Recruiting is going to be a lot more difficult for a coach who is damaged goods than it is for an up-and-comer who is yet-to-be-determined. He's got a good enough record that he could get a job SOMEWHERE if he gets fired at Memphis... But he would be wise to take a step back to take some stock, re-evaluate - and then acknowledge his shortcomings and actually address them. Whether that is as head coach at a smaller school or as top assistant at a bigger one (for the right coach) I do not know. Phony positivity and shallow bravado leads to a dead end, which he is learning the hard way.Irish27 wrote:I don't think it's going to end well for Josh. I think the perfect school for him is the University of Houston. Expectations there won't be as high and Josh will be able to bring in the recruits. He needs to get a good x and o guy on his bench.
If he ever wants to be a good coach, he needs to establish his own authentic style as opposed to forging ahead with his "synthetic amalgamation of every coach he has been around who is successful" approach. He tries to be everything to everybody which has him on a path to be no one to nobody.
The dude needs to grow up, gain some perspective, and make his focus more about his team and players, and less about him.