Re: Men's Basketball
I agree in whole with JackMD's comments.
The men's program is in a bad, bad place right now--partly because of bad performance by coaches and players (in scheduling, recruiting, preparation, and game performance), and partly because of bad luck.
I've said before that this is probably the biggest challenge that Nagy will probably ever face in his professional coaching career. He needs to adapt to the new realities, from being a top-tier D-II program to being a bottom-of-the-heap D-I program.
Coaching is very much a what-have-you-done-for-me-lately profession. Nagy and the Jackrabbits have not done much lately. This invites all manner of speculation and criticism, some of which is warranted, some is not. This is just another adjustment to D-I that we are all going through.
Being bad in D-I matters iin a way that it simply doesn't in D-II. Nobody cares if you're good or bad in D-II. But being bad in D-I gets you talked about around office coffee pots nationwide. Just ask Savannah State.
I agree in whole with JackMD's comments.
The men's program is in a bad, bad place right now--partly because of bad performance by coaches and players (in scheduling, recruiting, preparation, and game performance), and partly because of bad luck.
I've said before that this is probably the biggest challenge that Nagy will probably ever face in his professional coaching career. He needs to adapt to the new realities, from being a top-tier D-II program to being a bottom-of-the-heap D-I program.
Coaching is very much a what-have-you-done-for-me-lately profession. Nagy and the Jackrabbits have not done much lately. This invites all manner of speculation and criticism, some of which is warranted, some is not. This is just another adjustment to D-I that we are all going through.
Being bad in D-I matters iin a way that it simply doesn't in D-II. Nobody cares if you're good or bad in D-II. But being bad in D-I gets you talked about around office coffee pots nationwide. Just ask Savannah State.
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