I like your comment more than mine. And I like mine.
Honestly have not read through the thread but can't believe we even have this. Hurley won the championship and came back even hungrier this season. Players that were also on the team last year said that his practices were even tougher this season. Not to mention the fact that he said in an interview immediately after the game that the coaches will start working on next seasons lineup on bus ride back to hotel. Ego or no ego, the man will put in the work.As great a coach as Hurley has been, his large ego is a concern now that he has become very famous in the world of Hoops. Does anyone see this as a potential issue? Will he be able to stay focused on the team...?
If his ego plays any role, it is that he will commit even harder to success (if that's humanly possible) to avoid failure. I believe his strong family (wife, sons, dad) will keep him grounded.I think this is an awful take as there is zero evidence that Hurley has shown us since he got here that he will accept less than the best from his program. We have literally improved every year he has been here EVEN AFTER WINNING A NATIONAL CHAMPIONSHIP and losing our top 3 players
I'm not saying this about Dan Hurley, but most of the guys I know who talk the most about doing yoga have pretty big egos.The guy admits in public to crying and doing yoga/meditating. That's so far from ego, you think Cal is up there talking about the last time he had a good cry? If anything hurley is a great role model to all young males to be more in touch with emotions in a culture that tends to pride itself in males keeping it all inside.
I think you misunderstood my meaningNo. But we don’t feed trolls. Go starve elsewhere.
And neither are some of us here! For me, he is perfect.As Hurley said this past summer, "I'm not normal."
We are all happy you decided to post this gem upon release from prison.As great a coach as Hurley has been, his large ego is a concern now that he has become very famous in the world of Hoops. Does anyone see this as a potential issue? Will he be able to stay focused on the team...?
Idiot postAs great a coach as Hurley has been, his large ego is a concern now that he has become very famous in the world of Hoops. Does anyone see this as a potential issue? Will he be able to stay focused on the team...?
I was talking about the crying Hurley has talked about and Travelman was referencing.
I know plenty of egomaniacs who are are into yoga.
looks like if they scrunch them over they could fit 3 more.
Friend of mine was offended by the "we've owned college basketball for 30 years." Of course he's a Purdue fan and may have been just a little sensitive at that time.The only thing he's said this week that made me wince was his insistence that UConn would be in roughly the same place had we not moved to the BE.
Said it in another thread already, but I'm pretty confident that we don't get Tristen or Cam if we were still in the AAC. It's basically a one-bid league. I'd guess Castle to Auburn or OSU instead of Storrs. And because football, we weren't moving up to the B12 with Houston.
It's pure speculation on my part that we wouldn't be where we are today, but at the time DH said UConn was already on a trajectory like Houston back before rejoining the BE, we still didn't have an offense. And there wouldn't have been a Storrs South (does anyone really think Dickie's Arena in Fort Worth would've been 60% Huskies fans?)
Hurley is awesome as is
And they also mistake confidence (in himself, his process, his players) for ego as well. He's actually sounded humble to me. He's always acknowledged coaches with more experience, acknowledged the legacy of the school he's come to, and taken responsibility for losses and setbacks (see Bouknight troubles) along the way as part of his failure to coach up, mentor, or hold accountable in the right manner.I feel like people mistake intensity for ego. And his intensity (bordering on insanity) is WHY this team is so good.
I realized this OP post was a bit nuanced for the Boneyard. But when you look at famous atheletes and hollywood types, they often have problems with their egos when they get rich and famous. Danny certainly has a lot more fame to deal with now. I expect him to work though it all, but it is a challenge for anyone. Another interesting thing demonstrated in this thread is how rabid many UCONN fans are and attack anyone not praising our beloved leader... Nothing like good old mob mentality in higher education... but I guess sports are a bit of a release for our aggresive animal instincts...
Considering 1) this was a ridiculous post to begin with 2) you dont post much and 3) you spell our school wrong I am just curious who you actually root for. Kentucky? Providence? Cuse?I realized this OP post was a bit nuanced for the Boneyard. But when you look at famous atheletes and hollywood types, they often have problems with their egos when they get rich and famous. Danny certainly has a lot more fame to deal with now. I expect him to work though it all, but it is a challenge for anyone. Another interesting thing demonstrated in this thread is how rabid many UCONN fans are and attack anyone not praising our beloved leader... Nothing like good old mob mentality in higher education... but I guess sports are a bit of a release for our aggresive animal instincts...