Welcome back!!!And LOL at the idea he should keep Calhoun out if it. Calhoun employs the rat. But Ollie is supposed to play nice.
Wait. We didn't think that Calhoun should maintain NCAA compliance even if it wasn't spelled out? My take is simple. Calhoun had the championships, was beloved and no one was going to challenge him about anything. UCONN tried to skate on KO's contract when they saw the chance after his non performance. They used the minor rule breaking. It was a violation technically. Bad look for the school, terrible look for KO now with this racial thing.Whether he did or he didn't that is irrelevant. Calhoun did not have verbiage in his contract to maintain NCAA compliance related to violations. KO did, and he got canned.
The good news is UConn is clearly going to keep the 10MM at this point. Kudos to AD Dave for sticking to his guns.
No the lack of any settlement offer is what "escalated this".This is so counter to the persona that Ollie tried sell to everybody. Was it all fake or did the divorce, struggling as a coach, and eventual firing sap him of that innate desire to overcome obstacles and look for the next opportunity to succeed both personally and professionally?
This discrimination card is the ultimate escalator.
That's what it comes down to. If you suck at the main function of your job (for those unable to keep up: a basketball coach is hired to win games), your employer will do everything in their power to terminate you. If you are awesome at your job, they will usually let other things slide, even if those things violate your contract/terms of employment. I'm not sure why that's so hard to understand.Obviously Calhoun's issues were worse and his penalty was less. Winning matters.
That's what it comes down to. If you suck at the main function of your job (for those unable to keep up: a basketball coach is hired to win games), your employer will do everything in their power to terminate you. If you are awesome at your job, they will usually let other things slide, even if those things violate your contract/terms of employment. I'm not sure why that's so hard to understand.
I agree. If this was the reason he got fired he deserves his money. But he lied to the NCAA which justifies not paying him. However, the should settle for like 4 millionBut then you MUST understand the other edge of that blade. Which is if you are fired for performance (and not cause) you GET the remainder of the contract.
So by your reasoning if it is OK for UConn to go scorched earth to fire a bad coach, its OK for KO to go scorched earth to play the race card.
Right?
ronic because KO fired the only white coach on his staff....Glen Miller
I'm not a lawyer and I don't pretend to understand the ins and outs of KO's contract. Ultimately though, if he did violate his contract (including rules violations, however small) then he can be fired for cause. Someone mentioned it earlier, but my understanding is that KO's contract was written much more strictly than JC's with regard to NCAA compliance. No one forced him to sign it.But then you MUST understand the other edge of that blade. Which is if you are fired for performance (and not cause) you GET the remainder of the contract.
So by your reasoning if it is OK for UConn to go scorched earth to fire a bad coach, its OK for KO to go scorched earth to play the race card.
Right?
But he was fired for causeBut then you MUST understand the other edge of that blade. Which is if you are fired for performance (and not cause) you GET the remainder of the contract.
So by your reasoning if it is OK for UConn to go scorched earth to fire a bad coach, its OK for KO to go scorched earth to play the race card.
Right?
But then you MUST understand the other edge of that blade. Which is if you are fired for performance (and not cause) you GET the remainder of the contract.
So by your reasoning if it is OK for UConn to go scorched earth to fire a bad coach, its OK for KO to go scorched earth to play the race card.
Right?
But he was fired for cause
Politely disagree. KO's legal team made it hard from the beginning for the school to ever think about settling. He always wanted a lot bigger number than he what he was due, given that the amount he was contractually due was zero. He violated the terms of his contract, pure and simple. The Calhoun contract is just a shiny object distraction. He didn't burn the bridge, he nuked it, and once you go there, you cant expect the school to roll out the checkbook. He simply has no one to blame but himself. He cheated and didn't win, those two things usually wont keep you employed as a $3m a year basketball coach.No the lack of any settlement offer is what "escalated this".
Apparently down escalators are ok.On a side note I wonder if there's any escalators in the courthouse.
First off, I respect you response. 2nd, They (KO's lawyers)threw out a number....the school never responded, never countered, never tried to negotiate. I think it is pretty easy to show he was treated differently than his white predecessor who had many and in some cases more serious violations. It is not like JC's contract allowed him to break rules repeatedly. I wish they settled, which in my opinion is the right thing to do. Even if Uconn wins, how much do you think this whole thing is going to cost him.Politely disagree. KO's legal team made it hard from the beginning for the school to ever think about settling. He always wanted a lot bigger number than he what he was due, given that the amount he was contractually due was zero. He violated the terms of his contract, pure and simple. The Calhoun contract is just a shiny object distraction. He didn't burn the bridge, he nuked it, and once you go there, you cant expect the school to roll out the checkbook. He simply has no one to blame but himself. He cheated and didn't win, those two things usually wont keep you employed as a $3m a year basketball coach.
I think alot of this is personal between KO and DB
Was the number that they threw out there not the full amount? LolFirst off, I respect you response. 2nd, They (KO's lawyers)threw out a number....the school never responded, never countered, never tried to negotiate. I think it is pretty easy to show he was treated differently than his white predecessor who had many and in some cases more serious violations. It is not like JC's contract allowed him to break rules repeatedly. I wish they settled, which in my opinion is the right thing to do. Even if Uconn wins, how much do you think this whole thing is going to cost him.
On a side note, I see here as well as on FB all the comments about "the race card"....troubling for me that a bunch of white people referring to it as that. That in my opinion is exactly why there actually is a race card. (not referring to you or your post btw).
Irrelevant. That is how negotiations work.Was the number that they threw out there not the full amount? Lol