CAHUSKY
UConn Class of 2013
- Joined
- Aug 26, 2011
- Messages
- 93
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Not it that contest. You take "Slice" all day and twice on Sunday.I don't know.. Maybe I'm wrong..but I would take my chances with Ray all day long.
Not it that contest. You take "Slice" all day and twice on Sunday.I don't know.. Maybe I'm wrong..but I would take my chances with Ray all day long.
Not it that contest. You take "Slice" all day and twice on Sunday.
Clyde is a very very good big mans coach, at 6'3"-6'4". My point is you don't need a "big" to coach the bigs. Clyde played big when he was at Pitt even at his size because he was a wide strong guy who used brains and brawn to rebound and score. He is welcome on my staff anytime but not so much for UConn's due to his errors in judgement off the court. I'm willing to forgive LOL
CAHUSKY said:Not it that contest. You take "Slice" all day and twice on Sunday.
abdelmessiih, yup. i remember him dapping up KO and hugging him before and after the game last year. Although Not sure what he can do recruiting wise when he cant lure players because of in conference schedule chalked full of ranked teams ( kansas,texas, etc)
His classes at Pitt were fantastic. Who cares what they did in the NBA? his classes at KY are legendary. Hard to imagine you wouldn't want him on your staff. Couldn't care less about his head coaching record. Which Uconn recruiter would you rate more highly?Slice got some good NYC kids at Pitt, none of whom made a sniff in the NBA, and then was an epic failure at Manhattan - pretty much the only guy who ever couldn't win there (look - took them 2 years to get good again after he left). Now he got a golden parachute into a place where a cute puppy could probably land a couple recruits.
I still think Slice, Ace Recruiter is largely a myth. Had he landed at Rutgers as an assistant and did something there, I'd tip my cap.
I don't know.. Maybe I'm wrong..but I would take my chances with Ray all day long.
They need a big man coach who had a post game in college and doesn't like easy women. LOL!

Clyde is a very very good big mans coach, at 6'3"-6'4". My point is you don't need a "big" to coach the bigs. Clyde played big when he was at Pitt even at his size because he was a wide strong guy who used brains and brawn to rebound and score. He is welcome on my staff anytime but not so much for UConn's due to his errors in judgement off the court. I'm willing to forgive LOL
I agree. The guy who had to work his butt off is a better coach because everything didn't come naturally. Naturally gifted players often don't know what to teach. It is instinctual for them.
Not it that contest. You take "Slice" all day and twice on Sunday.
Maybe I've been asleep all season, but was surprised to see Slice with UK. I know there was a huge outcry when Pitt/Dixon cut ties. He was responsible for every decent NYC recruit Pitt got for Howland and for Dixon's early years. The guy has a way about him - might've been too sketchy for Dixon though.
You just described KFree. And KO although the analogy is about hard working guys who lacked the physical attributes and not coaching the 4's and 5's.I personally believe that Vaughn, needing to learn how to score in the low post at his height (and he was exceptional as a college player) is what made him as good of a big man coach as he was.
I don't believe that someone needs to be at any specific minimum height to be a big man coach but I do believe he needs to have played that position at some level (there is no reason to believe a former D-3 6'3" PF couldn't be a quality teacher of post play) in order to fully understand the position.
As far as adding another former Husky, while the names thrown around sound nice, the only one who should receive any consideration at the moment is Donyell as he not only has played the position we are most lacking on the coaching staff, he has paid quite a bit of dues in the coaching profession.
CAHUSKY said:His classes at Pitt were fantastic. Who cares what they did in the NBA? his classes at KY are legendary. Hard to imagine you wouldn't want him on your staff. Couldn't care less about his head coaching record. Which Uconn recruiter would you rate more highly?
Rohrssen has been at Kentucky for 10 months. Hired in May of 2014. His first class hasn't even arrived yet. Thank you for proving my point that his reputation is largely a myth.
At Pitt, his biggest success was Chris Taft. DeJuan Blair wasn't his - he came in after. Neither was Krauser - he came in before. There were some good players, yes - Young, Fields. But Pitt didn't drop off when he left.
http://www.cardiachill.com/2014/4/1...-recruiting-pittsburgh-panthers-john-calipari
Slice got some good NYC kids at Pitt, none of whom made a sniff in the NBA, and then was an epic failure at Manhattan - pretty much the only guy who ever couldn't win there (look - took them 2 years to get good again after he left). Now he got a golden parachute into a place where a cute puppy could probably land a couple recruits.
I still think Slice, Ace Recruiter is largely a myth. Had he landed at Rutgers as an assistant and did something there, I'd tip my cap.
Tom Herrion recruited Dante Taylor and Steven Adams, although Dixon played with Adams's brothers in New Zeland so that played a big part in him committing to Pitt(Herrion also landed Ashton Gibbs and Lamar Patterson among others) and Pat Skerry landed Khem Birch. Skerry leaving for Towson is a big reason why Birch eventually transferred.I can think of three 5 stars ... The big from Oriakhi's class, Adams, and the Canadian lefty that transferred to UNLV. We're any of them Slice recruits?
walker11 said:I can think of three 5 stars ... The big from Oriakhi's class, Adams, and the Canadian lefty that transferred to UNLV. We're any of them Slice recruits?
okafors a brilliant, cultured, well-rounded dude who will probably retire with a net worth of about 100 million dollars. i imagine grinding the college recruiting trail after he hangs it up from the league would literally be his worst nightmare. as for burrell, id wager 75%+ of high school-aged uconn fans couldnt even identify him, let alone kids from around the country. other than that, i like your idea
Burrell will walk in the door as the only athlete in history that was a first round draft pick in MLB and the NBA. He earned an NBA championship ring playing with Michael Jordan on the Bulls.
I think he might carry a little credibility.
Youre right, I erroneously gave him credit for this years KY class. That said, his Pitt classes were strong and I don't really care that those players, for the most part, didn't have good NBA careers. What we need, in my opinion, is someone who is respected/liked on the AAU circuit with long standing relationships. That's exactly what our staff, in my opinion, is lacking. I love Ray but he isn't what we need and that's what my initial post was referring to.Rohrssen has been at Kentucky for 10 months. Hired in May of 2014. His first class hasn't even arrived yet. Thank you for proving my point that his reputation is largely a myth.
At Pitt, his biggest success was Chris Taft. DeJuan Blair wasn't his - he came in after. Neither was Krauser - he came in before. There were some good players, yes - Young, Fields. But Pitt didn't drop off when he left.
http://www.cardiachill.com/2014/4/1...-recruiting-pittsburgh-panthers-john-calipari
CAHUSKY said:Youre right, I erroneously gave him credit for this years KY class. That said, his Pitt classes were strong and I don't really care that those players, for the most part, didn't have good NBA careers. What we need, in my opinion, is someone who is respected/liked on the AAU circuit with long standing relationships. That's exactly what our staff, in my opinion, is lacking. I love Ray but he isn't what we need and that's what my initial post was referring to.
Vin Baker is available and is currently coaching: LinkyHaven't read through the whole thread, and maybe it was mentioned before the post above mine, but if we are clammoring for a bigs coach, in the family, with a bit of coaching experience, isn't Donyell Marshall a no-brainer?