CentralGopher
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Can I vote for more than one?
I have no idea what your point is.But that is the point. If you can't blame Ben Johnson you can't blame Tim Brewster. It is not his fault the school hired him despite him not being qualified. (I am not actually saying this is true, I am saying that is the excuse people are using to not blame Johnson)
Also if the Administration and Coyle get the blame for hiring Johnson then they have to get the credit for hiring PJ and Motzko.
You can't have it both ways.
Yes, mark all that apply.Can I vote for more than one?
I hope so!Utah is not Arizona in basketball.
Every coach and their wife "love it" wherever they are. Means nothing 99% of the time.
I'm not saying it's 100% but very possible. Unless he just hates Mark Coyle's guts now. I'm hoping Mark can go hat in hand and say "Sorry the boss made me do it. Let's fix the mistake."I hope so!
Ben's buyout after year three will be a bit higher.Apparently Lindsey took a $200K buyout rather than be Coyle's "fundraiser", even though it cost her $900K. I wonder if Ben will get the same offer.
I think people continue to mix two different lines of thought here. Does the administration deserve blame for when they make a bad hire? Yes. But after they make a decision on who to hire, it's 100% on that person to make the most of that job.
The administration or Coyle isn't running these programs. Coaches with no or limited head coaching experience have been successful at other P6 programs now, and in the past.
Ben is the CEO of the basketball program and is in control of every aspect of it, just like PJ is in football, and Motzko is in hockey. Does the administration deserve praise for their success? Why does the administration want those programs to be successful and not basketball? If coach P is successful on the women's side, unlike Whalen, that's not because of how coach P operates compared to Whalen? The administration just waved a magic wand and said now coach P will be successful?
The administration isn't recruiting 10 power forwards and no guards. The administration doesn't refuse to use all of the allotted scholarships. The administration isn't choosing assistant coaches or the schedule.
Ben sold himself to the administration on why he's the right person for the job, and why he was going to be successful here. But now we're going to say that the outcome was predetermined, that it's not his fault, and we just need to be ok that he's essentially stealing money and reducing the program to its worst state in history?
It's ridiculous to blame this on anyone else other than Ben Johnson.
If your 8 year old convinces you he can drive your car and crashes it into the garage. It is your fault for letting him drive and everything that comes after that.
Trying really hard to cover up that he had zero years of head coaching experience. Good effort16 years of assistant coach experience, including 5 at the U
There is a very easy line in the sand that counters both of these posts (GWG's is far more thoughtful, but they both get at the same idea):
did the AD hire a guy who had never been a head coach before?
If yes: then at minimum equal blame falls on the hiring decision, if not more.
If no: then I'm much more sympathetic to these posts.
Tom Izzo was 40 years old 16 years of assistant coaching experience, and no head coaching experience when he was hired a Michigan State. After three years at Duke they were calling for Mike Krzyzewski’s head. Ben’s first two recruiting classes look solid next year‘s income and class is very promising. If the gophers turn the corner and win 7-9 games in the conference this year and stay competitive then can you really say it was a bad hire.Trying really hard to cover up that he had zero years of head coaching experience. Good effort
That's on Coyle
I think that would take us about to where we were when Richard was fired. The jury would still be out on the “bad hire” question. The okay recruiting doesn’t do much for me in the free transfer era. The likelihood of keeping that core together is small.Tom Izzo was 40 years old 16 years of assistant coaching experience, and no head coaching experience when he was hired a Michigan State. After three years at Duke they were calling for Mike Krzyzewski’s head. Ben’s first two recruiting classes look solid next year‘s income and class is very promising. If the gophers turn the corner and win 7-9 games in the conference this year and stay competitive then can you really say it was a bad hire.
Please no more K comparisons, we had enough of that during the Pitino years lmaoTom Izzo was 40 years old 16 years of assistant coaching experience, and no head coaching experience when he was hired a Michigan State. After three years at Duke they were calling for Mike Krzyzewski’s head. Ben’s first two recruiting classes look solid next year‘s income and class is very promising. If the gophers turn the corner and win 7-9 games in the conference this year and stay competitive then can you really say it was a bad hire.
Believe me, I’m not saying it was ever a good hire, in my eyes the administration is gutless and they went cheap. I also have much more faith in Ben than I ever did with patinoK hired in 1980 with five years head at Army, Izzo hired in 1995, Painter hired in 2005 (with more than zero head experience).
If Coyle was using these guys to justify the hiring of Ben Johnson in 2021 .... I mean, just yikes. He deserves more than half the blame, then.
dude come on. You literally listed five guys who had head coaching experience. Hoiberg was a head coach in the NBA. So was Woodson.
None of the four are close to Ben Johnson.
You don't hire a guy who has zero head coaching experience to a P5 job. That's on Coyle
It's a line in the sand, that you don't cross.
And he was trying to get paid millions of dollars.Ben Johnson isn't an 8 year old kid trying to drive a car. When hired, he was a 40 year old grown man with 16 years of assistant coach experience, including 5 at the U, and allegedly had strong ties to local AAU programs.
And he was trying to get paid millions of dollars.
This is tremendous work, GWG. On the other side, you have guys like Archie Miller at Indiana who you would have thought was a decent hire.Hoiberg had zero head coaching or assistant coaching experience before taking the ISU head coaching job.
People mocked Indiana for hiring Woodson on this board because he had never coached college.
You think Matt Painter learned how to run a B1G program after 1 year of being a head coach at Southern IL, and 1 year as a P6 assistant? Ben Johnson had 10 years of P6 assistant experience.
Shrewsberry's only head coaching experience was being 32-63 at a NAIA school 13 years prior.
Chris Collins had zero head coaching experience before taking the NW job and won more at a much more difficult place to win.
Jerome Tang, zero college head coaching experience before K-State
Jamie Dixon, one year as a head coach at a secondary school in New Zealand, zero head coaching experience in the USA before landing at Pitt
Greg Gard, zero head coaching experience before Wisconsin
Brian Dutcher, zero head coaching experience before San Diego State
Tommy Lloyd, zero head coaching experience before Arizona
There are many more examples and none of them are even close to as bad as Ben Johnson
Disagree.This times infinity.
Ben Johnson isn't an 8 year old kid trying to drive a car. When hired, he was a 40 year old grown man with 16 years of assistant coach experience, including 5 at the U, and allegedly had strong ties to local AAU programs.
Did he put his own name in, or was he recruited to apply by people inside the U? It goes both ways in the hiring process quite frequently. And lots of people interview for jobs they are not ready for. But not many of them actually get the jobs.I've seen people saying Johnson should not have even applied, or should not have accepted the job once it was offered.
that's just not realistic. the job was posted - Johnson met the requirements - he was interviewed - he was offered the job - and he accepted.
does anyone honestly think that, at that point in the process, Johnson was going to stand up and say "you know what, I don't think I'm really capable of doing this job, so I'm going to turn it down."
at that point, he has no way of knowing whether he would ever have another opportunity like this.
Now, is it possible that Johnson over-estimated his ability to recruit - or under-estimated the difficulties he would encounter at MN? Yes, I think that is very possible. But if I was hiring someone, I would rather hire someone who is confident in their ability to do the job as opposed to someone who has doubts about their ability to do the job.