Good read. I do think you are stuck with JPM unless she quits herself.
It's silly to think because its not like Duke has bad seasons. I mean you guys have made it to the elite eight. Thats more than so many other teams and you constantly have a winning season (ACC Regular Season/Tourney Champs under JPM), yet to the Duke fans that isn't enough.
HuskyFan, I agree with you.
It is simultaneously ridiculous to think we are discussing getting rid of a coach who has won approximately 83 percent of her games, four regular season ACC titles, and made four Elite Eight appearances in seven years, yet completely understandable after seeing a team that was a regular Final Four participant and national title contender under her predecessor turn into a team that suffers continuous blowout losses to elite opponents and the inability to defeat teams in the top five.
Remember, Duke was a perennial Final Four contender under Gail Goestenkors (made four Final Fours and two national championship games in the nine years before McCallie got there; made seven Elite Eights in the ten years before McCallie got there; never lost before the Sweet 16 in the decade before McCallie arrived). By the way, for some on this board who say that "Duke recruits itself" because of the balance of elite academics and (allegedly) eilte women's basketball, remember that Duke was at the bottom of the ACC before Goestenkors got there. One NCAA berth in the program's entire history. In her 6th year, Goestenkors had Duke in the Elite Eight. In her 7th year, Goestenkors had Duke in the Final Four (and the national championship game). Goestenkors built the program to where it was when McCallie took over, in that there was no previous basketball tradition and Goestenkors created the Duke women's basketball brand and made it a sought-after destination for recruits.
McCallie has been at Duke for seven years. Here her numbers:
- No Final Four berths
- Two NCAA Second Round losses as a #1 or #2 seed
- 0-13 against teams ranked #1 or #2
- 7-21 (25.0 percent) against teams ranked in the top five
- 13 losses against opponents ranked in the top five by 15 or more points
- 16 losses against opponents ranked in the top five by 11 or more points
Considering that Duke has been in the top five or top ten for many of those games, the record is unacceptable (not just the won-loss record, but the constant blowouts).
When she took over the Duke program in 2007, McCallie inherited a roster of eight high school All-Americans. And also remember that Duke recruiting under McCallie has been the best ever; Goestenkors had a lot of talent, but she never had the depth of talent that McCallie had. So the elite talent is there, but the results are worse. Duke has clearly taken a step back on the national stage. No one seriously discusses Duke as a Final Four contender, much less a contender for the national title. Even when Duke is ranked in the top five, women's basketball analysts, commentators, and fans do not pick Duke to make the Final Four because they are familiar with McCallie's track record against top five opposition.
Former AD Joe Alleva made very public statements attacking Goestenkors and claiming she did not deserve to be paid an elite salary (like Geno and Pat) because she did not win the national title. He went on to belittle her accomplishments, both in public and private. After she left for Texas, he hired McCallie and made proclomations about McCallie not just equaling, but surpassing the success and accomplishments of Goestenkors and winning the national title.
Yet after seven years, where is Duke? After seven years of Gail, Duke went from the absolute bottom of the ACC to the Final Four. After seven years of McCallie, Duke has rosters of All-Americans and not only cannot sniff the Final Four, but has multiple second round losses. And there are very serious issues about assistant coaches leaving, other staff turnover, players mysteriously leaving the program, Twitter rants, post-game locker room temper tantrums, press conferences where she refuses to name the opposing players, etc.
And she will get a pass this year because of the injuries (though the blowout losses to UConn last year and this year came with a full roster and two of the losses to Notre Dame came with Jones in the lineup). But the reason there are so many injuries is her strength and conditioning program, which is built for strength, but not conditioning. Players are strong, but not in basketball shape, which is why running teams or teams that can fast break using crisp passing have always caused problems for Duke. The inability to prepare players to be in basketball shape is contributing to the injuries.
With football finally winning, the spotlight would have been on McCallie. But with the Duke men losing so early, McCallie gets another pass, as the spotlight is off of her.
Honestly, it would take a massive player defection for Duke to get rid of her at this point, especially with a contract that runs through at least 2018.
So while I agree that the expectations of Duke fans are incredibly high and that looking at her record in a vacuum would think she has done a stellar job at Duke, her performance as head coach has to be measured against the backdrop of her predecessor and where Duke was when she took over. And by that measure, the program has taken a significant step in reverse.