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#6381 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Mar 2011
Posts: 4,325
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And yet the program wasn't elite, which is exactly my point.
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#6382 | |||
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Senior Member
Join Date: Jul 2011
Posts: 3,780
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Just a matter of disagreement, I guess. I still think IU has a hoops cache that no other school in the B10 can match and I think Crean is doing well to capitalize on that advantage. Their problem is that, unlike football, they're not primarily recruiting against the B10; they're recruiting against UK, Kansas, UNC, etc. for the handful of difference-maker recruits. And they're still a step behind those name schools, so they'll have an occasional spotty season. Hell, UNC is heading for a spotty season. It's just really tough to stay on top year-after-year in hoops with the way the game is set up. Quote:
I think that is selling MSU short. I don't think MSU is any better or worse off than OSU or M when it comes to losing a coach. What we have seen is ANY program is on shaky ground with a coaching transition, even the likes of NC (Doh!) and IU. When Izzo leaves, MSU be on the same shaky ground. Personally, I don't expect them to spend 10 years floundering about, but who knows? -- it's possible. That said, Beilein is older than Izzo so it's quite possible that M will be back out on the limb in a hurricane before MSU is. Quote:
I said 5th best in the conference, at best, and I didn't say it flippantly. I'm aware of M's history as a hoops program. Based on conference titles, NCAA tournament performance and head-to-head records, IU, Purdue, Ohio State are clearly ahead of M. I'd also rate Illinois ahead of them based on more conference tournaments same number of FFs (though M has slight upperhand in tourney performance) and head-to-head. Michigan State is a close question, historically. MSU has as many regular season titles and more tourney titles (lesser value b/c of sample size) and a better tourney performance. M has head-to-head, so that's a really close call. I could see 5th for either of them and 6th for either of them. Now, 5th or 6th best in the B10 is comfortably top 20 overall, IMO. So, nationally, M is probably a top 20 program historically -- maybe top 15. Last edited by iam416; May 8th, 2012 at 08:01 AM. |
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#6383 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Mar 2011
Posts: 4,325
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Under Knight IU wasn't pulling in those recruits either. He got the most out of his talent, kept in-state kids in state, and once in a blue moon an elite kid from outside the midwest would have the appetite to try his luck with Knight. So while I agree about that cache, it's not as if Crean going head to head with KU, UNC and Kentucky for McDonalds All-Americans would be a return to normal for Indiana. That would imply recruiting better than ever.
Could be re MSU, but I doubt it. MSU's had a few very lucky bounces in its last 30 years of basketball - Magic Johnson first and then the Michigan implosion. They've capitalized on those opportunities brilliantly, but without either one there'd be very little history there for an AD to sell good coaching candidates on. It comes down to just two names that truly matter in the history of that program -- Magic and Izzo. Not enough. I think programs like OSU and UM are far better equipped to attract a name coach or an in-demand up-and-comer. Pitino and Michigan flirting with each other some years back is an indication of that. Pitino was never gonna come here and Michigan was never going to hire him, but both sides knew the prestige of the other would result in a PR win if they flirted. It's an intangible argument I'm making here, so fair enough if you just don't see it that way, but that sort of scenario is a way to measure eliteness and I just don't see the potential for that with MSU. I see your point re Purdue, but then again I don't. Twice in the Final Four, the last time being 1980. If you consider the likelihood of future success as well as adding up the performances of the past, it doesn't seem likely that Purdue's going back to seeing major success. And, re Illinois, they have no title to their name. In my subjective ranking of past performance, you need at least ONE if you wanna claim elite status. OSU hasn't won since 1960, but at least they won. Again, it's all subjective, how past successes are ranked. The aughts were the first decade since the 1950s in which Michigan didn't make the final four at least once, and consistency counts. OSU has made it twice as many times as Michigan, but seven of those 12 were 50 years ago or more, and we all know how important it is to Buckeyes to eliminate the distant past from discussions of head-to-head matchups. That's why it pains me so to have endured 15 years of Michigan buffoonery in their approach to basketball. This didn't even have to be a discussion. |
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#6384 | ||
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Senior Member
Join Date: Jul 2011
Posts: 3,780
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Quote:
Indiana also produces a ton of hoops talent. Crean is getting back in on it. Unfortunately. OSU was able to pilfer, e.g., Conley, Oden and Thomas from Indiana. Indiana is, IMO, a fair equivalent of Ohio in football. The talent base is there. If Crean wins, he'll get it. As far as historical ratings go, I value conference performance, tourney performance and head-to-head. With tourney performance, you're correct that you need to take into account the tourney set-up since it's change so drastically over the years. One could argue 1976 as the watershed year (when more than 1 team from a conference could get in--otherwise, it's sort of duplicates conference performance) or 1985 with the move to 64. But, of course, you have to take into account the era of the tournament. As far as B10 teams go, IU needs no explanation. Purdue is second in B10 regular season titles (or tied for first depending on how you view "vacated" things -- I count the "vacated" stuff, personally and based on your FF statement re M, I assume you do, too). Purdue has won 8, I think, more conference titles than M and owns them head-to-head. So, I think I'm on solid ground when I say Purdue is a top 3 B10 program. Ohio State has the most regular season and tournament titles and the most FFs of any B10 team. Speaking of decades, OSU made the FF in the 30s, 40s, 60s, 90s, 00s, 10s. 7 FFs since 1960. Their head-to-head is their downside vis-a-vis Purdue and Illinois (I think, need to check the latter). I think Illinois is poor man's version of Purdue in conference play, so I think it's a closer call with M. I'd still rate them as 4th. I can't really sort out MSU or M -- I could see that going either way. Quote:
M is something like 760-700 all-time in conference play. I think that illustrates nicely where they fit in. |
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#6385 | |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Dec 2004
Posts: 20,534
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To be a professional means that you don't die. - Takeru "the Tsunami" Kobayashi |
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#6386 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: SEC Country (don't hold it against me)
Posts: 3,472
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The Magic Johnson years were better than anything UM hoops achieved, weren't they?
