He was the D-II National Champion and is 58 years old. Former Tiger
Interesting
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He was the D-II National Champion and is 58 years old. Former Tiger
Interesting
I wish we would've hired a D2 coach.
He coached in Missouri so Im sure he already has relationships with the high school coaches in the state
How many Mississippi guys did Stands have the last few years?
Renardo Sidney- California
Arnette Moultrue- transfer from UTEP
Dee Bost- North Carolina
Brian Bryant?
Jalen Steele?
white guy from Tennessee?
Stewart
Augustus
Swat
Jamont
Hansbrough
looking back- Mississippi guys haven't helped us much lately
This is irrelevant. Basketball recruiting, at a big school, is much more that just in-state. Mizzou recruits nationally, whether you'd like to admit it or not.
But this hire is definitely a head-scratcher at the moment. Kind of reminds me of the Shula hire at Alabama...
I know hiring a head ball coach to be head ball coach sounds complicated, but I promise you other schools put on their big boy britches and do it all the time.
Wasn't Wisconsin's coach the reigning D2 national champion when he was hired?
I honestly don't know why D2 to D1 isn't a bigger thing. Often times they're better coaches because they're dealing with shit talent and have to rely on actually coaching.
I'd love to see how Coach Cal would do in D2.
Roy Williams and Tom Izzo Rick Ray is not. Not even close. Also, wasn't Izzo groomed to take over that position anyway basically? Roy Williams was Dean Smith's right hand man. Hell, while we are at it let's throw in Coach K as you guys seem to do. All of these comparisons are just laughable. They don't hold water Smoot. Give it up.
I never said they were comparable. Hack tried to make the point that any AD who puts on his 'big boy britches' hires a HC. I proved that was a laughable statement; I didn't mention Ray at all.
And no, Rick Ray is not Coach K. But guess what, neither was Coach K when he was hired at Duke. In today's day and age, that hire would have been blasted by media and fans everywhere.
The point is, there is no tried and true formula on how to hire a successful coach; you hire the guy you think is the right guy for the job, you support him, then you wait and see. We're still in wait-and-see mode on Ray.
How the **** would that hire be blasted today? He is a disciple of one of the greatest coaches, pro or amateur, regardless of sport, of all time AND he took a service academy to a postseason tournament as a head coach and left with a winning record.
I'm not saying this to downplay Ray, although I stand firm on him being a bad hire, but he had zero business being hired strictly based on his resume. He may have knocked the interview out of the park, great. He is in over his head and any of us could have looked at his resume and saw this. There's no comparison to Coach K's hiring though. Not even in the same realm.