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Alabama (projected 6 seed) and Georgia (7)I honestly don’t think she ever “had” this team. Besides Kentucky, they really haven’t beaten anyone.
Alabama (projected 6 seed) and Georgia (7)I honestly don’t think she ever “had” this team. Besides Kentucky, they really haven’t beaten anyone.
Her belief is that the system works, and that the players just need to fully commit to it.She never made adjustments as the season went on.
If Kim really thinks that, I’m a bit disappointed in her. I assumed she was doing what a coach might feel forced into if their talent is not well enough distributed to play a traditional rotation. That was Geno’s take on what she was doing last season.Her belief is that the system works, and that the players just need to fully commit to it.
If Kim really thinks that, I’m a bit disappointed in her. I assumed she was doing what a coach might feel forced into if their talent is not well enough distributed to play a traditional rotation.
I just keep coming back to firing Jolley essentially for Cardoso making that three and two years later you're on the worst losing streak suffering the worst defeats in school history.
Say what?! Take away the UConn win and Tennessee's season was nothing to write home about. 8-8 in conference, tied for 8th. That is not phenomenal and not remotely worthy of being considered for NCOY.Kim's proven that she is a fantastic recruiter and had a phenomenal first season. This season has been bad, but unless there are major issues going on inside the locker room, it's short sighted to fire a coach after 1 bad season, especially considering Kim was in consideration for NCOY last year.
For some reason I thought she was a finalist for NCOY but I just checked and she wasn't. At any rate though, she looked like a slam dunk hire a year ago. For what was supposed to be a rebuilding year, 2024-25 was an excellent season. Tennessee started the year unranked and finished #15, making the Sweet 16 and proved they could compete with (and beat) the top teams in the country. Despite UCONN being their only marquee win, they came incredibly close to upsetting many top teams:Say what?! Take away the UConn win and Tennessee's season was nothing to write home about. 8-8 in conference, tied for 8th. That is not phenomenal and not remotely worthy of being considered for NCOY.
Her belief is that the system works, and that the players just need to fully commit to it.
It's amazing how fast perception changes.For some season I thought she was a finalist for NCOY but just checked and she wasn't. At any rate though, she looked like a slam dunk hire a year ago. For what was supposed to be a rebuilding year, it was an excellent season. Tennessee started the year unranked and finished #15, making the Sweet 16 and proved they could compete with and beat the top teams in the country. Despite UCONN being their only marquee win, they came incredibly close to upsetting many top teams:
-1 point loss to #9 Oklahoma
-2 point loss to #6 LSU
-4 point loss to #7 Texas
-7 point loss to #2 South Carolina
-5 point loss to #6 LSU
A good benchmark for academic standing is membership in the American Association of Universities. In the SEC, Texas, Texas A&M, Florida, and Vanderbilt are AAU members. South Carolina (my alma mater) not being a member has not caused my self esteem to crater.I’m bemused by the easy assumption that Vanderbilt is academically superior to UConn, or many other state schools for that matter. These sorts of judgments are typically made based on very flawed information (rankings, acceptance rates, endowments, etc) and reveal very little about the undergraduate experience. In reality, there is probably very little to distinguish Vandy from UConn (or Harvard or Stanford) as an academic experience. Of course, as a recruiting device, the value of academic reputation, however erroneous, can have a powerful influence on the decision making process of high school kids and their parents.
Believe it or not, Missouri is an AAU member as well.A good benchmark for academic standing is membership in the American Association of Universities. In the SEC, Texas, Texas A&M, Florida, and Vanderbilt are AAU members. South Carolina (my alma mater) not being a member has not caused my self esteem to crater.
I think she’ll probably get 2 more years, maybe 3. Most coaches get 4-5 years to right the ship when they take over a program unless there are extreme circumstances.It's amazing how fast perception changes.
Last year Tenn was 8-8 in conference with many close losses and the WIN over UConn. Caldwell was an up and coming coach.
This year 8-8 in conference with a few blowouts and a loss to UConn, and the Vol fans calling for her head. (Vol fans also see Vandy winning )
Much of this difference due to most tough SEC games and UConn packed into end of the schedule. This led to a 2-8 stretch after a long unbeaten start.
Next year will be year 3 for Caldwell. She will have more of her own recruits and perhaps a 'last chance' to prove the system.
I don’t think it’s perception…it’s reality. I will say, though, that many Vols fans got an overinflated boost from last year by the fact that they beat UConn. For whatever reason, the UConn effort in early February was definitely not the same as the one that destroyed SC a couple of weeks later. Whether it was the Tennessee loss or something else, there was a definite change.It's amazing how fast perception changes.
Last year Tenn was 8-8 in conference with many close losses and the WIN over UConn. Caldwell was an up and coming coach.
