Rambleon8390 wrote:
63 ... understand your frustration ... overall how do you feel about the talent level of the current team vs. recent years ... could / should make a big difference in changing some of the end results we have seen of late! Anyone have any thoughts on this?
Although I'm really high on the new level of professionalism in the athletic department, I am not sold on Porter Moser's abilities. Exhibit A for me on doubts about Porter Moser was the loss at home to YSU last year. We had a 20+ point lead with approximately 16 minutes left, yet we lost. Had we won, we would have been 2-0 in conference with a road win against the eventual conference champion. The blown lead and loss at home to YSU made our win against Valpo on the road look like a fluke. There were other examples of big leads that turned into losses over the year.
This was compounded by my frustration at Moser unnecessarily cleaning house in his first year-- when we had Walt Gibler, Ben Averkamp, Jordan Hicks, and Christian Thomas-- yet we lost 17 of 18 conference games to set a new record for conference futility. Why? Because Moser dumped Courtney Stanley and ran off a lot of experienced players. Three dumped Loyola players that we really could have used to prevent THE WORST CONFERENCE RECORD EVER OF ANY HORIZON LEAGUE TEAM ended up playing for St. Leo in Division II, and took them to the Division II tournament. JR Blount is now an associate head coach at St. Leo.
We've had great talent many times before, without very much to show for it. Consider the 2001-02 Loyola team, which had David Bailey, Louis Smith, Corey Minnifield, Ryan Blankson, Jonathan Freeman, Kevin Clancy, DaJuan Gouard, the Smith twins (Anthony and Antoine), Silvie Turkovic, and Vas Tsimpliavidis. That's two NBA D-League players (Bailey and Minnifield), three foreign pros, two college and high school coaches, and two more capable of making a living in hoops except for their education in more lucrative fields.
Or---- consider the lineup in 2004-05: Blake Schilb, Majak Kou, Tyrelle Blair, DaJuan Gouard, the Smith twins, Tracey Robinson, Tom Levin, Chris Logan, etc. That team went 13-17.
In 2005-06, we lost Blair, Gouard, and the Smiths, but we gained JR Blount, Kye Pattrick, Leon Young, and Brandon Woods. Darrin Williams also became active. That team went 19-11, 8-8 in conference.
For most of the 2000s, we had better talent and raw athletic recruits than any other school in the Horizon League. That's just a plain FACT. What we lacked was a cohesive system, the will and discipline to enforce our game plans, assistant coaches that could back up the coach, continuous recruiting efforts, an emphasis on basketball IQ, and an effective coaching regime that could make the most of our talent. All of these weaknesses were due to underfunding. To this day, I steadfastly believe that if Tyrelle Blair had remained at Loyola, we would have gone to the tournament in 2007.
There's a good reason that Jim Whitesell ended up at St. Louis, that Patrick Baldwin went to Missouri State and then to Northwestern under Chris Collins, and that Howard Moore went to Wisconsin and then to be head coach at UIC: That was a helluva staff that simply didn't have the time or the resources to erase a losing mentality. We've got that volition now, but I'm not sure if we have the talent or perseverance given a generation of failure. Then again, this is a good chance to test the totally believable hypothesis that the Horizon League was systematically holding us back.