I would jump up and down in joy if we hired Jamie Dixon.Jamie Dixon would be alright. I liked watching his Pitt teams in the Big East but he always seems to falter come tourney time.
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
I would jump up and down in joy if we hired Jamie Dixon.Jamie Dixon would be alright. I liked watching his Pitt teams in the Big East but he always seems to falter come tourney time.
Considering the full range in the NCAA of salaries, excluding Coach K and Calipari, is like $3.9 million, I think $1 million per year is a whole hell of a lot.
Especially since I'd expect the fully guaranteed contract to be for 5 years or so.
And the P5 spread is even less, probably closer to $3 million.
$1M/year is not a lot for an established P5 coach who has been to the tournament, especially when you're making a jump. In any industry, making a jump to another company is an automatic raise.
If you're a P5 guy with a good track record and have had some at least decent teams of late, there's no way in hell they're going to leave their comfortable positions without a nice raise.
I am sure I am not alone in just going over the list of all D1 coaches? I hate guessing names at the risk of jeopardizing even the smallest chance. But a lot of guys that would be a susrpsise hire.
IF we genuinely are offering some candidates $3 to $4 million and pursuing earnestly, we really have done all we we can to keep this this rolling.
And? Established guys are not jumping in June to a program with a good team but huge holes in the upcoming years for only 500k to $1 million. We will need to pay above market value with a fairly large compensating wage to get them to jump imoConsidering the full range in the NCAA of salaries, excluding Coach K and Calipari, is like $3.9 million, I think $1 million per year is a whole hell of a lot.
Especially since I'd expect the fully guaranteed contract to be for 5 years or so.
And the P5 spread is even less, probably closer to $3 million.
Take away Izzo, Self, and Pitino and that spread closes down another whole million dollars.
Just so we are clear, a $1 million per year raise.
That is 33% of the entire spread of coaching salaries in the country minus the top 5 coaches who would all be HOFers if they retired today.
Who has sources and who doesn't?People with no sources guessing names isn't going to hurt the cause.
And? Established guys are not jumping in June to a program with a good team but huge holes in the upcoming years for only 500k to $1 million. We will need to pay above market value with a fairly large compensating wage to get them to jump imo
Just so we are clear, a $1 million per year raise.
That is 33% of the entire spread of coaching salaries in the country minus the top 5 coaches who would all be HOFers if they retired today.
But we might have to overpay to get a 'name' coach on June 7th. Let's just say that someone like Mike Brey (since I've been focused on him for a while) is willing to talk for an extra million a year. I think you have to offer it.
Pretend you're at a school and have taken them to 4 NCAA tournaments in the last...7 years. Now pretend a school from a P5 conference who has 4 straight 23+ win seasons comes calling you and asks you to jump ship. You know this school wants to continue its success and you also know that there aren't many others out there like you who would be willing to do it. Would you demand more money as you know the demand for you is a lot greater? Many would, and they take more risks. This is not like you or I jumping to some new corporation and them giving us a 10% raise. The stakes here are a lot higher and some of these established coaches are able to play more with the money game.
I don't think any of that applies to this whatsoever.
I've accepted TJ as the next guy, so he has my vote. Unless there's a huge stud that they've managed to keep under wraps in the interview process I hope TJ gets the nod. Significantly cheaper and we can pay for a veteran coaching staff to come in and really hit it hard on recruiting for the next few years.
Except it does. It's simple economics. When someone is in a comfortable position and know they aren't going to lose their current job, they have more room to play with ESPECIALLY when they know they're at the top of the class and the other people interviewing them are far below their skillset. As someone who actually hires other people, I can tell you with certainty that it applies here as well as anywhere/anything else in the world dealing with high profile jobs.
No, they would use it for negotiations, have the gap closed, and send JP a thank you.My point is, yes they would.
When the entire earning potential for your profession is for all intents and purposes $3 million, and at most $4 million in all reality, a raise of $1 million per year is a huge amount.
Give me an example of it actually happening in college basketball.
Give me an example of a P5 coach at a better program jumping in June for anything 500k to $1 million.Give me an example of it actually happening in college basketball.