clicheusername3
Banned
If there is one thing I can always count on people being passionate about on this forum its walk-ons and Grad Assistants...ahahahaha
Wouldn't that be the final spot on Hoibergs staff, and isn't the general consensus that Hoiberg needs to fill that spot with someone who actually has, ya know....some experience?
Hoiberg also landed his first recruit the other day to, a pretty good one from what I heard to. How many has Fran landed so far? I don't think he will wear out his welcome in Ames any faster than Fran will in IC.
Frank Martin is a glorified AAU coach. So take that for what it's worth. College BB today is about 80% recruiting. 10%keeping the players happy once their there. And 10% actual coaching.
I heard this Wed Jeff was at a basketball camp and the students over heard the conversation.
They were shocked they thought he was going to Iowa
Grad Assistants don't have coaching experience. Thats why they are grad assistants. Being the GA gets them some experience so they can be hired as a paid assistant.
Sounds like Hoiberg. Is he the head grad ast. head coach?
Who Fran picks to have as his GA will have nearly no impact on the Iowa basketball program. I think most of the posters who are worked up about this have no idea how menial the GA position is. You get to put the balls back in the rack after practice is over.
Like it or not, Iowa and ISU are going to battle out for recruits in this area despite only playing each other once a year. I think we can agree that there are quite a few nice in-state kids coming up the next three years. How Freddy can recruit will determine his stay. I believe college basketball is the one sport you can succeed in without coaching experience. Its all about the players. Look at your situation - you hired the National Coach of the Year and how did that work out.
Just like you guys hired the hottest coaching prospect in the state at the time. A well known "in state" name that HAD coaching experience...so how did that work out for ya? Oh but that's right, according to you coaching experience is not necessary...that must be why McDermot failed. But something tells me that had Iowa hired BJ Armstrong, all we would have heard from the Clown faithful is about his lack of coaching experience.
I would have said this regardless of who we hired. I firmly believe that basketball is the one sport you do not need experience coaching. I mean its man or zone defense, press or no press, and a handful of offensive plays that require minor adjustments. Hell, you can run the same play on offense every play if you want. (Princeton offense). Football you need experience in hundreds of defensive formations, offensive sets, and in just basic strategy. In basketball, if you get the talent and you can control that talent, coaching is secondary, and I firmly believe that. Look at Josh Pastner and Brad Stevens. I mean they can only be 30-35 as well. Maybe they had a few years learning as an assistant, but I believe that they learned nothing that Hoiberg didn't learn from being a student of the game as a player and in his position at Minnesota. He has been called the greatest player-coach Johnny Orr has ever coached, so I think he knows a thing or two.
I would have said this regardless of who we hired. I firmly believe that basketball is the one sport you do not need experience coaching. I mean its man or zone defense, press or no press, and a handful of offensive plays that require minor adjustments. Hell, you can run the same play on offense every play if you want. (Princeton offense). Football you need experience in hundreds of defensive formations, offensive sets, and in just basic strategy. In basketball, if you get the talent and you can control that talent, coaching is secondary, and I firmly believe that. Look at Josh Pastner and Brad Stevens. I mean they can only be 30-35 as well. Maybe they had a few years learning as an assistant, but I believe that they learned nothing that Hoiberg didn't learn from being a student of the game as a player and in his position at Minnesota. He has been called the greatest player-coach Johnny Orr has ever coached, so I think he knows a thing or two.
I would have said this regardless of who we hired. I firmly believe that basketball is the one sport you do not need experience coaching. I mean its man or zone defense, press or no press, and a handful of offensive plays that require minor adjustments. Hell, you can run the same play on offense every play if you want. (Princeton offense). Football you need experience in hundreds of defensive formations, offensive sets, and in just basic strategy. In basketball, if you get the talent and you can control that talent, coaching is secondary, and I firmly believe that. Look at Josh Pastner and Brad Stevens. I mean they can only be 30-35 as well. Maybe they had a few years learning as an assistant, but I believe that they learned nothing that Hoiberg didn't learn from being a student of the game as a player and in his position at Minnesota. He has been called the greatest player-coach Johnny Orr has ever coached, so I think he knows a thing or two.