hinghameagle {l Wrote}:I ask the following question, with the qualifyer that I think it is moot, as I don't think BC would ever offer Pearl the job, but my question is this:
Who thinks that Pearl will get an offer to coach a school this offseason that is a better job than the BC job?
I guess it is subjective as to how good the BC job actually is, so why dont we limit the choices to any job in a BCS conference?
I think that if BC did offer him the job, it would be his best offer of the offseason. Whether he would take it or not is another question.
ATLeagle {l Wrote}:hinghameagle {l Wrote}:I ask the following question, with the qualifyer that I think it is moot, as I don't think BC would ever offer Pearl the job, but my question is this:
Who thinks that Pearl will get an offer to coach a school this offseason that is a better job than the BC job?
I guess it is subjective as to how good the BC job actually is, so why dont we limit the choices to any job in a BCS conference?
I think that if BC did offer him the job, it would be his best offer of the offseason. Whether he would take it or not is another question.
Pearl will get an offer from a BCS conference this year. I can't see one now that would be a better fit than BC (subjectively). I think he would take UGA over BC, but I don't think the Dawgs are going to go that way. He would take Texas over BC, but once again, I don't think they go that way. Would he take Oregon State over BC? No way.
jhiggi02 {l Wrote}:I think that there is also no way that the administration offers Pearl and if he does get offered I see no way he takes the position, as BC currently sits at the bottom of BCS basketball programs....
This basketball situation is truly a shame.
jhiggi02 {l Wrote}:ATLeagle {l Wrote}:jhiggi02 {l Wrote}:I think that there is also no way that the administration offers Pearl and if he does get offered I see no way he takes the position, as BC currently sits at the bottom of BCS basketball programs....
This basketball situation is truly a shame.
I don't know if you are doing an MNG impression but you are underestimating the appeal of BC. The fact that the whole roster turns in a year is a huge plus. ACC and tradition is a huge plus. The New England basketball prep schools provide enough talent. The only knock against BC is fan support. But most guys don't really care about that. They only use it as an excuse later on. The only reasons some BCS jobs are more appealing are money and no pressure from the admissions office.
I will start out by saying that I am a DIE HARD Boston College fan and will always support the athletic programs. I sincerely hope that you are correct and I am drastically underestimating the appeal to BC due to the current state of the program and the end of the GDF tenure.
Unfortunately, I am being dead serious due to the current state of the program, location (cold northeast), facilities, $$ being spent on the program IE coaching, 'high' admissions standards, lack of fan support/media support and a few other factors. Fan support, or lack thereof is definitely not the only knock on the program. You do mention admissions and money, but I will touch on those to help explain my views regarding recruiting.
I attended one of those "New England basketball prep schools" that you mentioned and have had many friends recruited by BC and other BCS schools during the 06-08 years of the Skinner era. Unfortunately, top student athlete recruits from the ISL and NESCAC A (Brewster Academy, Tilton, et all) did not only turn a blind eye to B.C. but rather openly spoke about how none of the top recruits would give the school serious consideration. They viewed UCONN as the dream regional landing destination. I do not know how much this has changed, since conference realignment/Calhoun departure, but if we look at recruiting figures, UCONN is still a much more preferred landing destination than boston college. With the rise of Harvard, any basketball player caring about academics now has a much better academic and athletic fit. Add in the fact that most of these prep stars that we speak of are from out of state, do not thoroughly enjoy the region and most all HATE the academic requirements of such prep schools, and this provides anecdotal evidence that their is little incentive for them to consider BC. Providence and UCONN are both porous examples for poking holes in this argument due the (non existent??) academic standards and a couple other factors. Furthermore, the Worcester Academy kids we recruited in our heyday were diamonds in the rough, Smith etc. (Coincidentally I was one of the few athletes in the region to turn down major offers and the Ivies to commit onto BC, admittedly not for a top 2 sport and only because my mother attended the university... Also didn't attend due to an arm injury).
I am not saying that the correct coaching hire would not be able turn this thing around, grab some prep prospects and completely re-arrange the face of the program. Unless it was a big $$ hire, this likely would take a few years as a new, up and coming coach would have to build the recruiting foundation from the base up and change the perception of BC basketball to the region. I doubt that we will be willing to dish out enough cash to compete for a Bruce, et al and would be left with hoping that we hit a home-run with a MAC coach.... not the game changer needed to change the dynamics I mentioned above, IMHO.
To another point, the roster returning is normally a huge plus, should those returning players constitute a talented team... We all know our deficiencies (no center, no defensive ability ETC) and without major and miraculous improvement/ recruiting coups, these players will struggle to compete in the ACC schedule next season, irregardless of who is the coach. I think that this detracts from whatever appeal a roster of returning players should hold, of course this is in relation to a known coaching commodity.
In essence, this program will either need a known commodity to come in or a homerun hire which will take YEARS to turn the program around. I fear that should a BCS program offer similar $$ to any coach with name recognition, that we will be passed over. Hopefully Pearl, if offered, would choose to come back to his roots as this would be tremendous.
Sorry for the long response, however the MNG comparison is kind of out of hand.
jhiggi02 {l Wrote}:You are completely wrong. Harvard does not share the same academic admissions standards as boston college. Having qualified academically for both schools, Harvard has MUCH stricter standards. Harvard has signed an agreement with the IVY's to adhere to a certain standard on the Academic Index scale (a score comprised of test scores, grades, class rank which each athletic team must hit an average of, 200 or around there) ALSO, there is a limit to the individual lower limit of this score, which was around 170, although I could be off by 10 points, I was right around 180. Furthermore, Harvard has a completely different appeal to a recruit valuing academics...... It is NOT boston college, its is Harvard. Regardless of classroom standards (which I would hope Boston College actually has a more rigorous minimum standard than Harvard as grade inflation is ridiculous, which is known by anyone who went to Harvard or knows of Harvard's classroom setting) players and students focused on academics will almost always pic Harvard.
