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Author Topic: [Cracked Sidewalks]Top Assistant Coach Options  (Read 2363 times)

CrackedSidewalksSays

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[Cracked Sidewalks]Top Assistant Coach Options
« on: March 28, 2014, 11:00:10 AM »
Top Assistant Coach Options

The crazy train for Shaka Smart pulled almost every corner of Marquette nation into it this week right up until Marquette officially went on record and said Smart was out. Since then, we've heard established names like Ben Howland, up-and-comers like Saul Phillips, coaches still coaching like Cuonzo Martin, and the hometown hero name in Brian Wardle all mentioned as possible replacements for Chris Otule's coach.

What amazes me that through all of this the only assistant coach that has been mentioned is Mike Hopkins. He has been Jim Boeheim's number two since 1996 & is generally considered the Orange heir apparent. Yet every time someone puts a mic in front of a national guy, Hopkins' name comes up. Considering Boeheim just inferred that his retirement may be coming sooner rather than later, Hopkins may not be the best choice for Marquette. He spent over 20 years playing and coaching at Syracuse. When that job opens, he will take it, no matter where he is coming back from.

So why is it no other assistants are being mentioned? Tom Crean and Buzz Williams were both assistants when they took over at Marquette, and that resulted in 10 NCAA appearances, two Sweet 16s, one Elite 8, and one Final Four in 15 years. Archie Miller, Johnny Dawkins, Tom Izzo, and Kevin Ollie are all coaching this weekend and were coming from assistant positions. With that in mind, I wanted to look at some of the top assistants out there. I looked at five assistants from blue blood schools. First, I looked at the average offense and defense ratings over the past 4 years, the number of top-25 recruiting classes they had during their time as assistants back to 2003, and both the number of NCAA wins they've been a part of and the number of trips to the Final Four.

<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="http://3.bp.blogspot.com/-HYB1-BIIK7o/UzWYUwm5QpI/AAAAAAAAAFI/i7M7qqlHQ0w/s1600/Graph.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" src="http://3.bp.blogspot.com/-HYB1-BIIK7o/UzWYUwm5QpI/AAAAAAAAAFI/i7M7qqlHQ0w/s1600/Graph.jpg" height="79" width="320" />[/url]</div>

1) Dwayne Stephens -- How this guy isn't a head coach is beyond me. 13 straight years in the tourney, a ton of postseason success at Michigan State, and probably won't wait for his 59-year-old boss, Tom Izzo, to retire. He's worked with guys like Draymond Green, Derrick Nix, and Adrien Payne, turning them into stud big men. Sparty has been in the top-50 in terms of eFG% on offense twice and defense three times in the past three years, so Stephens knows where to focus his coaching efforts. Oh...and his first Final Four? It came when he was an assistant to Tom Crean at Marquette in 2003.

2) Orlando Antigua -- I'm sure any Kentucky assistant will make some MU fans squirmy, but Antigua could be a very good fit. As a recruiter, he's been lead on numerous McDonald's All-Americans and been involved with top-5 recruiting classes every year he's been in Lexington. Antigua is also the national team coach of Puerto Rico, which helped him land Puerto Rican stud recruit Karl Towns for Kentucky. His recruiting success stories read like a who's who of lottery picks -- Anthony Davis, Nerlens Noel, DeMarcus Cousins were all Antigua gets. And the guy has one of the best stories in college basketball. How many guys can claim to have been shot in the head at age 13, played Big East basketball (at Pitt) with a bullet in their head, and gone on to be a Harlem Globetrotter?

3) Steve Robinson -- It may be tough to pry Robinson out from under Roy Williams' thumb -- the guy has spent 19 years as a Williams assistant -- but it could be very worthwhile. Robinson has recruited the best players in the country over the past dozen years, following Williams from Kansas to North Carolina. He can recruit anywhere, landing recruits from Washington State (Marvin Williams) to Washington, D.C. (Ed Davis) and everywhere in between (#1 recruit from Iowa, Harrison Barnes). As a bonus, Robinson also has head coaching experience; in the 1990s he took Tulsa to back-to-back NCAA Tournaments and also got Florida State to the Big Dance.

4) Dave Dickerson -- He's been down this road before. Dickerson was voted the #1 assistant in the ACC before taking over the head coaching gig at Tulane in 2005. His Green Wave experience was a disappointment, going just 71-85 in five years without any postseason appearances. Since landing at Ohio State, the Buckeyes recruiting has been fantastic and Dickerson was elevated to associate head coach after just 4 years on staff. He has a ton of experience, including helping Gary Williams take Maryland to a national title in 2002.

5) Kurtis Townsend -- When it comes to recruiting, no one has been more consistent over the past decade than Bill Self at Kansas, and leading the way on many of those recruits was Kurtis Townsend. Last summer, ESPN rated Townsend as the best assistant coach recruiter in the country. He has landed the #1 recruit in the country on more than one occasion -- both Andrew Wiggins and Josh Selby were Townsend gets. Perhaps more important, he's done it everywhere he's been. Townsend was on staff at Miami, USC, Michigan, and California before coming to Lawrence.

Bottom line, we missed out on Shaka, but there are plenty of Final Four and national title-winning coaches still out there and available. The only question is if the powers that be at Marquette are prescient enough to pick those guys out ahead of time.

Source: Top Assistant Coach Options

Earl Tatum

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Re: [Cracked Sidewalks]Top Assistant Coach Options
« Reply #1 on: March 28, 2014, 11:45:17 AM »
Still like an experienced head coach. As soon as these Assistants are successful, they will bolt in a few years.
I like Antigua a lot.Stepehns next.  But Pastner is my guy. We need a name or we will just be another school
below the elite. TIME IS NOW!

LAZER

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Re: [Cracked Sidewalks]Top Assistant Coach Options
« Reply #2 on: March 28, 2014, 11:50:50 AM »
Still like an experienced head coach. As soon as these Assistants are successful, they will bolt in a few years.
I like Antigua a lot.Stepehns next.  But Pastner is my guy. We need a name or we will just be another school
below the elite. TIME IS NOW!

Pastner isn't coming here.  Lateral move and Memphis can match any offer.  He'll be a name when the next big time job opens up

MikeDeanesDarkGlasses

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Re: [Cracked Sidewalks]Top Assistant Coach Options
« Reply #3 on: March 28, 2014, 11:56:46 AM »
These guys are mostly lead recruiters.  Most of the time these types of guys aren't savvy when it comes to X's and O's and the overall management of a program.  The article you should be looking up is "best assistant coaches ready to run a program". 

FloorSlapping

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Re: [Cracked Sidewalks]Top Assistant Coach Options
« Reply #4 on: March 28, 2014, 12:15:09 PM »
These guys are mostly lead recruiters.  Most of the time these types of guys aren't savvy when it comes to X's and O's and the overall management of a program.  The article you should be looking up is "best assistant coaches ready to run a program". 

Except of course for Hutson he can recruit and knows X's and O's.  Most head coaches were, at one point, assistant coaches.  Do coaches not develop the X's and O's until they reach head coach status? 

 

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