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2022 college basketball coaching carousel of progress

Discussion in 'Sports and News' started by dixiehack, Jan 26, 2022.

  1. dixiehack

    dixiehack Well-Known Member

  2. Twirling Time

    Twirling Time Well-Known Member

  3. tapintoamerica

    tapintoamerica Well-Known Member

    This looks like a sacrifice to the NCAA, which is how University-6 is subtly spinning it. It may not be quite that simple. The NCAA is out of the enforcement business. They have neither the manpower nor the willpower to do anything about violations. Even in the case of a repeat offender.
    The team quit on its coach. That's pretty apparent. He took 40 cents on the dollar, and both sides will be satisfied.
     
  4. Hermes

    Hermes Well-Known Member

    I’m now imagining the saddest Disney ride with a drunk John Schnatter on a hamster wheel filled with empty pizza boxes and Jim Beam bottles.

    “Oh it’s a great big boooooooful tmrooooooow!”
     
  5. DanOregon

    DanOregon Well-Known Member

    An interesting dilemma - go for the "for cause" firing and owe nothing but risk the coach being more "open" with the NCAA - or reach a settlement, go separate ways and each try to repair the damage to their reps.
     
  6. tapintoamerica

    tapintoamerica Well-Known Member

    The new interim coach, Pegues, filled that responsibility for the season's first six games, for which Mack was suspended in what now looks like a precursor to the execution. ACC Net talking head Cory Alexander said several University-6 players took a liking to Pegues and didn't feel like playing for Mack. Sounded very much like a coup.
     
  7. Sam Mills 51

    Sam Mills 51 Well-Known Member

    Chris Mack can claim wins and losses are why he's out. It's that his team has quit on him, or that he wasn't much more for compliance than Rick Pitino was. Or both.

    Like many schools, the athletic department probably had enough on him to fire him with cause. But they're embarrassed that they didn't find anyone who could give the appearance of cleaning up anything after Rick Pitino left a slimy trail behind him out the door. And, these days, settling with the coach is typically both cheaper and cleaner than dragging out in the courts (as the folks in Storrs found out and are on the hook for millions to Kevin Ollie plus who knows how much to attorneys).

    What a mess. Louisville has been nothing but an embarrassment since John Swofford panted after them to make sure he could hold an extra football game once a season. Not worth it.
     
  8. DanOregon

    DanOregon Well-Known Member

    Kind of an odd question - but when is the last time the NCAA really "took action" against a program. USC's scholarship limits must have been the last big one. Can't remember the last time a team in contention for a title faced a tourney or bowl ban - or lost TV games. Now it's mostly limits on recruiting. It isn't just that there are so many easy work arounds to cheat now - but the penalties are toothless as well.

    I guess I'm surprised we haven't heard or read about college athletics cheating in the "modern era" - jocks on the air always joke about the $25 handshakes twenty years later - but we all know it has gotten a lot more creative and detailed in the last 20 years. Jobs and housing for the folks with an "extra car" for junior to use, etc. I wonder if NIL will serve as an amnesty for past acts as long as they are detailed. Shoot, we have gambling partnering with the NFL - it isn't like college sports has a lot of high moral ground anymore.
     
  9. poindexter

    poindexter Well-Known Member

  10. Hot and Rickety

    Hot and Rickety Active Member

    Better job, Louisville or Maryland?

    In a vacuum, I'd probably say Louisville: better facilities, better location (no other pro teams to compete for fan dollars in Louisville), slightly better conference fit, fans who don't completely check out if the team is anything less than stellar. But Louisville's administration is a mess right now, it has both an interim AD and an interim school president, and the NCAA still is investigating (toothless as that may be). Maryland, even with an athletic department that always seems to shoot itself in the foot, might be the better job right now, especially if it can get a practice facility built.
     
  11. Hot and Rickety

    Hot and Rickety Active Member

    Speaking of the DC area, the walls may be closing in on Patrick Ewing at Georgetown, who's done little to reverse the program's irrelevance that began under JTIII. He has one year left on his contract, so the school pretty much has to either extend him or cut him loose, and there's very little reason to do the former apart from not disturbing Big John's ghost (this may actually be a consideration there):

    https://www.washingtonpost.com/sports/2022/01/22/georgetown-villanova-big-east-basketball-ewing/

    'It's not about the talent': Patrick Ewing and the battle to avoid another lost season at Georgetown
     
  12. heyabbott

    heyabbott Well-Known Member

    If you’ve seen what Maryland did to upgrade their football facilities you know they will do the same with bball. When engaged Maryland’s game day fan base is top 10. Given the number of pro and college teams in the area, media focus isn’t as intense. You can actually fly under the radar in Maryland. Without Cheating Jim, Ole Roy and the kindly plantation owner Duke K, the ACC will be too large to have meaningful rivalries anymore without their marquee coaches. Already UNC NC State is not a national rivalry like it was. No one is looking forward to Clemson at Pitt in bball. Ever. Notre Dame adds nothing to the conference basketball. The ACC will become #3 basketball conference. SEC is going to move up 1 and stay behind Big10.
     
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