Username | Post: Georgetown |
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digamma Masters Student Posts 468 |
03-23-17 02:46 PM - Post#228003
Should we be worried? |
Go Green PhD Student Posts 1145 |
03-23-17 03:03 PM - Post#228012
Should we be worried? Amaker is showing up on every list of potential replacements for JTIII. I'd say "yes." |
Tiger69 Postdoc Posts 2814 |
03-23-17 03:04 PM - Post#228013
Depends on how much $ they throw at him. Good stepping stone to Dook? |
Tiger69 Postdoc Posts 2814 |
03-23-17 03:09 PM - Post#228014
Also, he's got a lot of fancy players who he might like to go with him.... Ugly business. H may have to go with one-and-dones with their next coach |
Tiger69 Postdoc Posts 2814 |
03-23-17 03:13 PM - Post#228016
Seriously, the fact that he's stuck it out this long and his wife has a reason to stay put bodes well for h. I was, frankly, surprised that he didn't take the first good offer after he got his first championship. |
bradley PhD Student Posts 1842 |
03-23-17 03:22 PM - Post#228018
I do not think so unless he knows that he is not getting the Duke job when Coach K is done and Tommy wants a shot at a big time program. Does not make sense considering last year's freshmen class. I think that he will stay put. He is good for the IL. |
palestra38 Professor Posts 32803 |
03-23-17 03:22 PM - Post#228019
I think Georgetown will aim higher than Amaker, although that is a possibility. |
SRP Postdoc Posts 4910 |
03-23-17 05:15 PM - Post#228031
An Amaker hire would not appease the fans who wanted JTIII out. It would be seen as "more of the same." They want to get someone non-Ivy, non-academic, "big-time." But I don't know if the job is good enough to attract an already-successful major-school coach. They could try an up-and-coming assistant with recruiting chops from a big-time school that's slightly academically respectable. Is there a Notre Dame assistant who would be plausible? |
palestra38 Professor Posts 32803 |
03-23-17 05:39 PM - Post#228037
As we saw with Harvard and the Amaker hire, if a school with substantial resources wants a guy, they will give him what he wants in terms of pay and support. If they get a big time guy, they will do what is necessary to make him successful. |
SRP Postdoc Posts 4910 |
03-23-17 06:08 PM - Post#228041
It may be a better job than I thought when I posted above. Their DOE-reported men's basketball budget is $11.3 million for 2015, not exactly chicken feed even in the expensive D.C. area. |
TigerFan PhD Student Posts 1885 |
03-23-17 07:05 PM - Post#228043
Generally I think its bad form to speculate about other schools' coaches but I'm going to break my own rule and offer two thoughts: 1) Siyani Chambers was a very special Harvard player and one who appeared to have a particularly close relationship with Tommy Amaker. With Chambers now graduating, maybe Amerker will jump for a new opportunity. 2) Amaker has done a hell of a recruiting job the last couple of years. If he wants to leave the program in great shape and if there is a deserving assistant at Harvard that Amaker has a strong relationship with and who he would feel comfortable handing the program off to (I don't know the program well enough to know if this is true or not), that may also make it the right time for him to move on. |
Southbridge Street Freshman Posts 50 |
03-23-17 07:24 PM - Post#228045
Thompson made $3.2 million several years ago, based on IRS filings by the university. If postings on fan boards are at all credible, those currently in favor as a successor are Smart (Uni of Texas), Crean (ex Indiana, Marquette), Marshall (Kansas State) with some opining that Patrick Ewing is also in the mix. The specter looming over all this is whether John Thompson Jr. will remain a presence on campus, which might favor Ewing. Pronounced disinterest in Amaker. |
Old Bear Postdoc Posts 3992 |
03-23-17 07:54 PM - Post#228047
Dan Hurley may also be in the mix. |
digamma Masters Student Posts 468 |
03-23-17 08:05 PM - Post#228049
1) Siyani Chambers was a very special Harvard player and one who appeared to have a particularly close relationship with Tommy Amaker. With Chambers now graduating, maybe Amerker will jump for a new opportunity. This is my biggest concern about the whole thing. Timing seems a little different with Siyani leaving. That said, it arguably is a little more of the same for Georgetown, so I could see them looking elsewhere. |
Mike Porter Postdoc Posts 3618 |
03-23-17 10:42 PM - Post#228054
I'm not convinced Coach Amaker would be interested. Yes more money, but more pressure at a place that's been down for a few years and where fans expectations are probably too high (even for a historically great program). Why do that when he is already well paid, at place where he could coach forever, when he is still recruiting like a machine? |
HARVARDDADGRAD Postdoc Posts 2691 |
03-24-17 01:16 AM - Post#228058
Siyani was special. Bryce is off to a great start. Same goes for Towns (Wes), Lewis (Zena), and Bassey (Okolie). If Amaker leaves, it would only be because of his career path. Frankly, leaving Harvard only puts another test and added risk in the way of his presumed return to Duke. |
