UNIFanSince1983 wrote:Similarly it is dumb to penalize a coach because he has more experienced players on his roster. Especially when the experienced players on the other coaches roster have been to a Final Four and are All-Americans coming into the year.
My only point was to rlh who was saying Jacobson wasn't doing as good a coaching job as Marshall because his team was more experienced. Both are great, and I actually think Marshall is a better coach, but devaluing what Jacobson has done due to experienced players is dumb.
I somewhat devalue every NCAA coach that suddenly looks better when he has experience working to his advantage.
You and I will have to agree to disagree, because I think it is entirely common sense to adjust a coach's performance relative to the amount of experience he's putting on the court, and I think it is BEYOND ignorant to penalize a coach for consistent strong performance or reward a coach for past poor performance.
I could show detailed numbers for the NCAA tournament in general in regards to the tendency for non-major programs to succeed at a far greater clip with upper-classmen heavy rosters, but look at Jacobson's performance specifically:
2015: 25-2 (5 seniors, 5 juniors)
2014: 16-15 (2 seniors, 6 juniors)
2013: 21-15 (4 seniors, 3 juniors)
2012: 20-14 (1 senior, 4 juniors)
2011: 20-14 (1 senior, 1 junior)
2010: 30-5 (5 seniors, 3 juniors)
2009: 23-11 (2 seniors, 5 juniors)
This year is the most heavily weighted season towards upper-classmen in his entire career on UNI (I didn't look at his first two rather average seasons, as I try not to judge a coach on his performance before he get a chance to get his players in the program). The only year close to this one in regards to veteran leadership is 2010, Jacobson's best coaching performance prior to this.
So yes, you weight his performance relative to the experience he's putting on the court. Jacobson has a clear level of coaching performance that increases and decreases relative to the number of seniors he puts on the court, and his four best seasons have come in the five seasons he's had 6+ upperclassmen on the roster. He's a good coach consistently able to put out 20-21 win seasons, but he's only able to win more than that when he loads his team with upperclassmen. I am somewhat less impressed with his coaching performance because of that.
Not UNimpressed. Just slightly less impressed.
Put it this way: would you be more impressed with UNI right now if they were 25-2 with 12 freshmen on the roster? If anyone says no to that, they're insane. If you're not recruiting one-and-done players, coaching performance should always be judged relative to the experience he puts on the court. If you take 12 true freshmen who were lightly regarded in national recruiting and you win 30 games, that is a phenomenal coaching performance; if you take those same 12 players and win 30 games with them as redshirt seniors, that is a far less impressive performance, and you sacrificed the consistency of your program to win that year -- and usually in college basketball, sacrificing the consistency of the program to win in one single year is due to a desire to leave the program, leaving a flaming dumpster behind you. (Obviously not the case with Jacobson, before anyone decides to latch onto that as an insult at UNI somehow.)
I'm not even arguing loading up on upperclassmen is a bad thing at all. Marshall's done it for years by heavily recruiting the JUCO ranks. But if Marshall finished second to a team with less upper-classmen, no way in hell would I argue he should be getting COY over the coach of that team, who would have clearly done a superior job that year.
My point is, Jacobson and Marshall are both excellent coaches and they should both be graded on their team's achievements. Each man is entirely, 100% responsible for the on-court production of their team, this year AND in previous years, and you shouldn't grade them on anything but their ability to win the conference. Neither guy needs to be graded on a curve over any extenuating circumstances. Win the conference and win COY. Anything less than that is refusing to treat Jacobson like Marshall's peer, and is insulting to a coach of his ability.