But a good paying one. I’m figuring that two years of that contract would provide for me for the rest of my life even after taxes. Not sure it’s worth it though.That doesn't make it a 'very good job'.
But a good paying one. I’m figuring that two years of that contract would provide for me for the rest of my life even after taxes. Not sure it’s worth it though.That doesn't make it a 'very good job'.
This definitely wasn’t considered a good job if it was we wouldn’t have hired back to back coaches with minimum to no head coaching experience. I think we as fans overrate this job. This is an attractive job for a low to mid major HC but not to the level we thinkHiring a compent coach comes first. This is considered a very good job (or at least was before Ben Johnson was hired). You need a coach that kids want to play for and not a coach who has zero track record and is learning on the job. That describes both Pitino and Johnson. The fact that Nolan Winter chose to go to Wisconsin speaks volumes here. That has nothing to do with NIL and everything to do with him and his family not trusting to develop Nolan and win basketball games.
I think we underestimate the damage Norwood did by dumping Tubby who was respected in the coaching fraternity. Unless the coaches knew what a sleazy person Teague was before we did, we were iced out because of the way Tubby was treated. Richard was fourth or fifth choice. Hiring Ben further diminishes the job I think.This definitely wasn’t considered a good job if it was we wouldn’t have hired back to back coaches with minimum to no head coaching experience. I think we as fans overrate this job. This is an attractive job for a low to mid major HC but not to the level we think
What I posted is my takeaway from an interview on a subscription site and a podcast that is available for free. Wisconsin took another big (Gus Yalden) in their 2023 class in along with Winter. Evans had not committed to Minnesota when Winter made his decision, but Yalden had committed to Wisconsin.Or that he liked the Wisconsin campus and history and didn’t want to be on the same roster as a five star seven foot three guy. Your points are understood but reading the minds of 18 year olds that I’m assuming you don’t know is only campaigning for your point not really adding anything to the conversation that we have not heard. You and most of us are unhappy. We get it. Cut the self-righteousness.
What is your definition of "cheating"? Clem certainly did not cheat compared to his peers. North Carolina cheats, Kansas cheats, everyone cheats. The guys that didn't win here, have not won elsewhere. The guys that didn't win here didn't win elsewhere. Monson has settled in as a low major D1 coach. Tubby Smith made one more NCAA tournament in 9 more years of coaching. Pitino has been under .500 in the Mountain West in both his seasons there.By who? Every coach that has won consistently here has cheated.
No one judges the program based on what an AD did ten years ago to Tubby. Yes, they probably think that was dumb, but they make a decision based on current AD, conference, salary, facilities, where they want to live, etc.I think we underestimate the damage Norwood did by dumping Tubby who was respected in the coaching fraternity. Unless the coaches knew what a sleazy person Teague was before we did, we were iced out because of the way Tubby was treated. Richard was fourth or fifth choice. Hiring Ben further diminishes the job I think.
I think we underestimate the damage Norwood did by dumping Tubby who was respected in the coaching fraternity. Unless the coaches knew what a sleazy person Teague was before we did, we were iced out because of the way Tubby was treated. Richard was fourth or fifth choice. Hiring Ben further diminishes the job I think.
Clem certainly did not cheat compared to his peers.
Agreed, but I have no idea what the memory lifeline is in the coaching fraternity and how long reputations stick. Pitino was treated better than he would have in many Power5 institutions, but the slow downgrade in the program didn't help. I am not seeing the U as a highly desired job by in-demand coaches at any level, no matter where the roots of that disease is.I agree with you 100% about the treatment of Tubby but I think the treatment of Pitino should have been more encouraging to a potential coaching hire. He was a mediocre coach but he still lasted 8 years here.
Of course not, but what was done to Tubby ten years ago has contributed to the accelerating erosion of the program since. I would bet money, and I'm cheap, that firing Tubby did impact their ability to hire a better and more experienced coach than Pitino turned out to be.No one judges the program based on what an AD did ten years ago to Tubby. Yes, they probably think that was dumb, but they make a decision based on current AD, conference, salary, facilities, where they want to live, etc.