bradley PhD Student Posts 1842 |
03-24-17 08:58 AM - Post#228062
I agree that Georgetown does not make sense for a number of reasons. Coach K is 70 years old with health issues. Amaker is a good age to take over the reins if Coach K retires with the 3-5 years. Why take the risk to go to Georgetown if he is truly a candidate for the Duke job. Although Harvard looks stacked for the next several years in the IL, there is a question if this team is good enough to play at a very high level, i.e. success at the NCAA Tournament. They took a step back over the last three games of this season. You would think that Coach would have a pretty good read as to their true upside. If he has doubts that may become a factor in his decision making process. He probably knows that next year will be challenging even in the IL if Mason is fully recovered and Much can play. |
PennFan10 Postdoc Posts 3584 |
03-24-17 09:41 AM - Post#228064
I think the Amaker to Duke hypothesis is not something he would base decisions on today. Coach K is old but you can find stories of his retirement going back at least 5 years and he has never indicated he would step down anytime soon. Even if he surprised us all with a retirement today Amaker is far from a sure thing and probably not even the top candidate on the list that includes Chris Collins, Bobby Hurley, Jeff Capel, and even Johnny Dawkins. I don't think TA is making decisions based on anything that may or may not happen at Duke. |
Tiger69 Postdoc Posts 2814 |
03-24-17 12:17 PM - Post#228069
TA is, in part, responsible for the the dramatic rise in talent level throughout the IL over the past few years, coupled with the more generous financial aid now available. Unfortunately, the "rising tide" has favored a few schools more than others. But, even with his star-studded freshmen, TA hasn't demonstrated that he has anything on the Ps or yale. There is little reason IMHO to believe that his stock will rise any farther going forward if he remains at h. In addition, it doesn't appear that, whenever it opens up, TA has any edge on the Dook job. So, that leaves him with the decision to either a) settle into a long, secure tenure in Cambridge at a comfortable, but not eye-popping pay rate or, b) cash in for a few years at another level. The longer he stays at h, the more he "gives up" in big compensation, and the deeper his personal and family ties become in Cambridge. Maybe h will even give him an honorary "h" sweater for his "sacrifice" |
Go Green PhD Student Posts 1145 |
03-24-17 01:13 PM - Post#228071
But, even with his star-studded freshmen, TA hasn't demonstrated that he has anything on the Ps or yale. How many other Ivy schools have won five titles in a row besides Harvard under TA? |
PennFan10 Postdoc Posts 3584 |
03-24-17 01:28 PM - Post#228072
But, even with his star-studded freshmen, TA hasn't demonstrated that he has anything on the Ps or yale. How many other Ivy schools have won five titles in a row besides Harvard under TA? One I think. Penn won 6 in a row from 1969-1975 and then won 7 out of 9 (though only 3 in a row in that stretch) from 1998-2006. |
Go Green PhD Student Posts 1145 |
03-24-17 01:37 PM - Post#228074
One I think. Penn won 6 in a row from 1969-1975 Ah.... the Chuck Daly years. Pretty good company for TA to be in. |
Penndemonium PhD Student Posts 1896 |
03-24-17 01:41 PM - Post#228075
I tend to agree with Tiger69. He has clearly done a great job at Harvard by being the first mover in taking advantage of a rising tide of IL (and especially) financial aid. He showed creativity in dealing with the IL obstacles to recruiting. I don't say that to diminish him - he did these things spectacularly for a great result. I'm a bit skeptical about whether he is the right guy to turn around Georgetown, though. Georgetown has a unique set of circumstances. It has advantages of history, the recruiting pull of JT Sr., a pretty good budget, a great home market, and a record of successful pros. It has disadvantages of JT Sr. overshadowing the program, academic requirements, a conference that has been diminished, sub-optimal facilities, and declining brand for young players and HS coaches. I think Georgetown needs to get lucky on their coaching hire, and have a coach who fires on every cylinder of high major recruiting, game tactics, and coaching. I think their best shot is to find a diamond in the assistant coaching world rather than go with Amaker or Ewing. I'm a Georgetown fan, BTW. |
Go Green PhD Student Posts 1145 |
03-24-17 01:46 PM - Post#228076
sub-optimal facilities, Not anymore. The new Thompson Center on campus is an absolute palace. I think that was a big reason why people expected JTIII to get more time--give him a chance to recruit with the new digs. But now it looks like someone else will show it off to recruits... |
palestra38 Professor Posts 32803 |
03-24-17 01:51 PM - Post#228077