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Atlanta, GA |
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#6387 | |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Jul 2011
Posts: 3,780
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Quote:
Also, of some note, Illinois and Purdue also have huge winning percentage advantages over the likes of OSU, M and MSU (at least through 2008-09 -- the date of my encyclopedia, heh). Illinois, Purdue and IU were clustered in the 63-65% range and MSU, M and OSU were right around 60%. OSU is now probably a modestly comfortable 4th after their last 3 seasons. Also, Purdue as 22 B10 titles, tied with OSU. IU is next. Illinois next. Anyway, it's a fun discussion and there are plenty of close calls. I don't, however, think the top 3 is a close call. I think 4-6, as I said, is at least debatable, but I still think Illinois is a pretty solid 4th. Frankly, a number of all-time rankings would put Illinois in the top 3 and OSU at 4th, but I think those lean to heavy on all-time wins. I haven't seen an all-time ranking that has M any higher than 5th in the conference. |
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#6388 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Mar 2011
Posts: 4,325
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I've never seen any all-time ranking of this type. Always just had this discussion based on own observations. Link? Maybe let me look before the discussion continues.
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#6389 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Mar 2011
Posts: 4,325
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#6390 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Jul 2011
Posts: 3,780
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Here is Sagarin's thingy as of 2009 in conjunction with ESPN: http://assets.espn.go.com/photo/2009/1004/cbe1.pdf
Here's NBC's jackwagon list: http://nbcsports.msnbc.com/id/281165...ge_basketball/ I wish stats were easier to come by. It's a pain in the ass tracking down a lot of this stuff. But, it's interesting--at least to me. As for the above lists, I think Sagarin's is pretty decent historically -- the NBC list definitely weighs toward recent success, though Utah ahead of OSU is retarded. |
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#6391 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Jul 2011
Posts: 3,780
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Incidentally, all-time winning percentages:
Illinois -- 0.650 Indiana -- 0.638 Purdue -- 0.633 OSU -- 0.603 MSU -- 0.598 M -- 0.598 B10 titles (regular-tourney): Purdue 22-1, OSU 22-4, IU 20-0, Illinois 17-2, M 13-1, MSU 13-3 NCAAs (appearances-S16 1985-current-FFs-NCs): IU 36-8-8-5; OSU 28-7-11-1; MSU 26-12-8-2; M 23-5-6-1; Illinois 29-6-5-0; Purdue 26-7-2-0 Don't have the head-to-heads immediately available. |
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#6392 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Mar 2011
Posts: 4,325
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Thanks. So as to remain a productive human today I will leave it for later this eve...
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#6393 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: SEC Country (don't hold it against me)
Posts: 3,472
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I checked the record books...there seems to be some years missing though.
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Atlanta, GA |
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#6394 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Mar 2011
Posts: 4,325
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I bet you did!
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#6395 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: SEC Country (don't hold it against me)
Posts: 3,472
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Saying Magic and Izzo are the only reasons for MSU's rise to basketball elite, you would be discounting Izzo's true impact. He has grown and cultivated the program (look at their facilities).
MSU has a bright basketball future, and its not like it will immediately go away if he were to leave. Hopefully Michigan's basketball program is on par, but it seems like you are discounting Sparty too freely.
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Atlanta, GA |
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#6396 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Feb 2011
Location: Atlanta, GA
Posts: 2,409
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Lots of tidbits here.
