Wow! That's just absurd. I don't think you were on here bitching when Cal brought DeMarcus, Wall, and Bledsoe with him. DeMarcus had even already committed to Memphis.Originally posted by catlogic15:
Not boo-hooing. But does bother me that Slice used the enormous recruiting budget of UK, the resources, private plane, unlimited time, etc. to build a relationship on our dime to then stear them away. I have a problem with that.
If he were that great on his own, why didn't Pittsburgh sign 4 5 stars a year?
After this year, Slice goes away. St. John's ain't Kentucky.
Hindsight is 20\20..... Which is why I'm not blaming anyone, but if a guy was brought in for one reason (this case recruiting).... Doesn't bring us anyone, and in fact, before finishing one season with a team, is now recruiting the same players to another team.... It doesn't take Cal to figure out it was a bad hire.Originally posted by brianpoe:
You have no idea if he was a bad hire or not, only Cal can make that statement.Originally posted by Arrogant Blue:
The guy was a bad hire, plain and simple.
Yes this is part of college basketball, and we've been on the other side of it before..... Cal with Memphis, and Kenny Paine with Washington.
He was brought in as recruiter only, and unless he brought in Briscoe by himself, he accomplished nothing. All the recruiting he did on our behalf is now working towards St. Johns. I get why left, and I'm not blaming anyone.... but he has proven to be a bad hire nonetheless.
Luckily we have the best coaching staff in the nation still in place, and I have no doubts we'll be fine.
Originally posted by Son_Of_Saul:
This post was edited on 4/17 10:28 PM by Son_Of_SaulOriginally posted by Aike:
Coaches have every right to move on. Get.Over.It.
Slice has the right to move on, but UK fans certainly have the right to piss and moan as much as they want about him leaving halfway through the battle. It works both ways.
Would be like a preacher leaving a church but taking half the congregation with him, or a computer programmer leaving a company and taking his former company's ideas with him.
UK is competing with Slice and St. John's for a future lottery pick. He's the competition now, and UK fans absolutely have the right to hope he fails as a result of being a competitor.
This happens every day unless there is a contract that prevents it.
I have NO problem agreeing with you that it was a bad hire. What we don't know is why it was. But, we do know that he was only at Pitt a year before taking the UK job. His reputation was as a recruiter and, as you said, whom did he recruit?Originally posted by Arrogant Blue
Hindsight is 20\20..... Which is why I'm not blaming anyone, but if a guy was brought in for one reason (this case recruiting).... Doesn't bring us anyone, and in fact, before finishing one season with a team, is now recruiting the same players to another team.... It doesn't take Cal to figure out it was a bad hire.You have no idea if he was a bad hire or not, only Cal can make that statement.
But if you want to single out my extremely positive post about it, in a thread full of negative ones.... There's not much else I can say to you, except..... well, I'll just leave it at that. I'm not going to bash another fan for disagreeing with me.
That might not be practical in sports but would be sheer genius having a signed contract to prevent it.Originally posted by BBBLazing:
Originally posted by Son_Of_Saul:
This post was edited on 4/17 10:28 PM by Son_Of_SaulOriginally posted by Aike:
Coaches have every right to move on. Get.Over.It.
Slice has the right to move on, but UK fans certainly have the right to piss and moan as much as they want about him leaving halfway through the battle. It works both ways.
Would be like a preacher leaving a church but taking half the congregation with him, or a computer programmer leaving a company and taking his former company's ideas with him.
UK is competing with Slice and St. John's for a future lottery pick. He's the competition now, and UK fans absolutely have the right to hope he fails as a result of being a competitor.
This happens every day unless there is a contract that prevents it.
did you have the same problem with Cal recruiting Wall and Cousins while at Memphis and then bringing both to UK?Originally posted by catlogic15:
Not boo-hooing. But does bother me that Slice used the enormous recruiting budget of UK, the resources, private plane, unlimited time, etc. to build a relationship on our dime to then stear them away. I have a problem with that.
If he were that great on his own, why didn't Pittsburgh sign 4 5 stars a year?
After this year, Slice goes away. St. John's ain't Kentucky.
In the business world it's call a 'non-compete contract'. Years ago I got sued for a million dollars from an ex-employer because I left them and went to a competitor. After a lot of time, money, and depositions it was dropped because I lived in a 'right to work' state, and those contracts don't hold water. But live in a non-right to work state and you're toast.Originally posted by jameslee32:
That might not be practical in sports but would be sheer genius having a signed contract to prevent it.Originally posted by BBBLazing:
Originally posted by Son_Of_Saul:
This post was edited on 4/17 10:28 PM by Son_Of_SaulOriginally posted by Aike:
Coaches have every right to move on. Get.Over.It.
Slice has the right to move on, but UK fans certainly have the right to piss and moan as much as they want about him leaving halfway through the battle. It works both ways.
Would be like a preacher leaving a church but taking half the congregation with him, or a computer programmer leaving a company and taking his former company's ideas with him.
UK is competing with Slice and St. John's for a future lottery pick. He's the competition now, and UK fans absolutely have the right to hope he fails as a result of being a competitor.
This happens every day unless there is a contract that prevents it.
In the context of non-compete agreements between employees and employers, a distinction must be drawn between a "right-to-work" law and the individual right of an employee to be gainfully employed. A right-to-work law is typically a law governing the relations between unions, laborers, union dues the rights in collective bargaining agreements; they typically have no effect on a non-compete agreement. An individual employee's right to be gainfully employed (meaning his right to find work that he is suitable to perform) can be affected by a non-compete agreement.Originally posted by OHIO COLONEL:
In the business world it's call a 'non-compete contract'. Years ago I got sued for a million dollars from an ex-employer because I left them and went to a competitor. After a lot of time, money, and depositions it was dropped because I lived in a 'right to work' state, and those contracts don't hold water. But live in a non-right to work state and you're toast.Originally posted by jameslee32:
That might not be practical in sports but would be sheer genius having a signed contract to prevent it.Originally posted by BBBLazing:
Originally posted by Son_Of_Saul:
This post was edited on 4/17 10:28 PM by Son_Of_SaulOriginally posted by Aike:
Coaches have every right to move on. Get.Over.It.
Slice has the right to move on, but UK fans certainly have the right to piss and moan as much as they want about him leaving halfway through the battle. It works both ways.
Would be like a preacher leaving a church but taking half the congregation with him, or a computer programmer leaving a company and taking his former company's ideas with him.
UK is competing with Slice and St. John's for a future lottery pick. He's the competition now, and UK fans absolutely have the right to hope he fails as a result of being a competitor.
This happens every day unless there is a contract that prevents it.