Spaulding!No!
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I wonder if barreiro will mention the men’s program.
AGREED!!! Not sure how he good have been. Look at who he mentored under. After doing that one doesn't need to look any further to say what a sheet hire this was.There's not much evidence he was a good assistant actually.
Exactly. Any perspective new coach should be asking about NIL and the strategies to move it forward in a hurry. Any hiring AD should be asking about the changing landscape and how the new coach will navigate and thrive in the new environment.So many excuses.... Today's college athletics are now different... The days of building a team over years is done with.. for some reason the university doesn't care or understand..... However based upon the coaching we've seen; it's quite possible all the nil $$ in the world wouldn't save Ben... He simply can not coach....
Again, the University of Minnesota is the equivalent of Boston College in the ACC. It's in a market that has other places to spend a buck. It's a higher ed organization that doesn't care about its athletic programs. It has alumni who, for the vast majority, don't care about sports. If you want a fan base that cares, then you need to go somewhere outside of UMN.So many excuses.... Today's college athletics are now different... The days of building a team over years is done with.. for some reason the university doesn't care or understand..... However based upon the coaching we've seen; it's quite possible all the nil $$ in the world wouldn't save Ben... He simply can not coach....
I agree with this. Ask yourself, where we happier worrying about PJF possibly leaving or going 5-7? I will GLADLY take losing a coach because they outperformed this job and went on to bigger and better than muddling through the bottom of the pack with a coach no one else wants. I'd bet PSU bball fans are happier today than they were during the middle of the Pat Chambers era.I don't disagree with everything you have posted here, but I disagree with the sentiment that we must have "Minnesota ties". Penn State was the biggest doormat in the conference but made the right hire. Yes, he left for greener pastures. But the level of success he had in two years likely led to a better hire in Rhoads. We have a sustained track record of firing coaches here, not coaches leaving. Quit worrying about hiring a guy that has Minnesota ties. Find a basketball coach and worry about having too much success later. The snowball isn't going downhill anymore. It's already at the bottom. Recruits see that. The fan base sees that. Future coaches can see that. This was an overreach, plain and simple. A high school diploma from Minnesota won't change the trajectory.
The lack of adjustments, especially in game is most disheartening so far this season. That falls upon the head coach.Ben needs an offensive Xs and Os coach. Their sets are awful, spacing sucks, no cuts, no movement. Fundamentals on D are awful. If all else falls, please stay between your man and the basket. The USF coach was coaching circles around Ben, flowing offensive sets, great spacing, and defensive awareness and guess what? He made adjustments!
Hard to see a realistic case being made for retention, but anything can happen.Big Ten season is going to be very interesting. It is clear that this team is more talented then the past few years but they also have some very clear weaknesses and at times look completely lost out there. Some of that could be a function of all the new faces playing together for the first time and some of it could definitely be the coaching as well.
Like you I don't think a move gets made mid season, but if at the end of the Big Ten season we are still languishing in last place I don't see how a coaching change isn't made after the season. Where it will get tricky is if the team shows some improvement during the conference season to the point where a case could be made either way for keeping or firing Johnson at the end of the season.
The men's team is a disaster but they have some solid young talent and a new competent coach could turn the program around very quickly.
My guess is they need to at least flirt with .500 in conference play for there to be any sort of case made for Johnson to be brought back. But it is really tough to know where the bar is at in terms of performance expectations for this season.Hard to see a realistic case being made for retention, but anything can happen.
I'd argue a lot of the diehards have left as well, not trying to pick at your comment because I completely agree, but GH is a small subset of the diehards and alot of them even on here are done (myself included)Gopher basketball is sadly irrelevant to 95% of Minnesota sports fans now. Only the diehards are left and many of them are close to giving up. I can't bring myself to care about regular season NBA games or I'd probably be there too.
The men's team is a disaster but they have some solid young talent and a new competent coach could turn the program around very quickly
Not sure about deeper, but I have zero doubt St. Thomas as an institution is more invested in "Playing to Win" than the U of M. That's pretty much why UST got booted out of the MIAC.In fact, I would argue that St Thomas fan base is deeper and more invested in the Tommies than the UMN fan base.