Because of Ivy rules of ties, Penn won 5 straight from '78-'82. It tied Princeton in both '80 and '81, won the playoff in '80 and lost in '81. |
mrjames Professor Posts 6062 |
03-24-17 01:52 PM - Post#228078
There is little reason IMHO to believe that his stock will rise any farther going forward if he remains at h. While I'm not guaranteeing that this current Harvard freshman class will see the second weekend by the time they graduate, I'd argue that there's plenty of reason to believe they could (the second-most productive frosh class as far back as I have records is Cornell's dynasty team). And if Amaker made the second weekend, his stock would likely rise higher. |
SRP Postdoc Posts 4910 |
03-24-17 02:15 PM - Post#228080
I hear Larry Brown is available if they want quick results followed by probation. |
PennFan10 Postdoc Posts 3584 |
03-24-17 02:27 PM - Post#228081
I'm with Mr James on TA. He brought in an unprecedented recruiting class in the IL with high ceilings. Let's wait and see what he does with that before judging him. TA's legacy is far from set at this point. |
westphillywarrior Sophomore Posts 196 |
03-24-17 02:30 PM - Post#228082
There is little reason IMHO to believe that his stock will rise any farther going forward if he remains at h. While I'm not guaranteeing that this current Harvard freshman class will see the second weekend by the time they graduate, I'd argue that there's plenty of reason to believe they could (the second-most productive frosh class as far back as I have records is Cornell's dynasty team). And if Amaker made the second weekend, his stock would likely rise higher. I agree, they could make the second weekend. They also might never make the first weekend. I think we're agreed that it's going to be difficult to get a second Ivy into the tournament for the next couple of years. And with tough Yale, Princeton and Penn teams - and if the Ivy tournament stays in the Palestra or moves to Jadwin or Payne Whitney...... Harvard might end up as the best team in the league but with less than a 50% chance of seeing the first weekend. |
westphillywarrior Sophomore Posts 196 |
03-24-17 02:38 PM - Post#228084
I'm with Mr James on TA. He brought in an unprecedented recruiting class in the IL with high ceilings. Let's wait and see what he does with that before judging him. TA's legacy is far from set at this point. That's not what mrjames said. It's very easy to judge Amaker at this point. He has done an amazing job at Harvard. And his stock could rise even further. |
PennFan10 Postdoc Posts 3584 |
03-24-17 03:34 PM - Post#228086
That's not what mrjames said. It's very easy to judge Amaker at this point. He has done an amazing job at Harvard. And his stock could rise even further. I am not at all clear on what you mean here. What did I say that MRj did not say? |
Tiger69 Postdoc Posts 2814 |
03-24-17 04:54 PM - Post#228095
My point is that, although TA has done a remarkable job at h, and I agree that he has, there was a time that at least a few on this board thought that h might run away from the rest of the league. In fact, as GG points out, they did get 5 consecutive titles, although two were ties (P in 2011, and Y in 2015) and one they won as a result of a late season Princeton collapse. Impressive run, but hardly dominance, AND they have since lost the past two years. TA's coaching and the h mystique to recruits may have peaked out. Meanwhile several other teams, with excellent coaching and rising levels of talent, have closed the gap. So again, this might be the best time financially for TA to bolt or resign himself to a good, but not as lucrative, long time gig in Cambridge. |
PennFan10 Postdoc Posts 3584 |
03-24-17 05:27 PM - Post#228098
That's what I thought you meant. And MrJ said his stock could go higher and the bid for him increase if this unprecedented group of Frosh get him to the second weekend. I agreed with MrJ by saying let's see how these frosh do as we have never seen this level of talent in the IL. |
mrjames Professor Posts 6062 |
03-24-17 05:52 PM - Post#228102
What really happened was a perfect storm of assistants leaving and some snags with top target recruits that really hit Harvard's recruiting hard in the 2013 and 2014 classes. The recent stability in key recruiting positions has gotten recruiting back on track, but missing on two consecutive classes has to work itself out of the system. Assuming the stability stays, 2018 should be another deep, talented class. The other thing that can't be understated is how good Princeton and Yale have been recently. It's hard to look dominant over another Top 50 team, no matter how good you are. My presumption is those that believed Harvard would run away from the rest of the league weren't counting on how good the rest of the league would become. |
Go Green PhD Student Posts 1145 |
03-25-17 07:33 AM - Post#228104
WaPo this morning says prime candidates are Amaker, Brey, and Smart for Georgetown. Ewing discussed as well. https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/sports/wp/2017... |
bradley PhD Student Posts 1842 |