Tidbit one ..... what this thread is for. I think that's pretty well established and Linesman reaffirmed it. No, talent, we're not going to close the thread on your suggeston to do so. Interesting find: talent is the number one poster on this forum followed by Linesman and strange in that order. Despite the intonations by our buckeye stalwarts about how moronic Michigan men are, they must like it here. Birds of a feather and all of that. The Hoke hire ..... I liked it out of the box. I didn't want Harbaugh or Miles for various reasons none of them having to with sour grapes. My point in lauding the brilliance of that hire has more to do with hidden value. As others have pointed out, he was the right hire at the right time. He's not a star but as a coach and as a human being he brings a pretty good resume. I guess its a matter of selecting measures to evaluate a man. W/L record, conference championships and national titles is one way but not my way. Michigan football isn't about winning at all costs. Here's an interesting question. What are the top 5 measures of a good CFB coach? Seems like there is a wide range of views expressed here. Frankly, winning is not very high on my list and I'm admittedly an odd ball here. Many times I've expressed the view that I'd rather Michigan be 6 and 6 and graduate football players that are also good citizens that are going to contribute. I wouldn't mind if M joined the Ivy League, played football at noon every Saturday including the final regular season game agasint osu, and didn't play in the post season (esp. the way its heading) ...... basically I'd like to bring M football back to the 60s. Obviously, none of what I'd like to see is going to happen and it is a totally unrealistic view but that's how I feel about CFB. I hate what has happened to CFB in general and what universities have done to leach off the money that can be made by playing it on the national level. Yes, that money funds other sports but, IMO, the draw at Michigan for HS students should be it's academics not that it plays waterpolo at a national level and the team trains in a 500 million dollar nautitorium. Anyway, my measure of a good CFB coach is going to be a lot different than most here. As I reflect back on a lifetime of Michigan football that spans more than a 1/2 century, Bump and Bo, Mo and Lloyd all look like pretty damn good coaches more for what they did to advance the foundational principals of M football and less for their W/L records. |
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#6397 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Feb 2011
Location: Kansas City MO
Posts: 4,046
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for the record, I was the biggest pro-hoke guy on this board. and you're welcome.
__________________
Grammar... The difference between feeling your nuts and feeling you're nuts. |
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#6398 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Mar 2011
Posts: 4,325
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The Hoke hire ..... I liked it out of the box. I didn't want Harbaugh or Miles for various reasons none of them having to with sour grapes. My point in lauding the brilliance of that hire has more to do with hidden value. As others have pointed out, he was the right hire at the right time. He's not a star but as a coach and as a human being he brings a pretty good resume. I guess its a matter of selecting measures to evaluate a man. W/L record, conference championships and national titles is one way but not my way. Michigan football isn't about winning at all costs.
On what did you base that decision, apart from the obvious loyalty aspect? In retrospect, all those folks singing his praises had had the benefit of seeing him in person, and given that access, maybe his obvious leadership qualities were apparent. He's very clearly a great leader. But how would any of us know? To me, at that time, he had cred as a turnaround artist but anything said by some very factionalized alumni IMO had to be viewed through the prism of the schism. (heh) I wouldn't mind if M joined the Ivy League, played football at noon every Saturday including the final regular season game agasint osu, and didn't play in the post season (esp. the way its heading) No offense Jeff but I don't believe you for a second. Your in-season attention to analyses and detail are both remarkably skillfull but also evidence that the above is a sentiment and only a sentiment. CFB may have veered off toward a destination that makes you and me and others very uncomfortable, but you're still along for the ride and so are many others of similar mind. Bump and Bo, Mo and Lloyd all look like pretty damn good coaches more for what they did to advance the foundational principals of M football and less for their W/L records. I hate to keep going round about this and wish I could just let it go, but my own personal feelings and approach to the concept of justice mandates that I say the following: one simply cannot say that about the last name on your list. His is a very complex record and a mixed legacy in the department you are referring to, with some high highs and low lows. It is a disservice to those with uncomplicated legacies to have him in the same category. Last edited by hack; May 8th, 2012 at 02:16 PM. |
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#6399 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Feb 2011
Location: Atlanta, GA
Posts: 2,409
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On what did you base that decision?
My intense wish to end the Rodriguez experiment coupled with an early view that Hoke had the right stuff. Just a feeling about him mostly from watching his behavior in front of the camera in the immediate aftermath of Brandon's announcement. You bring up a good point about "not believing me for a second." Maybe its the off-season. I don't know but I have a different feeling about M football in the great scheme of things right now. Can't put a finger on it but it has to do with my disdain for what CFB is becoming. Too much entertainment with the wrong people benefiting from the value of it, no matter how misplaced that value may be. On Lloyd ...... I do understand where you are coming from. However, in the end, whether you subscribe to the view that he was underming Rodriguez or you don't, LC was right about Rich Rodriguez if I understand what his true thoughts about him were. I don't think he liked him as a man or as a coach. A lesson I learned as a Marine was the truth of the addage: give a (stupid, arrogant, ambitious, lazy .... name your adjective) man enough rope and he'll hang himself. You don't have to build the scaffold, rig the noose or pull the handle. These kinds of peole will fail on their own. I think LC played his cards just right. He laid low, IMO, waiting for Rodriguez to fail, like he knew he would, and he did without a lot of help from his known adversaries. |
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#6400 | |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Feb 2011
Posts: 508
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