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Willard & Maryland 2nd Place In b1g…..

People on here are still joking about Willard's lack of success in the NCAAT, yet they're ok with going from 6 of 7 tournaments to 0-3 as if our program was set back 12 years to 2010 and when we hired Sha we were trying to just rebuild our program from embarrassment back to relevance. That's an agenda.
Not an agenda, but an acknowledgement of the undeniable reality we exist in now. Comparing the environment Shaheen Holloway is trying to succeed in compared to what Kevin Willard coached, and trying to act as if they are the least bit analogous, reveals absolute ignorance of the game today. Holding the record of one up to the other is like comparing a cantaloupe to a shot put.

So, yes, I'm still standing behind a coach who I think is a good one (the fact that he's one of ours buys him some additional credit, but not that much), especially as he and our university try to figure out how to finance success in a landscape that seems to change every year. I'm not 100 percent sure it's going to work, but I know that while he is not blame-free here, the vast majority of this failure so far is not Holloway's fault.

Regardless of any of the new landscape, unless someone is clearly an incompetent, I tend to give a coach I support five seasons to reveal their abilities in a particular setting. I did for Kevin Willard, who I was 100 percent behind hiring and coaching this program. He finally got it together after that length of time (after finally deciding to work), and elevated us to a NCAA-in-most-years type of program, which I don't take for granted. But I also wish he'd have cashed in earlier than he did given us the chance to hire someone who could advance in the NCAAs. A gamble, for sure, since you never know for sure what you're going to get, but I welcomed the chance to roll the dice and be aggressive. To me, we have that sort of coach here now, but the timing did not line up for us or him, so now they all have to figure out how to make it work now, the way things are now. We'll see, but I still feel good about him. I wasn't out on Willard after three seasons when he was 3-15 in the league (despite not having to find $2 million to pay a roster), so I'm not going to be out on Holloway yet, either.
 
From the two things can be true department. Shaka Smart at different points in his career led an 11 seed to a Final Four and lost seven consecutive tournament games.

Does that make him a "good tournament coach" or a "bad tournament coach." Or does it make him a guy whose team got hot at the right moment once and maybe he's somewhere in the middle?
Some context on this...VCU the season before the final four run won the cbi in his first season as head coach with much of the same cast on the roster. Irony about the tournament game loss streak is that was a major factor in waving goodbye to Barnes (Texas) because he just was not getting key results in March.

Here is one, Matt Painter...is he a bad coach for having lost to NJ low majors in back to back seasons? Purdue certainly has given him a long leash for not having won the big one.
 
Not an agenda, but an acknowledgement of the undeniable reality we exist in now. Comparing the environment Shaheen Holloway is trying to succeed in compared to what Kevin Willard coached, and trying to act as if they are the least bit analogous, reveals absolute ignorance of the game today. Holding the record of one up to the other is like comparing a cantaloupe to a shot put.

So, yes, I'm still standing behind a coach who I think is a good one (the fact that he's one of ours buys him some additional credit, but not that much), especially as he and our university try to figure out how to finance success in a landscape that seems to change every year. I'm not 100 percent sure it's going to work, but I know that while he is not blame-free here, the vast majority of this failure so far is not Holloway's fault.

Regardless of any of the new landscape, unless someone is clearly an incompetent, I tend to give a coach I support five seasons to reveal their abilities in a particular setting. I did for Kevin Willard, who I was 100 percent behind hiring and coaching this program. He finally got it together after that length of time (after finally deciding to work), and elevated us to a NCAA-in-most-years type of program, which I don't take for granted. But I also wish he'd have cashed in earlier than he did given us the chance to hire someone who could advance in the NCAAs. A gamble, for sure, since you never know for sure what you're going to get, but I welcomed the chance to roll the dice and be aggressive. To me, we have that sort of coach here now, but the timing did not line up for us or him, so now they all have to figure out how to make it work now, the way things are now. We'll see, but I still feel good about him. I wasn't out on Willard after three seasons when he was 3-15 in the league (despite not having to find $2 million to pay a roster), so I'm not going to be out on Holloway yet, either.
The non-conference disaster and far too many blowout losses last year were inexcusable. Will we ever have the collection of talent that we had on last year’s team again? Only time will tell but last year’s team was really good and Sha did not have them prepared. That’s on him and there’s nobody else to blame.

You want to blame this year’s season on the higher-ups? Sure. But there is no excuse for last year, 4th place finish in the Big East be damned. Time for him to put up or shut up. That’s where I’m at.
 
Not an agenda, but an acknowledgement of the undeniable reality we exist in now. Comparing the environment Shaheen Holloway is trying to succeed in compared to what Kevin Willard coached, and trying to act as if they are the least bit analogous, reveals absolute ignorance of the game today. Holding the record of one up to the other is like comparing a cantaloupe to a shot put.

So, yes, I'm still standing behind a coach who I think is a good one (the fact that he's one of ours buys him some additional credit, but not that much), especially as he and our university try to figure out how to finance success in a landscape that seems to change every year. I'm not 100 percent sure it's going to work, but I know that while he is not blame-free here, the vast majority of this failure so far is not Holloway's fault.

