BirdsEyeView wrote:I do agree it's a double standard to not have the best coach of the best team win the award. However, as evidenced by the MLB Coach of the Year not going to Joe Maddon this year (Cubs best record in baseball and Champs), the trendy pick will get votes over the coach who was EXPECTED to win.
It's not an MVC voters problem, it's a sports perception problem across every sport.
At the end of the day WSU fans, would you rather win the league consistently and not win COY or be a surprise 2nd place team who was projected 7th with a coach who wins the COY? You all know the answer to that question.
Would you rather be the best at your job every year or be the 2nd best one time and get the best guy's bonus?
Additionally, pro sports comparisons hold no validity. Coaches and managers of pro sports are bound by the rosters handed to them. Coaches at the collegiate level are directly responsible for the roster they have. In fact, it's one of the most important aspects of their jobs. Saying "Marshall had the best talent and therefore should have won" gives zero credit to the reason the best talent resides on his team. It wasn't handed to him by a GM somewhere writing a big check.
There are cases where the league winner and COY might not mesh. I get that. Last year, a year in which the league was one by 4 games and the COY winner's team finished in a tie for 4th (slightly if at all above expectations) and 5 games back, in his 4th year, was not one of those years.
Also, coaches that have been in the league for 3+ years are partially responsible for the expectations of their programs. If a coach is in his 4th or 5th year, and the expectations are crappy, we should reward said coach if they turn out to just be mediocre? While punishing a coach who created expectations that losing more than 0 league games is some kind of disappointment?
Secondly, beyond the coaches creating expectations, the voters themselves create the expectations. Half as often as not, seeing a team picked 7th by media that ends up finishing 2nd has as much to do with terrible analysis by preseason voters as it does with over-performing coaching.