To assume you know what the culture of the bb team is irresponsible. Unless you are part of that culture you have no way of knowing.Its not the defense, it’s the execution. And it’s not the strategy, it’s the culture (or the lack thereof).
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To assume you know what the culture of the bb team is irresponsible. Unless you are part of that culture you have no way of knowing.Its not the defense, it’s the execution. And it’s not the strategy, it’s the culture (or the lack thereof).
Crean didn’t get fired because he was increasingly difficult to deal with. That’s nonsense.The university administration actively sought to "de-emphasize" the men's basketball program after Bobby Knight was fired. That has been an ongoing effort since, and continues today. I've had folks argue that Tom Crean being fired less than two years after winning a Big Ten regular season championship was an indicator that the administration was serious about competing at the highest level of college basketball. Unfortunately, it was anything but that. Crean had become increasingly difficult to deal with and, at that point, was a thorn in the side of the administration. Therefore, Crean's lackluster final season was enough cover to let him go.
If you can't see the fact that the so-called "powers that be" at IU desire the men's basketball program to be no more or less "significant" than the football program -- or any other program -- I don't know what to tell you. There is not a blindingly powerful desire to win at all costs like there is with SEC football programs or the Duke/North Carolina/Kentucky's of the college basketball world.
Watch them. If you ever competed at anything, you’ll know what the obvious lack culture looks like.To assume you know what the culture of the bb team is irresponsible. Unless you are part of that culture you have no way of knowing.
My point exactly.De-emphasize the sport which put the University on the map and finally make an effort to become a football school which is a much bigger driver of revenue? I highly doubt that to be the case and if you think it is, then what's the point in even fielding a team if we aren't trying to win?
If that's what you want to believe, go right ahead.Crean didn’t get fired because he was increasingly difficult to deal with. That’s nonsense.
If that is the case....why has the university spent so much money on the basketball program?The university administration actively sought to "de-emphasize" the men's basketball program after Bobby Knight was fired. That has been an ongoing effort since, and continues today. I've had folks argue that Tom Crean being fired less than two years after winning a Big Ten regular season championship was an indicator that the administration was serious about competing at the highest level of college basketball. Unfortunately, it was anything but that. Crean had become increasingly difficult to deal with and, at that point, was a thorn in the side of the administration. Therefore, Crean's lackluster final season was enough cover to let him go.
If you can't see the fact that the so-called "powers that be" at IU desire the men's basketball program to be no more or less "significant" than the football program -- or any other program -- I don't know what to tell you. There is not a blindingly powerful desire to win at all costs like there is with SEC football programs or the Duke/North Carolina/Kentucky's of the college basketball world.
De-emphasize the sport which put the University on the map and finally make an effort to become a football school which is a much bigger driver of revenue? I highly doubt that to be the case and if you think it is, then what's the point in even fielding a team if we aren't trying to win?
This is exactly the point -- the university elites are fine with winning, but they have no desire to have a Calipari type figure leading the program. If a new coach at IU were to win at that level, it would be a problem in the eyes of the powers-that-be."No one bigger than the program ever again." That I can say as fact. Of course as well all know any coach that wins big here would obviously become very big and powerful.
This is exactly the point -- the university elites are fine with winning, but they have no desire to have a Calipari type figure leading the program. If a new coach at IU were to win at that level, it would be a problem in the eyes of the powers-that-be.
It’s the truth.If that's what you want to believe, go right ahead.
Tony Bennett is the only big name coach I know ofDoesn't Izzo play the packline defense?
Yeah because that’s this teams problem. Try learning how to make adjustments and teach guys how to shoot free throws. This team has left way too many points on the court. If they shot 75% from the line we would have a few more wins on our record.My hunch is Dolson will keep Archie (due to the buyout), but instruct hm to make some changes to his staff. Hire some assistants who can recruit.
Number four is most of the problem, coupled with a complete inability to recruit size. Even Archie must know this since he said after UM loss that their "size" was really hard to deal with.I think @Paterfamilias had a post in another thread that listed Indiana as having Top 5 ranked talent in conference (based on ratings coming out of HS). So that means one or a combination of things is happening.
1. Miller is the unluckiest guy in the conference.
2. Our players were vastly overrated by everyone who rates players.
3. Miller is a poor talent evaluator (along with a bunch of other guys).
4. Miller is a poor developer of talent.
I don't think we have a team full of one and done obviously, but we have guys that were considered more talented coming out of high school than the results have shown.
We are not at practice, but if Miller were to be given another year (and I voted fire) and I were his boss, I would be keenly interested in him explaining WTF he does during practice.
TJD comes back unless he goes to Europe to play or the developmental league, he offers next to nothing to an NBA team right now.My guess is that Archie has already been told that he job is safe regardless of what happens. I would assume that everyone except TJD comes back and Brunk is healthy and we get the new big from Cincy.