I have played, coached and refereed for almost 40 years. I can spot a real coach. Plitzuweit is one.It's too early to claim Plitzuweit a huge win. We are 7ish games into her first year. Motzko is good, but I think many people would have been good as the hockey program was a sleeping giant that needed to get out from under Lucia's run.
*but on Plitzuweit, the one game I watched, was much crisper than any of the Whalen games I ever watched...so there is that.
True.I'd argue a lot of the diehards have left as well, not trying to pick at your comment because I completely agree, but GH is a small subset of the diehards and alot of them even on here are done (myself included)
It's not entirely effort, but fund raising and networking is a skill. A very important skill for a modern power 5 athletic director.The hundreds of millions for a new arena is easy.
Starting next year they’ll be bringing in $80M a year from the Big Ten. That’s easy justification for couple hundred mill in bonds paid back over 30 years or whatever.
The impossible part, the part that you’re making up out of thin air, is that effort can make people donate significant NIL money. Not a thing.
Uphill climb, but not impossible.It's not entirely effort, but fund raising and networking is a skill. A very important skill for a modern power 5 athletic director.
Gopher basketball ranked in the top 25 in the nation in attendance every year from 1990 to 2003 and again four out of five years between 2009 and 2013. It has a fan base to raise $$ from, even if it's driven many of them away. It's not some impossible gig.
This is all total speculation at this point, but these secretive fuckers have forced us to speculate about what's behind the ruination of this program. It does feel that Coyle was at least encouraged to hire alumni or local products with local connections, but even if that's the case, we don't know how strong a factor that was. If I had to guess, I'd say Brian had a spreadsheet matrix of various factors, and that was one of them. Total guesswork on my part, but I'll be danged if there isn't a spreadsheet in here somewhere.Asuma aside, Ben has missed on every top MN recruit.. so if that's what was said... These MN h.s. and local movers and shakers point blank lied to em
I don't disagree with everything you have posted here, but I disagree with the sentiment that we must have "Minnesota ties". Penn State was the biggest doormat in the conference but made the right hire. Yes, he left for greener pastures. But the level of success he had in two years likely led to a better hire in Rhoads. We have a sustained track record of firing coaches here, not coaches leaving. Quit worrying about hiring a guy that has Minnesota ties. Find a basketball coach and worry about having too much success later. The snowball isn't going downhill anymore. It's already at the bottom. Recruits see that. The fan base sees that. Future coaches can see that. This was an overreach, plain and simple. A high school diploma from Minnesota won't change the trajectory.
We have numerous wealthy and successful alumni in a major metropolitan area. Not like this is easy or anything, but a robust NIL apparatus is certainly possible at Minnesota.NIL $ is an issue for ascending to the top two or three spots in the B1G and competing for titles year in year out. We're not asking for that. We're asking for basic competence, to not be one of the worst teams in Power 6, and to make the NCAA tournament maybe half the time. The bar is low and we continue to somehow hit our face on it.
Total guesswork on my part, but I'll be danged if there isn't a spreadsheet in here somewhere.
Clem came in at a low point in the program: only separated from a conference championship by four years, but the public was disgusted by the Madison scandal and was staying away from Williams Arena. I know; I was there; it was bad. Clem had charisma, and his teams were hard nosed and likable, and it was the toughest ticket in town before you knew it. This thing could turn around, but it takes the right person, and it has to be someone about 15 times more interesting and charismatic as Johnson.My guess is that the vast majority of us who still care are tied in to the game itself and not just our team. Not many fans are like that. I don’t give a rip about the NFL but I follow the Vikings. I like the institution of college basketball so it keeps me connected to the Gophers. I don’t think I am alone. We’re a tiny minority and that doesn’t pay the bill or put pressure on for better performance.
Is there a point that could possibly come where former BB alum, i.e. McHale, Thompson, etc. step in and say enough is enough. Would they have the influence over some of the regents and such to put forth an effort on their own to say this is our recommendation?
It must kill those guys to see where this program has gone since their glory days.