Regardless of any of the new landscape, unless someone is clearly an incompetent, I tend to give a coach I support five seasons to reveal their abilities in a particular setting. I did for Kevin Willard, who I was 100 percent behind hiring and coaching this program. He finally got it together after that length of time (after finally deciding to work), and elevated us to a NCAA-in-most-years type of program, which I don't take for granted. But I also wish he'd have cashed in earlier than he did given us the chance to hire someone who could advance in the NCAAs. A gamble, for sure, since you never know for sure what you're going to get, but I welcomed the chance to roll the dice and be aggressive. To me, we have that sort of coach here now, but the timing did not line up for us or him, so now they all have to figure out how to make it work now, the way things are now. We'll see, but I still feel good about him. I wasn't out on Willard after three seasons when he was 3-15 in the league (despite not having to find $2 million to pay a roster), so I'm not going to be out on Holloway yet, either.
How much different is the landscape other than it’s out in the open? Big money schools paying 5 times more to one player than we could afford has existed as a problem since Amaker left. Bobby G fought that fight. Willard fought that fight. Sha is fighting that fight. The only difference is no sit out. Nobody bitched when we picked up Dawes and Dre with no sit outs. Anyone think Powell was paid as much as 20% of what Zion made at Duke? The numbers are bigger but the concept is the same.
 
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How much different is the landscape other than it’s out in the open? Big money schools paying 5 times more to one player than we could afford has existed as a problem since Amaker left. Bobby G fought that fight. Willard fought that fight. Sha is fighting that fight. The only difference is no sit out. Nobody bitched when we picked up Dawes and Dre with no sit outs. Anyone think Powell was paid as much as 20% of what Zion made at Duke? The numbers are bigger but the concept is the same.
If I am not mistaken, in 2022 the rule was changed where you could transfer ONCE and not have to sit out. This is why we didn’t lose Dre, Kadary, or Dawes heading into the 2023-24 season.

The fact that you can now transfer annually without having to sit out is the key component that is not getting as much attention as it should. NIL is a huge piece of the puzzle but this impacts Seton Hall far worse.

Powell, Sandro, Rhoden, etc etc under Willard did not leave because they were poised to be breakout players come their junior seasons. No one wants to sit out at that point in their career when they are going to be the guy on their current team.

So if Godswill stays and takes a big jump in his development….Heck it could be any player for that matter, they can leave for the money because they don’t have to sit out.
 
If I am not mistaken, in 2022 the rule was changed where you could transfer ONCE and not have to sit out. This is why we didn’t lose Dre, Kadary, or Dawes heading into the 2023-24 season.

The fact that you can now transfer annually without having to sit out is the key component that is not getting as much attention as it should. NIL is a huge piece of the puzzle but this impacts Seton Hall far worse.

Powell, Sandro, Rhoden, etc etc under Willard did not leave because they were poised to be breakout players come their junior seasons. No one wants to sit out at that point in their career when they are going to be the guy on their current team.

So if Godswill stays and takes a big jump in his development….Heck it could be any player for that matter, they can leave for the money because they don’t have to sit out.
The one time no sit out rule was a joke that plenty of people like Earl Timberlake got around.

I agree the one time sit out rule is the difference, but this world of SHU getting out spent 5 times or 10 times is the same hill our previous coaches faced, not just Willard. That isn't new. Heck ratio wise we probably cut the gap from 25 to 1 down to 10 to 1.
 
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If I am not mistaken, in 2022 the rule was changed where you could transfer ONCE and not have to sit out. This is why we didn’t lose Dre, Kadary, or Dawes heading into the 2023-24 season.

The fact that you can now transfer annually without having to sit out is the key component that is not getting as much attention as it should. NIL is a huge piece of the puzzle but this impacts Seton Hall far worse.

Powell, Sandro, Rhoden, etc etc under Willard did not leave because they were poised to be breakout players come their junior seasons. No one wants to sit out at that point in their career when they are going to be the guy on their current team.

So if Godswill stays and takes a big jump in his development….Heck it could be any player for that matter, they can leave for the money because they don’t have to sit out.
It isn’t just the immediate transfer rule—it’s that EVERY player now thinks they are entitled to money and will shop their offers around.

It used to be: “we’ll give you $100-200k” for a top 50 kid and the kid will commit right there. Now you’ve got bench kids seeing what they can get and no penalty at all for trying.

I’m sorry—but in Willard’s time you only had the top 15% or so that got a the extra money.

Those that are railing about this “just being out in the open” are not too keen on how things were or how they are now.
 
The non-conference disaster and far too many blowout losses last year were inexcusable. Will we ever have the collection of talent that we had on last year’s team again? Only time will tell but last year’s team was really good and Sha did not have them prepared. That’s on him and there’s nobody else to blame.

You want to blame this year’s season on the higher-ups? Sure. But there is no excuse for last year, 4th place finish in the Big East be damned. Time for him to put up or shut up. That’s where I’m at.

