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When did Billy coach at Kentucky?
Assistant in the early 90s.
When did Billy coach at Kentucky?
Calipari did go to the pros coaching the Nets and the 76ers. Pitino did his stint in the pros as well coaching the Celts. Getting there is not as hard as staying there.I think Cal will go at some point. Jay Wright turned down the 76ers if I’m remembering correctly. Coach K I believe turned down some teams. Self seems satisfied at KU. It would need to be someone like Scott Drew or Dan next imo.
Under slick Rick, forgot about thatAssistant in the early 90s.
So did brad stevensLeonard Hamilton did it right.
He was pretty good. Inherited a bad team and got it to the Finals.Stevens did so well they told him he could no longer be their coach but they like him in the office.
his college coachUnder slick Rick, forgot about that
I don't think any of them would go back to college jobs that are nearly as good as what they have now.What about Drew/Hurley/Self?
Stevens never coached an NBA finals.He was pretty good. Inherited a bad team and got it to the Finals.
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Brad Stevens basketball coaching records on StatsCrew.com
The Stats Crew has compiled complete basketball coaching records for Brad Stevens.www.statscrew.com
I actually wonder why most guys would want to stay in college. Having to fly all over the country and text 16 years constantly to "show love" when you could just be coaching basketball? This is even more true in the NIL world.
I agree - I was surprised someone thought the quality of life favors college. Popp is not sitting in a high school gym in South Carolina in July and then jumping on a plane to sit in some other dumpy gym the next day. He's drinking ten bottles of wine and falling asleep on a boat off Positano.
Coach K was doing the same thing Pop is doing.I agree - I was surprised someone thought the quality of life favors college. Popp is not sitting in a high school gym in South Carolina in July and then jumping on a plane to sit in some other dumpy gym the next day. He's drinking ten bottles of wine and falling asleep on a boat off Positano.
Coach K was doing the same thing Pop is doing.
You picked the most well known coach in the NBA in the very twilight of his career, coach K was the most well known coach in the very twilight of his career. Neither guy is/was doing anything they didn't want to be doing and they're both sitting on boatloads of cash.Great example.
You picked the most well known coach in the NBA in the very twilight of his career, coach K was the most well known coach in the very twilight of his career. Neither guy is/was doing anything they didn't want to be doing and they're both sitting on boatloads of cash.
But most average college coaches aren’t getting NBA offersFair enough: the average NBA coach has a much better, more comfortable lifestyle than the average college coach. That's my take.
But most average college coaches aren’t getting NBA offers
I agree - I was surprised someone thought the quality of life favors college. Popp is not sitting in a high school gym in South Carolina in July and then jumping on a plane to sit in some other dumpy gym the next day. He's drinking ten bottles of wine and falling asleep on a boat off Positano.
Unless you're an all-time great like Popp or Phil Jackson, I just don't see the upside to coaching in the NBA besides getting to tell people "I coached at the highest level".
Nick Nurse won a title and was jettisoned from Toronto 3 years later. Mike Budenholzer only lasted two years after his title. Same with Frank Vogel. Hell, Dwayne Casey won Coach of the Year in 2018 and was still fired the exact same year!
It really just doesn't seem worth it to me.
I think it's personal preference. The travel sucks (or is great) in both jobs. You get to be a surrogate Dad to a rotating group of kids, or you get to manage uber-rich star athletes and their entourage. In college you control your roster but have to rebuild it every year. In the NBA, you have to work with what you're given and may honestly not even have a chance of winning. College is a lot fewer games, but recruiting is its own season. Media expectations are similar.Okay. The average NBA coach has a better QOL than the average coach of a successful P5 program. Better? It's just my take. People can differ. I randomly played golf with an NBA coach a few years ago and asked him if he would consider a college gig and he laughed. A lot of guys just don't want to deal with the grind of recruiting, the year-round nature of it, and babysitting teenagers. Again, people can disagree, but that doesn't seem very controversial.
The Mayor! (At Iowa State). Great player but my only real memory of him was getting torched by the Fab 5 at the Palace.They had high hopes for Fred Hoiberg and he bombed out.
Agreed and maybe the job security thing is overrated because the NBA has always liked retreads. It's fine if you don't mind changing addresses. I do find it interesting that more college coaches have always been more well known and more revered than NBA coaches. A lot of these guys have huge egos so I think it's a factor.Fair enough: the average NBA coach has a much better, more comfortable lifestyle than the average college coach. That's my take.
He got a win coaching in the Dance against us. He got his NBA job after losing to UConn in the Dance.The Mayor! (At Iowa State). Great player but my only real memory of him was getting torched by the Fab 5 at the Palace.
Agreed and maybe the job security thing is overrated because the NBA has always liked retreads. It's fine if you don't mind changing addresses. I do find it interesting that more college coaches have always been more well known and more revered than NBA coaches. A lot of these guys have huge egos so I think it's a factor.
I've been told Jay Wright didn't like the direction of college hoops. He didn't want to have to coach and be their head fundraiser/dealing with boosters while not developing kids his way anymore with the portal threat. I wouldn't be surprised if it pushed Roy to leave a little early too. The college job has gotten more complicated in recent years.