Go--
This is the way it's been going for a quarter century now, through Will Rey, Ken Burmeister, Larry Farmer, Jim Whitesell, and Porter Moser. One guy shows a weakness in an area, we dismiss him and overcorrect for his weakness with the next guy-- often to the catastrophic detriment of the one thing the previous guy did right.
Farmer could recruit like mad, but couldn't coach his way out of a wet paper bag. So we get Whitesell, who could coach very well but couldn't (or wouldn't-- for fear of getting players who might become ineligible) recruit. So we get Moser, who's great on making the sale but pretty lousy on the back end (in game coaching, keeping players, scheduling, etc.).
It seems to me the only thing that mitigates or arrests this cycle is having (and keeping) a really good top assistant who is excellent at the things the head coach can't do well. We had that for a few years here and there in this cycle-- Famer couldn't coach, but for two years we had
Scott Spinelli, during which time Loyola was 32-29 overall and 18-14 in conference. For comparison, during the rest of the Farmer regime, Loyola was 39-73 overall and 17-41 in conference-- with a lot of the same quality players.
In Whitesell's first years, we had players recruited by Farmer, along with a few brought in by top assistant Howard Moore. In Whitesell's first three seasons we went 53-39, and 26-22 in conference; during the rest of his tenure we were 56-68 overall, 24-48 in conference games. And nearly everyone who paid attention acknowledged that we had mediocre (or worse) talent during Whitesell's last years, who managed to perform marginally better than their physical skills would suggest.
My theory is this: It is not enough to pay competitively for the head coaching job; we need to have enough money and incentives in the total coaching budget to keep and retain a top assistant who complements the head coach by doing the things the head coach is weak at doing. We've seen that at the pro level with someone like Tex Winter with Phil Jackson, and we've seen it at Loyola for short periods with Scott Spinelli and Howard Moore. We've seen it happen at other schools in our conference-- Barry Collier and Matta/Lickliter/Stevens at Butler is an example. Farmer as a top assistant is another example. If you try to find this "package" all in one person-- a head coach with a revolving door of low-paid assistants, they're probably not going to be successful, or not come to Loyola-- they're going to be hired at (or hired away to) a bigger, better paying venue. If Loyola could keep an effective tandem (or better yet, trio) in place for five years, that's how we get our program back to prominence.