BleedGopher
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Good read by Parrish. The days of a Minnesota hiring the hot mid-major coach from Gonzaga (fresh off an Elite 8 run) appear long gone. The mid-majors are now paying in some cases, as well or better than many high major jobs. Few, Marshall, Stevens (when he was at Butler), Miller, Jacobson etc. are at schools where basketball is the number one sport, with great pay, less stress of the Big Ten, and more realistic expectations.
It seems like most schools start their coaching search by going after the same guys and then after a week they have to adjust expectations and become more realistic.
Parrish writes about it in his column:
College basketball's coaching carousel has just about stopped spinning. The only thing left to decide is Delaware's coach. But all nine Power-5 jobs that opened have been filled.
And guess what?
Gregg Marshall didn't take any of them.
Neither did Archie Miller. Neither did Chris Mack.
And it should serve as a reminder for every AD in the country, and the reminder is this: unless you have a top-10 job in the sport to offer, you're likely not going to be able to hire an established and successful coach with a decent job who isn't running from something.
That's what recent history tells us.
Did you realize that 40 Power-5 jobs have opened in the past five years, and exactly two of them -- UCLA and Texas -- have been filled by established and successful coaches with decent jobs who weren't running from something. That's it. UCLA hired Steve Alford in 2013. And Texas hired Shaka Smart in 2015. But literally every other job that's opened in the past five years has been filled by one of the following types of coaches:
An under-compensated mid-major coach
An assistant
An unemployed coach
A coach-on-the-run for one reason or another
That's it.
http://www.cbssports.com/collegebas...-offer-its-unwise-to-target-a-list-candidates
Go Gophers!!
It seems like most schools start their coaching search by going after the same guys and then after a week they have to adjust expectations and become more realistic.
Parrish writes about it in his column:
College basketball's coaching carousel has just about stopped spinning. The only thing left to decide is Delaware's coach. But all nine Power-5 jobs that opened have been filled.
And guess what?
Gregg Marshall didn't take any of them.
Neither did Archie Miller. Neither did Chris Mack.
And it should serve as a reminder for every AD in the country, and the reminder is this: unless you have a top-10 job in the sport to offer, you're likely not going to be able to hire an established and successful coach with a decent job who isn't running from something.
That's what recent history tells us.
Did you realize that 40 Power-5 jobs have opened in the past five years, and exactly two of them -- UCLA and Texas -- have been filled by established and successful coaches with decent jobs who weren't running from something. That's it. UCLA hired Steve Alford in 2013. And Texas hired Shaka Smart in 2015. But literally every other job that's opened in the past five years has been filled by one of the following types of coaches:
An under-compensated mid-major coach
An assistant
An unemployed coach
A coach-on-the-run for one reason or another
That's it.
http://www.cbssports.com/collegebas...-offer-its-unwise-to-target-a-list-candidates
Go Gophers!!