TonyLiebert
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Ya, all that but I do believe what makes it most difficult is no boosters comparable to the winning programs and an administration that only gives lip service to athletics. And an Athletics Director that is not a promoter.Yes it is. Cold weather. Outdated arena. Lots of great local HS basketball but they want to spread their wings elsewhere understandably.
The weather: I'll put you in touch with my friend from College Station. When he and his wife stayed with us a few summers ago, they couldn't stop talking about how they loved the weather here compared to the humid hellscape they were going to have to return to. Of course, there's that other six months of the yearYes it is. Cold weather. Outdated arena. Lots of great local HS basketball but they want to spread their wings elsewhere understandably.
In San Diego you can drive to any season you want in 2 hours.The weather: I'll put you in touch with my friend from College Station. When he and his wife stayed with us a few summers ago, they couldn't stop talking about how they loved the weather here compared to the humid hellscape they were going to have to return to. Of course, there's that other six months of the year, but the only place in the country with perfect weather is southern California, and I wouldn't want to live anywhere without a change of seasons.
True, trueIn San Diego you can drive to any season you want in 2 hours.
Other than that it’s great.The biggest problems for a prospective coach at the U are poor pay for assistants, poor pay for head coach, poor NIL support, pro sports town, mediocre administration and regents that have tepid support for basketball, and no history of winning.
Depends what time of day. There are some times you won’t get more than a couple blocks away in 2 hours.In San Diego you can drive to any season you want in 2 hours.
Cold weather: East Lansing Ann Arbor, Madison. Historic arena. If we had a winning program, they’d spread their wings here.Yes it is. Cold weather. Outdated arena. Lots of great local HS basketball but they want to spread their wings elsewhere understandably.
That isn't in San Diego, that's LA or what has become of the Bay area, or if you want to get into Tahoe.Depends what time of day. There are some times you won’t get more than a couple blocks away in 2 hours.
Other than the stadium, couldn’t most of this once be said of the football program before PJ?It's a darn Tough job: No money, no national appeal, crummy home court, disjointed facilities for players, has become known as place where coaches come to die, Poindexter athletic director, afraid to play the other Division 1 school in town.
That's a pretty good recipe for a pretty darn tough place to create a consistent Top 25 program in today's Major College Basketball.
If the weather and the ability to drive to any "season" in 2 hours was the reason for choosing a college to play basketball, then Dutcher and SDSU should be getting the best recruits in the country. MN, IA, WI, NE, MSU, MU all have winter. If the team wins the players will come and the coach is the primary driver for a winning program.In San Diego you can drive to any season you want in 2 hours.
IF I read the Collective chart correctly we are 11th out of 16 reporting in the BG18. So not at the bottom. But still 11th! Also to the best of my knowledge we aren’t competing only against BIG18 schools for players Payne went to Texas A&M and Hawkins went to Texas Tech. No matter how you cut it, losing those two was the difference here between a winning year, a losing year, and Johnson’s job.The only evidence I have seen regarding nil indicates if you take away the four or five blue bloods at the top, then we are in the middle of big ten nil. Not the bottom.
No, we asked our last two coaches to skip the coaching ladder and train on the job. That's the issue.
There are definitely other issues but back to back bad hires is the overwhelming issue, really hopeful that Niko do what PJ has done in building a strong foundation.Can't disagree with that but it remains to be seen whether that is the only issue.
IF I read the Collective chart correctly we are 11th out of 16 reporting in the BG18. So not at the bottom. But still 11th! Also to the best of my knowledge we aren’t competing only against BIG18 schools for players Payne went to Texas A&M and Hawkins went to Texas Tech. No matter how you cut it, losing those two was the difference here between a winning year, a losing year, and Johnson’s job.
As for revenue sharing, each team gets about 20? While this should help, it mentioned that the schools expect NIL to shrink "substantially"? But will it shrink proportionally? Won’t the big hitters just continue to rake in donations far and above the common folk? While revenue sharing will allow more players to join the distribution of wealth, I am not so sure that it will cure the disparity in regards to the total amount of moneys each school has available to fund the bidding wars?