OK. Last responses.OaktownBear said:1. I'm disappointed you didn't acknowledge that you blew the characterization of Decuire by confusing him with Gates. Decuire is much respected for his time here and doesn't deserve that. I don't know if Gates did what was claimed (never made sense to me, personally) but it was never claimed that Decuire submarined his interview.BeachedBear said:calumnus said:
Moreover, at the time Knowlton was making an unnecessarily speedy decision (prior to the NCAA tournament) to hire from the two choices given him by the search firm he hired to do his highly paid job (and hiring a guy fired from his last job and jobless for a year), the football staff had a sexual harassment claim that needed his attention. Wait until after the tournament, that is when the up and coming coaches from mid majors who made the tournament get hired by teams from power conferences.
Well - at least that's sort of an explanation why no one can provide names of the the hundreds of starving coaches that wanted the Cal job.
You don't hire proven mediocrity as a "transitional hire." You keep swinging. Wyking Jones was almost exactly Tom Holmoe, the unprepared assistant remaining after your head coach leaves unexpectedly. Taking a chance on an unproven up and comer is OK (just make sure you give them a contract that reflects that). If Holmoe doesnt work out don't extend him and don't fire him and rehire Theder as a "transitional coach" to "stabilize the program" try again and give an up and coming OC like Jeff Tedford a chance.
There are hundreds of head coaches in college basketball, most making very little who would jump at the chance to coach at Cal. Fox had 9 years at Georgia located in one of the best states for producing talent in the US. He landed some top talent too, SEC players of the year, future NBA players. Despite that he made the NCAA tournament only twice in 9 years, losing in the first round both times.
However, I feel bad bagging on him, it is Knowlton who is to blame here. Scratch that, I blame Christ for hiring Knowlton. How did she think a conservative Republican from the East Coast whose love and expertise is hockey and only experience was at military academies (and not even Army or Navy) was going to be a good fit in Berkeley? Then Knowlton hires Fox because he "felt more comfortable" with him and Travis seemed "unprepared" (interviewed the day he got back from his team losing to #8 Michigan in the NCAA Tournament)! Again what was the rush?
So you're suggesting that this was politically motivated. hmmm, you may be on to something . . . But you are actually supporting my point by blaming Christ and Knowlton. If they are as bad as you say - then who would want to work for them.
"Transitional hire"? More likely Fox gets extended because he "needs more time" but "does it the right way" and we spend nine years "in transition" at the bottom half of the conference, just like he did at Georgia.
Well, if Fox gets a fifth year after 4 season in the bottom third of the league and no improvement recruiting, then I will give more credence to your theories. I will also stop contributing to the program and following CalM BBall. If Fox is top third with recruiting picked up and gets an extension - I'm OK with that. If Fox is middle third with mediocre recruiting - then I'm still disappointed.
I'll leave the discussion with this... After almost 40 years of following Cal Basketball, It seemed to me that the Jones era was the all time low in terms of how attractive a program Cal had become. I think any institution can attract and hire better talent when the hiring manager and executives are better.
2. You are seriously arguing that none of the many coaches who make in the $150K-$300K range wouldn't take on a challenge for $1.5M? If they flame out in two years like Jones did, they likely collect what they'd make in 15 years of coaching and then go back to some similar job if they want. Cal rushed through the decision. Cal didn't consider other options Knowlton was very transparent on the process. And, quite frankly, if what you are saying is true (it isn't. it is just the ever present unfounded excuse for bad coaching hires) an AD who can't find better coaching candidates shouldn't be an AD.
1. I wasn't confusing DeCuire and Gates. I do respect TD for his time here (and was more enthusiastic towards him than Fox). I don't believe TD put his best foot forward during the process - so I'll back off the term submarine - since semantics seems to be getting in the way (similarly - transition hire seems to mean something different to others as well).
2. I think you're oversimplifying how coaches are compensated - and how they move through the coaching ranks. I'm not arguing that none of them would - I'm asking you and others to tell me who they were(are). Because none of them showed up. As for you other points (Cal rushed, didn't consider options, Knowlton incompetence). I agree with most of it. However, as Fox is a step up from Jones, Knowlton is a step up from Williams.
I'm not defending the process, decision or the hire. Just pointing out that at the time - the School, Ath Dept and many other aspects of the Cal program were bad, bad, bad. So bad, that much of what you describe as an open job market - did not exist for Cal. If the timing was post Monty or post Cuonzo or even post Fox - all of that is back in play (which is why I use the term transitional hire for Fox). They had to hire someone to replace Jones - no doubt. Another Jones would have been a disaster.