Merkin wrote: Sat Mar 30, 2024 4:28 pm
PHXCATS wrote: Sat Mar 30, 2024 3:45 pm
Ncaa tournament does not define who is and isn’t a good coach
Yeah, well, you know, that's just like your opinion, man.
My opinion is that the NCAA tourney is all that matters. How many regular season conference championships did Sean Miller have at Arizona? How many PAC tourney championships does he have?
All we remember is his Elite 8 games.
Why is Lute Olson in the Hall of Fame and Eddie Sutton is not? Sutton took 4 different schools to the NCAA tourney. Creighton, Arkansas (F4), Kentucky (E8) and OK State (F4). Bob Huggins just made the HOF in 2022.
Agree. The NCAA tournament may not determine who is a good coach but it definitely determines who is a great coach.
The “name me a coach who made a F4 in his 1st 3 seasons” is sort of a lame misdirection as well. You’d need to look at only blue bloods and quasi blue blood programs to make that comparison for starters. Secondly, most head coaches don’t get the opportunity to start off at a BB or QBB. And just off the top of my head, in the last 3 years, Hubert Davis did it and Scheyer might this season. Izzo did it in his 4th (and 5th seasons). Roy Williams did it in 3. Stevens in 3. Davis and Shaka in 2. Crum and Fischer in 1.
And the more significant issue is that Lloyd has 1) now lost significantly ahead of seed-expectation 3 consecutive times and 2) runs an unconventional roster full of foreigners.
2 has already started to change and likely will so even more next season. But at Arizona you have to win in the NCAA tournament or the heat is eventually going to eventually turn on. By my estimation it hasn’t yet, and won’t now/shortly/because of Clemson; but if he loses 12 games next season I bet it will if he doesn’t make a post-season run, and I’d double that bet if he doesn’t make it out of the 1st weekend.
Lloyd has done a spectacular job in the regular season, in OOC pre-season tournaments and special event games, and in the P12 tournament.
He has done a lousy job in the NCAA tournament.
First rule of leadership, Princess.