03-25-17 07:53 AM - Post#228105
Harvard's freshmen class is remarkable from a ratings perspective. They are certainly a talented group that will improve over time as they get stronger and more experienced plus the likelihood is that they will be together as a group for four years, barring injuries, and they certainly got considerable playing time in their freshmen year. With that being said, the round of sweet 16 last evening demonstrated how high the bar is to make it to the round of 16 and beyond. The athleticism and talent level at several of the games, particularly UCLA/Kentucky is crazy good. The speed and quickness of many of the players, including freshmen, is very different than what you see with IL play. Level of play by the power conferences is very strong. It will be interesting to see how the Harvard 2016-17 class plays out. They will be in the tournament at some point and time, probably two maybe three times, unless the Palestra "bug" hits them along the way. |
TigerFan PhD Student Posts 1885 |
03-25-17 11:35 AM - Post#228107
Casual Hoya article on Amaker: http://www.casualhoya.com/2017/3/24/15051330/ge org... |
Go Green PhD Student Posts 1145 |
03-25-17 12:04 PM - Post#228108
The comments and gifs were funny! |
Tiger69 Postdoc Posts 2814 |
03-25-17 12:19 PM - Post#228110
Georgetown is living in Never Never Land. After firing a classy guy and good coach, it appears they can't decide whether to go big time (one fan actually suggested Alan Iverson to establish "street cred"!, or continue to be a pseudo Ivy. Good luck, Gtown. Their best chance is Tommy Amaker who has "street cred" as well as a college degree. |
Go Green PhD Student Posts 1145 |
03-25-17 02:23 PM - Post#228117
Georgetown is living in Never Never Land. A big part of the problem has been Villanova's success. Georgetown's fans could stomach it when Syracuse or UConn was winning national championships. But Nova is another matter... |
mrjames Professor Posts 6062 |
03-25-17 08:27 PM - Post#228130
It is pretty comical, though, to watch Georgetown fans debate whether *they* want *Amaker.* When you assume, you make... well, you know the rest. |
TigerFan PhD Student Posts 1885 |
03-27-17 08:19 PM - Post#228243
Interesting back story on Gtown hoops: http://deadspin.com/the-power-struggle-at -georgeto... |
sparman PhD Student Posts 1345 |
03-28-17 09:54 AM - Post#228248
The feud between Morgan Wooten and John Thompson is legendary (and it's only one of several classic feuds John has perpetuated). It's actually remarkable how JT3 has managed to overcome this handicap. |
mrjames Professor Posts 6062 |
04-03-17 02:44 PM - Post#228480
No surprise here, but the Georgetown job was filled, and it's not Amaker. That it was Ewing was moderately surprising, maybe. Dude has earned a shot at the top chair. |
PennFan10 Postdoc Posts 3584 |
04-03-17 03:08 PM - Post#228482
Any truth to the report that TA turned it down? |
mrjames Professor Posts 6062 |
04-03-17 03:46 PM - Post#228483
All the truths. |
nycivybball Pre-Frosh Posts 5 |
04-03-17 04:29 PM - Post#228484
Safe to assume at this point that TA will remain uninterested in any other job openings besides Duke (once Coach K leaves)? |
SRP Postdoc Posts 4910 |
04-03-17 05:48 PM - Post#228488
Georgetown will now have a huge advantage in the handshake line, as Ewing can engage from long range and see over the support staff. |
penn nation Professor Posts 21193 |
04-03-17 06:10 PM - Post#228490
St Johns vs Georgetown--Ewing vs Mullin all over again. |
sparman PhD Student Posts 1345 |
04-03-17 06:33 PM - Post#228491
Funny in that some GU grads were telling me Saturday this was about to happen, although I guess a lot of people thought it would. |
mrjames Professor Posts 6062 |
04-03-17 06:37 PM - Post#228492
I don't see Tommy taking Duke either, but I haven't eased everyone into believing that yet, so I'll hold off on making that case for now. |
Silver Maple Postdoc Posts 3770 |
04-03-17 07:24 PM - Post#228493
Aside from the fact that it's far from certain that he'd be offered the Duke job, I also have trouble seeing Amaker taking it. He's in what is probably the perfect job for him, and I'm pretty sure he realizes that. Only a fool walks away from a perfect situation, and Amaker's not a fool. |
Old Bear Postdoc Posts 3992 |
04-03-17 08:12 PM - Post#228495
I thought Ewing might return to The Peoples Republic of Cambridge as Tommy's replacement. |
sparman PhD Student Posts 1345 |
04-03-17 09:14 PM - Post#228499
But isn't the conventional critique that he doesn't manage game situations well? |
Silver Maple Postdoc Posts 3770 |
04-03-17 10:30 PM - Post#228501
I didn't say he's a brilliant basketball coach, just that he's not a stupid guy. There's a difference. |
sparman PhD Student Posts 1345 |
04-04-17 08:02 AM - Post#228506
I was trying to make a gentle joke about his reputed ability to make decisions in the heat of the moment, not a serious comment. |
Silver Maple Postdoc Posts 3770 |
04-04-17 09:43 AM - Post#228512
I read you 5 x 5. |
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