Coyle made a strange decision when he hired Ben. That isn't because he couldn't have done much better. There were coaches very interested in this job. There would be in the future. As frustrating as the past two years have been, I hope we aren't looking for a new coach next year because Ben and staff turn it around and make significant progress this next year.
And a banner removedSo cheating only counts if you're the worst cheater? Four years of probation would say otherwise.
Define "highly desired". Most years there's around 10 power 6 openings. Most of them are pretty highly desired and will have several good candidates who would take the job. They just have to pick the right one. We have not done that the last two times.Agreed, but I have no idea what the memory lifeline is in the coaching fraternity and how long reputations stick. Pitino was treated better than he would have in many Power5 institutions, but the slow downgrade in the program didn't help. I am not seeing the U as a highly desired job by in-demand coaches at any level, no matter where the roots of that disease is.
For use of terms, I would put "highly desired" as one that a school would have a decent shot at one or both of these: A demonstrated success at another Power5/6 willing to take the job, or a known up and comer at the mid-major level well known in the industry (even if not by fans).Define "highly desired". Most years there's around 10 power 6 openings. Most of them are pretty highly desired and will have several good candidates who would take the job. They just have to pick the right one. We have not done that the last two times.
Agreed, but I have no idea what the memory lifeline is in the coaching fraternity and how long reputations stick. Pitino was treated better than he would have in many Power5 institutions, but the slow downgrade in the program didn't help. I am not seeing the U as a highly desired job by in-demand coaches at any level, no matter where the roots of that disease is.
Yes, but I am looking forward and wonder if we will have access to the kind of candidates we may have had in the last hire. I hope so, but I am not confident.Agree with that bolded part completely. Mostly agree with the last but I think there would have been promising mid-major coaches with a track record who would have accepted this job.
Much, much needed.So we gonna land Wrightsell this weekend??
Of course we are. Unless we don't!So we gonna land Wrightsell this weekend??
I agree with that - and it was because Norwood was still the AD they would have to work for.Of course not, but what was done to Tubby ten years ago has contributed to the accelerating erosion of the program since. I would bet money, and I'm cheap, that firing Tubby did impact their ability to hire a better and more experienced coach than Pitino turned out to be.
I wasn't aware that Norwood's reputation was that bad before his exploits here were exposed. It's a reasonable conclusion that Norwood was as much the problem as anything else.I agree with that - and it was because Norwood was still the AD they would have to work for.
Thank you for the question. I am sure we have some expert talent scouts on here.So does anyone have any insight on how good Wrightsell can be?
So does anyone have any insight on how good Wrightsell can be?
If I am going to spend time hoping - I am going to hope we don't need to go looking.Yes, but I am looking forward and wonder if we will have access to the kind of candidates we may have had in the last hire. I hope so, but I am not confident.
The job might have slipped from an above average power 6 job when we hired Tubby to a below average one. But it's still not in the bottom bin with jobs like Oregon State, Washington State, Northwestern, Cal etc. They will have their choice of solid candidates a year from now if necessary. Which appears increasingly likely.For use of terms, I would put "highly desired" as one that a school would have a decent shot at one or both of these: A demonstrated success at another Power5/6 willing to take the job, or a known up and comer at the mid-major level well known in the industry (even if not by fans).
The issue here isn't that we have had two (and maybe three) bad hires in a row. Most of us know that. It's that the consecutive bad hires is making the next hire more difficult than it could or should be.
Yes, it does.That doesn't make it a 'very good job'.
Same for UNCBy who? Every coach that has won consistently here has cheated.
It's just not really cheating if everyone does it.So cheating only counts if you're the worst cheater? Four years of probation would say otherwise.
DelusionalYes, it does.
You don't think equal work with a higher salary and greater job security makes something a very good job?Delusional