal wants to stay in the P12, but not be competitive in Bball, then at least do it in a pragmatic, cost-effective way. Overpaying two HC salaries for mediocrity will get you fired in the real world.
After seeing 5 games and then some (the OP starting point). Here is what I see as the best case scenario of the Knowlton/Fox experience. Fox gets the most out of current players and recruits some players to fit his program. After three years, CalmBball is playing OK and has reached it's ceiling. Knowlton and the larger Campus Community is somewhat supporting the program, but no one is really SATISFIED. However, during three years, the college basketball community recognizes three things:
- Knowlton is stable and supports the program
- It is no longer a rebuild - nor a stepping stone, but a place to really build a program.
- Knowlton has now spent enough years at the P5 level to build relationships that he has some names and connections to hire better.
- Cal has the opportunity to do better in Bball
Cal parts ways with Fox and hires a younger high-ceiling coach who proves worthy of enough money to keep around for a decade or two (that is why we want someone under about 45 yrs old).
While I would have liked that to happen with Jones replacement, I don't think the bullets were in place (and aren't yet). The best alternative provided by ANYONE was Decuire - and our next hire needs to be better than Travis D (although I think he was just as capable of being the transition coach that Fox is destined to be - and could have been had cheaper, but I guess he didn't have the interview).
I haven't seen one argument that talent doesn't matter. I have seen arguments about realistic options for acquiring and developing that talent, and maybe what "talent" actually is. I'd also argue that it's the team that matters, not individuals, and if the talent doesn't fit together you'll have problems. Martin's best team is a good example of pieces that did not mesh well compounded by a coach who couldn't figure out how to minimize that problem. But you need talent, which we currently lack.
On who develops lower ranked recruits, I haven't seen anyone do a deep dive on that but Derrick Williams was a three-star (Arizona), Russel Westbrook was a three-star (UCLA), Wesley Johnson was a two-star (Iowa State), Ekpe Udoh was a three-star (Michigan), Joe Alexander a three-star (West Va.), Frank Kaminsky a three-star (Wisc.) All those guys were first round picks. You also obviously have guys like Gordon Hayward, Steph Curry, Dame Lillard, Paul George who were with mid-majors, but it would be interesting to test your hypothesis on that.
I'm just hoping Fox can get the program to a point where it's respectable and stable, and then we'll see if Cal can make the right decision. Your best-case scenario seems right, but it is best case and that's a bit sad.
But again, the problem is that it is a dangerous myth ("we just need to find that great teacher and all will be OK") No. You need, in the modern game, a guy who can RECRUIT.
And, I want to underscore this, look at Juwan Howard . Do you really want to make the argument that a guy who has never coached in college is a "great teacher?" Of COURSE NOT. You know what he is doing? KILLING it on the recruiting trail - especially with instate talent.
This is the kind of hire that you make it you want to win. Michigan gets that. Memphis gets it. GTown gets it. Cal gets Mark Fox.
I get that you don't like the last hire. I don't either. But I'm not talking about that.
1) Explain to JK that absent a practice facility the program is dead in the water and can not compete. Explain that to alumni as well. Disabuse them of the idea that with "good coaching" he can take Germans who have a vertical jump of 0.5 inches and turn them into all world Pac-12 centers.
Now I don't expect him to do that but a boy can dream a week before xmas
2) Explain to the powers that be that Cal currently is competing with 1 arm and 2 legs tied behind back when it comes to especially the grad school transfer rules. Absent changes we will NOT do better there and that it is a critical piece of the puzzle
Now I don't expect him to do that but a boy can dream a week before xmas
3) Explain to the powers that be that the GPA rule is ridiculous. Cal should NOT compete lower or HIGHER than either Washington or UCLA (the other 2 decent PUBLIC R1s in our conference). If there is no GPA rule at UCLA there should not be one at Cal
Now I don't expect him to do that but a boy can dream a week before xmas
All three of the above DEEPLY hamper our recruiting. But we have TOO many people (on this board especially) that believe
A) We don't need a practice facility cause a hoop and a black top is OK for me so it is OK for them...and they should be studying ANYWAY
B ) That we don't want to "cheapen" cal's grad schools and hey, a great teacher can "coach em up" and especially those 3 starts that are going to stay 4 years
C) Less support but still some. God forbid we take a "dumb azz".
The problem (and why I am mad) is that too many Cal "fans" buy A-C and then say "Well with a good coach that watches Newell tapes we can win titles....and lets face it...that is all that matters since I went to school before the tournament blew up so who cares anyway." I get that everyone is a stakeholder. WHat pisses me off is not recognizing that life is about trade offs and that searching for unicorns is usually a search that doesn't work. If we want to win we have to recruit. End of story.
We still have to recruit the star players, but we need to carefully evaluate them for their fit at Cal, and in our team's system, and for need, and not just sign him because has 5-stars after his name in recruit rankings.
1. A 25 win season
2. A Conference Championship
3. A Conference Tournament Championship
4. Reaching the Sweet 16 in the NCAA
If a player had achieved any of those things, I felt he had helped his team and had been worth the effort to be highly recruited. I realize that getting drafted is an achievement, but I don't really give a rat's behind about what a Cal player does in the NBA. There are some fans who seem to be more excited about what a player does in the NBA after he leaves Cal, than they are excited about what he does while he is playing for Cal. I did the spreadsheet solely to find out how many top recruits help their college teams, if at all. If someone tells me a player was drafted, I'll ask, "Yes, but did he help his college team?"
One of many problems with your methodology is that you only look at the rate of success as you define it among top players and say "gee that isn't high" based on some subjective standard you pull out of thin air. A 40% hit rate would actually be very high. You never compare your hit rate to lower ranked guys. I don't need to do a spreadsheet. The hit rate is a lot lower for guys rated lower
I really don't know what you think you have proven. No one has ever said that high star ratings guaranteed success. They increase your chance of success tremendously.