25 wins and 13 in conference is a good season. Full stop. You've tried to diminish this over and over again, and you're alone in that. You have two compatriots saying that it's "put up or shut up" time for Holloway, but fortunately most REASONABLE people, including the entire administration of SHU, don't feel this way. But you could take your own advice and put up ($$) or shut up.
 
25 wins and 13 in conference is a good season. Full stop. You've tried to diminish this over and over again, and you're alone in that. You have two compatriots saying that it's "put up or shut up" time for Holloway, but fortunately most REASONABLE people, including the entire administration of SHU, don't feel this way. But you could take your own advice and put up ($$) or shut up.
The record is nice, but good seasons in a power conference equate to NCAA tournament games. Hard to imagine anyone else from a power conference calling an NIT season a good season unless they've had a long postseason drought where they feel they are finally going in the right direction. I'm not quite sure even a school like SJU, who hadn't been dancing in 5 seasons called their season last year a good season.
 
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Some context on this...VCU the season before the final four run won the cbi in his first season as head coach with much of the same cast on the roster. Irony about the tournament game loss streak is that was a major factor in waving goodbye to Barnes (Texas) because he just was not getting key results in March.

Here is one, Matt Painter...is he a bad coach for having lost to NJ low majors in back to back seasons? Purdue certainly has given him a long leash for not having won the big one.
Matt Painter?

The guy with 15 (soon to be 16) NCAA appearances including seven Sweet 16s, two Elite Eights and a Final Four in 20 years at Purdue? The guy who has won nearly 70% of his games as a college coach?

Sign me up for that kind of failure.
 
25 wins and 13 in conference is a good season. Full stop. You've tried to diminish this over and over again, and you're alone in that. You have two compatriots saying that it's "put up or shut up" time for Holloway, but fortunately most REASONABLE people, including the entire administration of SHU, don't feel this way. But you could take your own advice and put up ($$) or shut up.
Did you just call the SHU administration “reasonable”? Are you sure that you’re not Sha’s burner account?
 
The one time no sit out rule was a joke that plenty of people like Earl Timberlake got around.

I agree the one time sit out rule is the difference, but this world of SHU getting out spent 5 times or 10 times is the same hill our previous coaches faced, not just Willard. That isn't new. Heck ratio wise we probably cut the gap from 25 to 1 down to 10 to 1.
It’s not new especially for the top tier players. But the rule changes have popped the cork on so much money pouring in at all levels it’s exponentially more than before available.

The old rules and restrictions and having to pay players through sneaker companies or with bag droppers did have some deterrence and capping. Everyone did it - that Barrett/Griffin class was living well - but it’s simply on steroids now.
 
25 wins and 13 in conference is a good season. Full stop. You've tried to diminish this over and over again, and you're alone in that. You have two compatriots saying that it's "put up or shut up" time for Holloway, but fortunately most REASONABLE people, including the entire administration of SHU, don't feel this way. But you could take your own advice and put up ($$) or shut up.
Sha’s failure started before the season even began and poisoned the entire thing: had Sha not been stubborn, we might have retained Samuel at a reasonable price. Deserves significant criticism for that blunder alone. Need to evaluate his coaching performance given that counterfactual—and therefore discount it hugely. Good season, it was not.
 
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It’s not new especially for the top tier players. But the rule changes have popped the cork on so much money pouring in at all levels it’s exponentially more than before available.

The old rules and restrictions and having to pay players through sneaker companies or with bag droppers did have some deterrence and capping. Everyone did it - that Barrett/Griffin class was living well - but it’s simply on steroids now.
Yes but it's on steroids for everyone. Seton Hall's budget is on steroids compared to what it was 5 years ago. Duke was probably paying their entire team $3 million a couple years ago. Now they're starting 5 is probably $8 million. Weren't we looking to grab the Washburn brothers for a $3,000 storage bill payment? Now we're paying $1-$1.5 million. We've grown but others have been able to grow faster than us because of 1 or 2 big donors that we don't have. The other guys have always been ahead of us. Creighton, Marquette, Villanova, PC, all had more money than us. Willards strategy of staying old through the transfer portal was ahead of the times and now that everyone is doing that we need to be creative and come up with a new way to be ahead of the times. Otherwise we're going to be outbid and just waiting in need of a miracle donor instead of making something happen.
 
Sha’s failure started before the season even began and poisoned the entire thing: had Sha not been stubborn, we might have retained Samuel at a reasonable price. Deserves significant criticism for that blunder alone. Need to evaluate his coaching performance given that counterfactual—and therefore discount it hugely. Good season, it was not.
You think Sha had $300k to pay Samuel?

Could you point me to any players getting paid $300k on SHU in ‘23-24?
 
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You think Sha had $300k to pay Samuel?

Could you point me to any players getting paid $300k on SHU in ‘23-24?
No idea. But irrelevant. The fact remains that Sha was stubborn and misjudged the market—it’s no excuse to say he might not have gotten the money had he asked for it. And had he asked and been denied, it simply would have represented yet another of his infirmities as a leader of program: inability to persuade admin and donors to give him the required resources.
 
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