I bet we finished 9th tho. I don't want a kid who doesn't know the difference between there and their anyway.
I bet we finished 9th tho. I don't want a kid who doesn't know the difference between there and their anyway.
How do you close on a kid like that?It stings when we don't even land in the top 8 of the top player at our position of desperate need. Especially considering he is friends with our top recruit, we can offer him 4 years of starting at PG at a Top 25 ranked Big 10. Part of the blame has to fall on the shoulders of the coaching staff for not closing, but from the schools the kid likes, part of this falls on the kid's desire to get paid to play.
LSU, seriously? They had the #1 player in all of college bball last yr and barely made .500. Cal was known as the biggest underachiever in college bball in 2016. UNLV/WKU? Good ol SMU, fresh off its top 25 season where it was banned from all post season play.
I was thinking the same thing.I bet we finished 9th tho. I don't want a kid who doesn't know the difference between there and their anyway.
I bet we finished 9th tho. I don't want a kid who doesn't know the difference between there and their anyway.
Just talking hypothetically here since I have no inside knowledge, but if our coaches recruited an athlete based on the values of our program but the athlete wanted to go where he would receive money to play, thus his final college choices as listed were places where he had such offers of money to play, is this a bad reflection on our coaching staff? If so, I'm happy they have such a poor coaching staff because I don't want to be a part of a sports program where we sacrifice values for the sake of winning.
Again, not putting blame on other programs as I certainly don't know anything about their recruiting processes, but the failure to get in a player's final 8 schools may be a good reflection of our program.
I bet we finished 9th tho. I don't want a kid who doesn't know the difference between there and their anyway.