This year 8-8 in conference with a few blowouts and a loss to UConn, and the Vol fans calling for her head. (Vol fans also see Vandy winning )
Much of this difference due to most tough SEC games and UConn packed into end of the schedule. This led to a 2-8 stretch after a long unbeaten start.
Next year will be year 3 for Caldwell. She will have more of her own recruits and perhaps a 'last chance' to prove the system.
One might suggest that you stick to your WBB knowledge base and leave the academics comments to the experts.I’m bemused by the easy assumption that Vanderbilt is academically superior to UConn, or many other state schools for that matter. These sorts of judgments are typically made based on very flawed information (rankings, acceptance rates, endowments, etc) and reveal very little about the undergraduate experience. In reality, there is probably very little to distinguish Vandy from UConn (or Harvard or Stanford) as an academic experience. Of course, as a recruiting device, the value of academic reputation, however erroneous, can have a powerful influence on the decision making process of high school kids and their parents.
Apologies for the omission.Believe it or not, Missouri is an AAU member as well.
Yeah, I know. 😑 😑 😑
I regret accidentally swerving this thread and have already apologized for it. But just for the record, this is precisely my area of expertise as a lifelong college professor with a large network of colleagues working at many schools, who has seen the inner workings of several universities and knows first hand how to assess the educational opportunities they offer to undergrads. I know how rankings and ratings fail to capture what truly matters to an education.One might suggest that you stick to your WBB knowledge base and leave the academics comments to the experts.
Based on 2025-2026 academic rankings and reports, here are the academic standing for Harvard, Stanford, Vanderbilt, and UConn:
1. Harvard University Ranking: Generally ranked in the top 3, often #1 or #2
2.Stanford University Ranking: Top 3-5 in the US, sometimes #1
3.Vanderbilt University Ranking: Top 15-20 nationally
- 4. University of Connecticut (UConn) Ranking: Ranked around #69
It's amazing how fast perception changes.
Last year Tenn was 8-8 in conference with many close losses and the WIN over UConn. Caldwell was an up and coming coach.
This year 8-8 in conference with a few blowouts and a loss to UConn, and the Vol fans calling for her head. (Vol fans also see Vandy winning )
Much of this difference due to most tough SEC games and UConn packed into end of the schedule. This led to a 2-8 stretch after a long unbeaten start.
Next year will be year 3 for Caldwell. She will have more of her own recruits and perhaps a 'last chance' to prove the system.
I don’t think it’s perception…it’s reality. I will say, though, that many Vols fans got an overinflated boost from last year by the fact that they beat UConn. For whatever reason, the UConn effort in early February was definitely not the same as the one that destroyed SC a couple of weeks later. Whether it was the Tennessee loss or something else, there was a definite change.
Coach Caldwell consistently says that her teams can be expected to play better later in the season. That pretty clearly hasn’t happened. I’ll agree that scheduling hasn’t helped, but this team is clearly a step down from last year, despite the fact that it has better athletes. Personally, I think she has recruited too many selfish types and wrecked any hope of chemistry with the frequent substitutions.
When asked why she chose Tennessee, Edwards said it was ‘the freedom Kim promised her” (paraphrasing). Unless something really changes over the summer, I’m expecting a similar season next year.
Edwards feels like a Barker replacement. I doubt she will be as effective as Barker in their bigger games as a freshman, especially from 3, but I could see her becoming a force as a sophomore. They're also losing Spearman and Wolfenbarger so they're basically starting over with the bigs and will have to hit the portal for another transfer or two.Volnation thinks Edward’s will save the program but I I agree with you
Charlie Creme just saying something like, Tenn still deserves a #7 seed for keeping it close or playing competitive or something random vs Vandy. Me? I'm thinking, that's a six game losing streak at the end of the season, when IMHO, the committee should be looking at what teams are finishing strong. Still not buying the SEC is SO strong, etc, etc, when I'm looking at a 8-8 and 16-12 record, the latter wins of which were vs East Tennessee State, UT Martin, Belmont, Middle Tennessee, Coppin State, Winthrop, and Southern Indiana. And no, I am not disparaging those programs.
Perhaps it was an argument on the men's side where the committee valued teams finishing strong. Regardless, I think this is an important indicator as to team success. Likewise, I haven't been impressed with Ole Miss going 2 for 8.You left out their wins over Alabama and Georgia.
Here is a simple exercise : where would you seed USC? Because their resume is almost identical to Tenn’s.
Also, the other 8 seeds in cremes bracket are Illinois, Oklahoma st, Oregon. You really think any of them are harder to beat than TN?
Agreed on mid majors, but there are 10+ teams worse than TN that will make the tourney. Target them.Perhaps it was an argument on the men's side where the committee valued teams finishing strong. Regardless, I think this is an important indicator as to team success. Likewise, I haven't been impressed with Ole Miss going 2 for 8.
It's a crazy idea, I know, however wouldn't it be nice to see strong "mid majors" that had superlative records, but perhaps didn't win conf tourney get in the NCAAT?