Here's an excerpt from an article I found online:
"He’s proven to be a subpar X’s and O’s coach. His in-game adjustments almost never work out. I can’t even keep track of the number of times I’ve seen him call a timeout when the game was getting away from Illinois and the team actually performed worse after the timeout.
There’s a specific play that’s burned into my memory from last season that is really indicative of the whole
Underwood era for me. It was against Wisconsin at home, and the Illini were down by ten points as the game was starting to slip away from them.
Underwood called a full timeout to try and stop the Badgers’ run. After a two minute break to draw up a set play, the Illini came out of the huddle and inbounded the ball. What happens next may or may not surprise you.
Turnover. Out of a timeout. I couldn’t believe it. The camera had barely switched back to the action on the court and the play that
Underwood had just drawn up went to hell in two seconds."
Sounds like something we've seen posted on this board hundreds of times right? Well, here's the twist - see the word Underwood in orange in that excerpt? That wasn't in the original text. Replace it with "Groce" and you get the excerpt in its original form from January 2017
It's interesting how the mythologies around ex-coaches changes depending on the current coach. Because BU is a great recruiter and almost all criticisms of him have to do with x's and o's, the mythology around Groce becomes that he was a strong x's and o's coach that couldn't recruit. If BU was an x's and o's genius who had trouble recruiting, I am certain we'd remember Groce as a good recruiter and terrible x's and o's guy.
John Groce is likeable, but time has essentially run out for him in Champaign.
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