I'm not a big basketball fan (maybe it's because I'm short) but I do pay attention to the Bears.
For those of you that are basketball fans, I thought I would point out that, under Mark Fox, the Bears are now averaging 62.6 points a game.
I bring this up because, while the victory over Furd was impressive, it did nothing to change a trend that is disturbing to me...and maybe you too---Lack of scoring.
As primarily a football fan, explaining how bad the Cal offense is took some doing because there were many folks that just didn't get it.
So, let me try again on the basketball board. Cal is now scoring an average of 62.6 points/game, #334 of 350 teams in the nation in scoring average. To be near the bottom in scoring in football is one thing. But in basketball, which includes all kinds of small schools and fringe leagues, to be near the bottom is really something.
Let me add something if this doesn't concern you. Our somewhat anemic HC of last year did better at 68.4 last year and 67.7 the year before. I really didn't think it could get much worse.
Still not sure? How about this, coach Fox's points/game is the worst offensive average at Cal since the 3 point shot was instituted in 1986. Even before then, there were only a handful of seasons where the average was worse than 62.6. According to one sports stats archive, Cal has only had 11 such seasons since such tabulations began in 1948. All but 2 of those were prior to when Cal basketball joined what was then the pac-8 in 1968. Those 2 were under one HC, Dick Kuchen. I realize it has not been a full season but the trend is getting worse over time. The 62.6 point average is actually inflated by some high scoring games against pushovers earlier in the season. Since conference play started, Cal is actually averaging about 55 points/game.
I realize that coach Fox's emphasis is on defense. Fine, but points allowed is only the 9th best at Cal since 1986. I"ll give him this, his defense is significantly better than Wyking Jones', who, ironically, had the worst tenure on defense of any coach at Cal since 1986. It's not really that hard to do that. And his 67.7 point/game allowed ranks only tied for #138 and puts him only 7th in the conference, which is merely average defensively.
I hope I have not offended by coming on here and ragging on a HC in his first season, but I would not do it if the performance was not historically bad. In my several decades following Cal sports, a coach who starts out historically bad and actually performs worse than the rather poor coach he replaced, does not improve enough to make amends. Coach Fox may be a very nice person and he might have some real coaching advantages, but this is very concerning to me. I mean only Texas A&M and S. Florida are the only notable schools below Cal in scoring.
Does it concern you? If not, why?
Please convince me why coach Fox is the coach of the future for Cal basketball. And don't say it's because he just beat Furd. Furd is not a basketball powerhouse unless women are playing.
For those of you that are basketball fans, I thought I would point out that, under Mark Fox, the Bears are now averaging 62.6 points a game.
I bring this up because, while the victory over Furd was impressive, it did nothing to change a trend that is disturbing to me...and maybe you too---Lack of scoring.
As primarily a football fan, explaining how bad the Cal offense is took some doing because there were many folks that just didn't get it.
So, let me try again on the basketball board. Cal is now scoring an average of 62.6 points/game, #334 of 350 teams in the nation in scoring average. To be near the bottom in scoring in football is one thing. But in basketball, which includes all kinds of small schools and fringe leagues, to be near the bottom is really something.
Let me add something if this doesn't concern you. Our somewhat anemic HC of last year did better at 68.4 last year and 67.7 the year before. I really didn't think it could get much worse.
Still not sure? How about this, coach Fox's points/game is the worst offensive average at Cal since the 3 point shot was instituted in 1986. Even before then, there were only a handful of seasons where the average was worse than 62.6. According to one sports stats archive, Cal has only had 11 such seasons since such tabulations began in 1948. All but 2 of those were prior to when Cal basketball joined what was then the pac-8 in 1968. Those 2 were under one HC, Dick Kuchen. I realize it has not been a full season but the trend is getting worse over time. The 62.6 point average is actually inflated by some high scoring games against pushovers earlier in the season. Since conference play started, Cal is actually averaging about 55 points/game.
I realize that coach Fox's emphasis is on defense. Fine, but points allowed is only the 9th best at Cal since 1986. I"ll give him this, his defense is significantly better than Wyking Jones', who, ironically, had the worst tenure on defense of any coach at Cal since 1986. It's not really that hard to do that. And his 67.7 point/game allowed ranks only tied for #138 and puts him only 7th in the conference, which is merely average defensively.
I hope I have not offended by coming on here and ragging on a HC in his first season, but I would not do it if the performance was not historically bad. In my several decades following Cal sports, a coach who starts out historically bad and actually performs worse than the rather poor coach he replaced, does not improve enough to make amends. Coach Fox may be a very nice person and he might have some real coaching advantages, but this is very concerning to me. I mean only Texas A&M and S. Florida are the only notable schools below Cal in scoring.
Does it concern you? If not, why?
Please convince me why coach Fox is the coach of the future for Cal basketball. And don't say it's because he just beat Furd. Furd is not a basketball powerhouse unless women are playing.