Next year is make or break. Make a run at the Big Ten title and in the tourney or pack your bags.
Sounds good to me!The university administration actively sought to "de-emphasize" the men's basketball program after Bobby Knight was fired. That has been an ongoing effort since, and continues today. I've had folks argue that Tom Crean being fired less than two years after winning a Big Ten regular season championship was an indicator that the administration was serious about competing at the highest level of college basketball. Unfortunately, it was anything but that. Crean had become increasingly difficult to deal with and, at that point, was a thorn in the side of the administration. Therefore, Crean's lackluster final season was enough cover to let him go.
If you can't see the fact that the so-called "powers that be" at IU desire the men's basketball program to be no more or less "significant" than the football program -- or any other program -- I don't know what to tell you. There is not a blindingly powerful desire to win at all costs like there is with SEC football programs or the Duke/North Carolina/Kentucky's of the college basketball world.
Sounds good to me!
At schools like Ohio State, Michigan, Wisconsin, Michigan State.....do you think basketball controls everything?
How are they doing in basketball compared to IU?
This has nothing to do with “de-emphasizing” basketball. It has everything to do with making crummy hires. There are programs that are on shoestring budgets compared to IU that could beat the socks off of us because they have a good coaching staff.
Well, now 62% think he should be fired.@kkott just over 60/40 want him gone. That number will go to over 80/20 if we lose the next 2
Well, now 62% think he should be fired.
Bit that’s not likely the sentiment among the much broader cross section of people who consider themselves IU fans and who don’t go to fan forums. This is a tiny, isolated little island, and it doesn’t represent much of anything in the “real” world.You said you thought it might already be toxic, did you think that number would be higher? I will make the same poll after the next two games if we lose, I bet it is over 80 then, at that point it is dumpster fire I would say. 62/38 is bad but not crazy bad.
#4. If someone does an honest evaluation of our player development. there really isn't any question.I think @Paterfamilias had a post in another thread that listed Indiana as having Top 5 ranked talent in conference (based on ratings coming out of HS). So that means one or a combination of things is happening.
1. Miller is the unluckiest guy in the conference.
2. Our players were vastly overrated by everyone who rates players.
3. Miller is a poor talent evaluator (along with a bunch of other guys).
4. Miller is a poor developer of talent.
I don't think we have a team full of one and done obviously, but we have guys that were considered more talented coming out of high school than the results have shown.
We are not at practice, but if Miller were to be given another year (and I voted fire) and I were his boss, I would be keenly interested in him explaining WTF he does during practice.
The university administration actively sought to "de-emphasize" the men's basketball program after Bobby Knight was fired. That has been an ongoing effort since, and continues today. I've had folks argue that Tom Crean being fired less than two years after winning a Big Ten regular season championship was an indicator that the administration was serious about competing at the highest level of college basketball. Unfortunately, it was anything but that. Crean had become increasingly difficult to deal with and, at that point, was a thorn in the side of the administration. Therefore, Crean's lackluster final season was enough cover to let him go.
If you can't see the fact that the so-called "powers that be" at IU desire the men's basketball program to be no more or less "significant" than the football program -- or any other program -- I don't know what to tell you. There is not a blindingly powerful desire to win at all costs like there is with SEC football programs or the Duke/North Carolina/Kentucky's of the college basketball world.
You can go rub one out if you need to, Bub-Rub.
De-emphasize doesn't mean you don't want the program to succeed. I take that as they don't want a coach bigger than the University. It would make zero financial $$ to wish the men's bball program didn't succeed. They want it to succeed a different way than it did with Knight. I'm not saying they are right or wrong, but IU wants money and a good/great bball program delivers that....duh
He was really focusing on the facilities arms race when he made those comments, and they weren’t altogether different from ones Knight made on the subject. Brand‘s comments have been embellished and wildly exaggerated from the second he made them.De-emphasize doesn't mean you don't want the program to succeed. I take that as they don't want a coach bigger than the University. It would make zero financial $$ to wish the men's bball program didn't succeed. They want it to succeed a different way than it did with Knight. I'm not saying they are right or wrong, but IU wants money and a good/great bball program delivers that....duh
Not a single soul that matters at IU doesn't want a basketball program that is "elite" (translation from my use of double negatives - everybody that matters wants IU to be ''elite"). They want to be in the ff and contend for conference championships. To say otherwise is ridiculous conspiracy-theory fodder. The fact that administrators don't want another Bob Knight does not mean that they are ok with mediocrity or want to limit the success of the program in any way. Those two things are not intertwined.What they want is a guy who comes in and wins 20 games a year like clock work, has us in the NCAA tourney nearly every year, and most importantly keeps the money flowing in and butts in the seats. But no they do not ever want to be elite as that would mean the coach is bigger than the program. They thought they had that in Crean and Archie but both were much worse than imaginable.