Earned, not givenTake it easy on Brad. He goes out there and gets that Frankenstein fade cut everytime he goes to the barber and that takes guts
Earned, not givenTake it easy on Brad. He goes out there and gets that Frankenstein fade cut everytime he goes to the barber and that takes guts
And you don’t have to comment with your paragraph length run on sentences.Oh boy another calipari thread
Cal is a terrible coach and his inability to develop coaches is a testament to his fixed mindset.I saw some tweets about this and thought it would be an interesting discussion here. Not looking to pile with Cal because he clearly had some magic from mid 90s through late 2010s but it’s insane to me that his coaching tree is so barren.
Josh Pastner is his most successful assistant in terms of HC success and I would not categorize him as a Cal guy given he was on staff for one year.
After that you have Payne, Barbee, Antigua, Flint, Kellogg… no offense to those guys but I don’t even think you could categorize them as even mediocre head coaches.
So how does one of the most successful coaches in this era not have any coaching tree to speak of? I don’t think “he only won because of talent” is it, although that’s part of it. To me it probably points to his something in his personality or DNA and not giving up control on anything with his programs, stunting the growth of his assistants.
Would love to hear some thoughts/theories on this because I think it’s a pretty glaring anomaly that says something (what I don’t know) about Cal, for better or worse.
Quin Snyder has been pretty successful.K's most successful was Mike Brey.
Interesting coaching tree. Dead end at Cal.
(Things were looking so promising for Walter McCarty until 2019).Then former players who became D1 coaches. Pope, Pelphrey, Ford....who else are we missing?
Cal is not a real coach, so his assistants learn basically nothing basketball wise from himI saw some tweets about this and thought it would be an interesting discussion here. Not looking to pile with Cal because he clearly had some magic from mid 90s through late 2010s but it’s insane to me that his coaching tree is so barren.
Josh Pastner is his most successful assistant in terms of HC success and I would not categorize him as a Cal guy given he was on staff for one year.
After that you have Payne, Barbee, Antigua, Flint, Kellogg… no offense to those guys but I don’t even think you could categorize them as even mediocre head coaches.
So how does one of the most successful coaches in this era not have any coaching tree to speak of? I don’t think “he only won because of talent” is it, although that’s part of it. To me it probably points to his something in his personality or DNA and not giving up control on anything with his programs, stunting the growth of his assistants.
Would love to hear some thoughts/theories on this because I think it’s a pretty glaring anomaly that says something (what I don’t know) about Cal, for better or worse.
Holllly crap didn't realize that
Jim B gets mad props then in this category
Take it easy on Brad. He goes out there and gets that Frankenstein fade cut everytime he goes to the barber and that takes guts
Good point. It seems UK started with the DD and lob for the slam. Now you see many teams doing that, and better than UK can do it. Plus people have figured out how to defend it it seems.Cal didn't coach he just had an edge. Once everyone started copying his strategy he was a dead man walking.
This is exactly what I thought about when I read the title.