Does Harvard have any top recruits from New England Prep Schools? No. Harvard has national appeal due to their academic prestige. Therefore my friend, if we look deeper into the argument, we will see that Harvard is not comparable to BC as they have a completely different style/ability to recruit. BC is a good school academically, Harvard is a great one.
Furthermore, look at the post I was responding to, and in kind, look at the MAJOR point of my post.... NORTHEAST PREP SCHOOL BASKETBALL RECRUITING.
From http://www.bostonmagazine.com/2012/01/c ... owerhouse/
“They’re targeting top-100 guys,” Telep, the ESPN.com recruiting analyst, says of the caliber of players Harvard now tries to bring in. “They are the only ones in the Ivy League operating with this model. They’re selling Tommy as a players’ coach and Harvard as Harvard. They’ve had no fear in challenging or competing for [the kind of] player Harvard has never had before.”
"Amaker is able to cast a wide net in part because of Harvard’s new financial aid guidelines, which happened to change dramatically just before the coach arrived in Cambridge. In 2006 the school announced that families with incomes of $60,000 or less would pay nothing toward the cost of a Harvard education, and that families earning between $60,000 and $180,000 would contribute between zero and 10 percent of their income. The new guidelines, which apply to all students, amount to de facto scholarships for some athletes. And the talent has followed. ESPN ranked two freshmen on this year’s team, Kenyatta Smith and Wesley Saunders, among the top 25 prospects in California. They were reportedly recruited by the likes of Vanderbilt, Northwestern, Stanford, and Southern California. Siyani Chambers, the second-rated player in the state of Minnesota, has committed to Harvard for next season, as has Mike Hall, one of the top prospects in Georgia."
jhiggi02 {l Wrote}:... You are completely wrong. Harvard does not share the same academic admissions standards as boston college. Having qualified academically for both schools, Harvard has MUCH stricter standards.
DavidGordonsFoot {l Wrote}:...You have a very old school mindset.
jhiggi02 {l Wrote}:Again- Clearly, reading comprehension is not taught wherever you attended school. I was replying to ONE aspect of ATL's response. NORTHEAST RECRUITING. I don't give a shit where BC recruits, just want good athletes and victories. ATL used northeast recruiting as a major reason why BC is appealing. Please read the board before responding. Also, love your arguing style, when one of your points is shot to shit, you completely change the face of the argument..
As to the not getting drafted thing. Again, Harvard's Academic prestige combined with recent success overrides this factor, as players looking to get drafted (or those caring about the draft as their first priority(and overwhelmingly first priority) would not choose Harvard. They are getting the player that would like to be drafted but also cares about a potential career outside of college, therefore they have dipped into some of our recruiting options with this recent success. In essence, if the argument is made that academic athletes use to prefer BC due to their level of success on and off the court, we are now a far second to Harvard. Our ideal recruit, is the athlete who dreams of playing in the NBA (first priority) but also wants a solid education to fall back on should that dream not not work out, and is only achievable with the right coach in place. Also, Jeremy Lin has far more name recognition than anything produced out of BC in recent history
That being said, Boston College had/has more appeal regarding the draft and less appeal regarding academics than Harvard, hence the difference in the way they go about recruiting.
To TRE's point: The point to Harvard having tougher academic admissions standards highlights the influence of the academic appeal and the recent success of the program has on these recruits. They have a VERY limited pot, yet end up with the high end athletes capable of qualifying. It will take a major shakeup for BC to be able to take away these athletes from Harvard... That is all my second point was in the original post.... We need a coach able to change the current dynamics drastically.
ATLeagle {l Wrote}:Just responding to a few different points.
2. Amaker sucks but he is probably going to be BC's new coach (or is more likely than Pearl). If Harvard were such a better job, he wouldn't be willing to ditch it for the chance to coach BC. He wants the BC job and thinks it is very underrated.
jhiggi02 {l Wrote}:Again, you are an asshat. If you read the original post, I was responding to ATL's comment about bc and north east recruiting.Just pointing out honest facts. ALSO, what with this administration (BoD President) makes you believe they are willing to spend money on a good hire. Without a mini miracle, what rising star assistant would pick BC when they have other offers and B.C. would pay the same or less? The whole point of my responses were that without ponying up the $$ we are unlikely to get a solid coach due to the negative influences surrounding the program. As you pointed out, we need a coach, to 'SPIN' the "doom and gloom" factors that I mentioned. THEREFORE if you are agreeing we need a coach to hide the warts of this program, then you must be agreeing that a lot of the factors I listed do exist. To expand a bit more, with the current state of our program, the odds of us hiring an ACE recruiting coach with X and O ability is nominal.
Without a philosophical change OR WITHOUT HITTING A HOME RUN LUCKY ASS HIRE, the program appears to be continuing in the direction of the wake program during their miserable run they had.... Just with less potential to turn this mess around.
twballgame9 {l Wrote}:Amaker blows as an Xs and Os guy, but he'd get us some damn talent.
jhiggi02 {l Wrote}:...I putty you sir.
jhiggi02 {l Wrote}:Look at NC State as well, they have been a tourney team and their coach cant determine the difference between an X and an O
MaroonNGold {l Wrote}:Can anyone confirm the reported siting of Pearl at Logan boarding a Pyongyang-bound flight to coach the host country team against the Rodman All Stars?
angrychicken {l Wrote}:MaroonNGold {l Wrote}:Can anyone confirm the reported siting of Pearl at Logan boarding a Pyongyang-bound flight to coach the host country team against the Rodman All Stars?
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