How that work out for them?Huh? Georgetown had the 16th ranked class in 2021, which is better than any of ours over the past decade. Also, we have not had a higher recruiting class than Georgetown since 2016.
What head coach that we are considering has proven he can recruit and fund the NIL
I agree with this, but these dominoes fell into place entirely too quickly and easily, did they not? I like the hire and if it all goes down as advertised, I have to believe it’s been going a little longer than the weekend.
Move the goalposts much? My comment was that hiring a former NBA player will help with recruiting and NIL. You said that it had no impact on recruiting at Georgetown. I showed it did. Now, you are asking what they did with that talent. That has nothing to do with my original comment. To answer, they did win their conference in 2021, but Ewing is not a good coach.How that work out for them?
He has some of the obvious selling point as others. You choose to ignore them.Other head coaches we were considering had obvious selling points though that Stoudamire lacks. I don't know what his is. Recruiting and NIL were mentioned so I questioned that.
All of what you say is true. But the program he “turned around” he left almost immediately. Not knocking anything he did, just saying he had one good year and then was gone. Sounds similar to the knocks on AAR and a couple others.He has some of the obvious selling point as others. You choose to ignore them.
He turned around a program that stank, which was coming off sanctions, and turned it into a winner in four years. He was WCC CoY. He has coaching experience at major programs and in the NBA. He has relationships everywhere, including in Atlanta where his children grew up and he is the godfather of one of our players.
Damon Stoudamire is also a name that will open doors with AAU and HS coaches. It will draw the attention of sidewalk fans, parents of basketball players, and our former basketball players. He is well respected and liked. The name carries weight, even if some HS players do not recognize him.
I agree that his leaving after his one good season is questionable, but he did go to the NBA and apparently did well with Celtics as an assistant.All of what you say is true. But the program he “turned around” he left almost immediately. Not knocking anything he did, just saying he had one good year and then was gone. Sounds similar to the knocks on AAR and a couple others.
Bottom line; I hope he’s a coach. If he is a coach and we can improve our NIL / recruiting some, we’ve got ourselves a nice future. If he is coming here simply because we think we can start pulling NBA lottery talent overnight, I’m not bullish on our prospects.
He has some of the obvious selling point as others. You choose to ignore them.
He turned around a program that stank, which was coming off sanctions, and turned it into a winner in four years. He was WCC CoY. He has coaching experience at major programs and in the NBA. He has relationships everywhere, including in Atlanta where his children grew up and he is the godfather of one of our players.
That’s a bonus thenNBA perception is that this is a huge blow to the Celtics coaching staff. Boston fans are unhappy but wish him well
The WCC is very imbalanced. Gonzaga is a national power. BYU was in the top 15 that year. Pacific tied with the other basketball power, St. Mary's.By winner you mean one year of finishing tied for third in conference. That is significantly lower success than almost any other candidates that has been talked about seriously. Yes it's a hard job, but so were several other jobs that coaches mentioned took on and had more success at. His ties to Atlanta are flimsy at best with little reason to believe they are meaningful for recruiting the way AAR's or Hunter's might be. The vast majority of his career has been on the west coast from his playing days to most of his coaching.
He has name recognition (among people who can remember the mid 90s) going for him for whatever that's worth.
1. You can poop on it if you want, but he was the WCC coach of the year that year. You can also ignore the context that they had fired their previous coach for violations and were coming off sanctions. But you can believe what you want to believe.By winner you mean one year of finishing tied for third in conference. That is significantly lower success than almost any other candidates that has been talked about seriously. Yes it's a hard job, but so were several other jobs that coaches mentioned took on and had more success at. His ties to Atlanta are flimsy at best with little reason to believe they are meaningful for recruiting the way AAR's or Hunter's might be. The vast majority of his career has been on the west coast from his playing days to most of his coaching.
He has name recognition (among people who can remember the mid 90s) going for him for whatever that's worth.
Only if we cannot get someone better. I would increase our pool of funds for assistants to around $1.5M and see who we could hire that is a better coach than what we had last year.It would be nice if we could keep Swartz as an assistant
Michigan and Howard it seems to be working ok.Didn’t at Georgetown. Didn’t at bama with Avery, not that nil was around then.