Miami head coach Jim Larranaga reportedly in talks to step down.
Miami head coach Jim Larranaga reportedly in talks to step down.
This picture answers the question of who but opens up a slew of other ones
This guy must be preparing new boots for Jim to entice him to walk away.
Crocodile Dundee? He will kill it having that knife during recruiting.
I guess they made a "strong-@#! offer"?
Miami head coach Jim Larranaga reportedly in talks to step down.
What he did is all legal now.I guess they made a "strong-@#! offer"?
Not really, it's just there's no point in that kind of under-the-table arrangement anymore due to NIL. Doesn't mean it's "legal."What he did is all legal now.
I can see this. Recruiting has always been a drain on coaches - which is why many jumped to the NBA and NFL. Now you have to recruit 13 players every year, not just the 4 or so opening you expected. They are crazy well paid, but it has to be exhausting, and at some point, overwhelming. Football even more so.
He had 2 seniors on his last year at George Mason. By his logic he abandoned 13 players.
These hot takes are getting tired.He had 2 seniors on his last year at George Mason. By his logic he abandoned 13 players.
Bowling Green had 3 seniors. Abandonded 12 players there.
Hypocrisy.
It's tiresome for a multimillionaire to whine about the job he's paid generational wealth to do becoming more fair for employees.These hot takes are getting tired.
- the guy switched jobs two times in almost 40 years. Using your logic, the 25 players he “abandoned” in those almost 40 years negates the literally hundreds he’s helped.
- let’s keep stretching your (imo flawed logic) a little further - “abandoning” maybe 5% or less of his players in his entire career. How many head coaches have these kids had in their career. Maybe 6? 10? So “abandoning” just one coach makes them “worse” than Jim L.
- while money was probably part of the driver, more opportunity to win game was likely a large, if not primary, driver. How many kids these days leave to win more? Especially after just being to a final 4? If so most don’t. It’s primarily money or playing time.
At the end of the day, the game has changed drastically and it’s the Wild West. It’s a poorly structured professonal league right now. Understandable if a guy that’s already at the tail end of his career doesn’t want to deal with that
It's tiresome for a multimillionaire to whine about the job he's paid generational wealth to do becoming more fair for employees.
It's also tiresome for those that insist on carrying coaches' water because why?!?
It's certainly not because it's hurting our teams (see: first elite 8 in 20 yrs, revenue sports all ranked) and despite the hand wringing the majority of the kids are better off.
I’ll tell you what, if I’m an up and comer, this stuff fires me up. The old guard might be too tired to put up with it, but all I’d see is less competition and more opportunity.
$$$ means more than life…as we’ve decided in this country so hard to pin things on these kids doing what’s best for themselves NOW.$$$ mean more than winning
Leaving 12 games into a season is bad when anyone does it, particularly when you use things that were true at the beginning of the season as an excuse for it (age, wage, employee structure, etc.)the guy said the game has changed so dramatically that he doesn’t want to deal with it at age 70something. That sounds perfectly reasonable to me…I can’t seem to understand why anyone would thino otherwise.
If you’re gonna give a highly respected, by all appearances a stand up guy that has probably positively impacted more lives than you and I ever will combined, a hard time and accuse him of “abandoning” his players cuz he thinks that using the same old cliche arguments that have been circling around to justify paying players, then yes…that’s tired
How many coaches take jobs for less money to win more?How many kids these days leave to win more? Especially after just being to a final 4? If so most don’t. It’s primarily money or playing time.
My comment was more of a dig at the state of college basketball in that what should have placed Will Wade in Bruce Pearl levels of basketball purgatory is pretty much table stakes in today’s world of college basketball.Not really, it's just there's no point in that kind of under-the-table arrangement anymore due to NIL. Doesn't mean it's "legal."
And more importantly it was illegal when he did it, and he knew that to be the case.
Leaving 12 games into a season is bad when anyone does it, particularly when you use things that were true at the beginning of the season as an excuse for it (age, wage, employee structure, etc.)
The arguments are only cliche because they're true and have been for the decades since coaches started making millions more than their employees.
I'm sure there are plenty of 'highly respected', 'stand up' University of Miami employees who have helped more people than either of us...or those that can retire quietly without trashing the thing that made them respected and wealthy.