SidViciousDawg said:
Good memory there. I absolutely posted it was time for Fox to move on. I simply respect what he and staff did and certainly respect those great Dawgs we had for that nice run, albeit by our standards. Still they accomplished a lot of first here at Georgia. We hired Crean to do better, we clearly have not. What I don't understand are the loudest detractors of Fox those years have been the biggest defenders of Crean.
Monk and others have stated numerous times they'd have fired the Staff after year 4. That team won 8 of 12 down the stretch to finish 9-9. Of course that doesn't get a coach fired. Follow that up with 12-6, 11-7, 10-8. Can you imagine UGA firing a Staff after that kinda run? Driller and BMD constantly wanting to fire Fox every year. Throw Dawg44 in the mix and whoever else. Just admit Fox and Staff did a respectable job and Crean & Staff have not.
As to Fox's low offensive output… take a look at your high-powered offensive genius Crean's #'s in conference play that first year. We opened scoring 50 against UT while they scored 96. We scored 50 v UT, 49 v KY, 52 v FLA, 60 v Ark,
52 v A&M, 55 v FLA, 39 v Mizzou (THIRTY-NINE!!), 46 v SC. So, we opened with FIFTY and and closed with THIRTY-NINE & FORTY-SIX. And, y'all wanna harp on Fox's offense?
Let's go back to 2012-13 (Fox's fourth year) to analyze how that staff ended up surviving and eventually getting five more seasons (and how Tom Crean deserves no such current leeway in a way tougher environment).
In a putrid SEC that netted just three NCAA Tournament teams (not including Kentucky, which suffered injuries and a rare down year), Georgia won five in a row midway through the conference schedule to somewhat right the ship.
The Bulldogs followed that winning streak by losing four of five before rallying for home wins over Tennessee and UK. Fox's fourth season concluded with a road loss to Alabama and a first round SEC tourney loss to LSU. On January 26, 2013, Georgia was sitting at 7-11 (1-4). They managed to finish 15-17 (9-9) and were competitive in virtually every loss down the stretch.
The non-conference schedule for Georgia in 12-13 featured two ranked opponents, including none other than Tom Crean's #1 ranked Indiana squad. It seems like Crean's guys must've played a little defense in that one as they rolled 66-53. Georgia lost non-conference games to Youngstown State, Southern Mississippi, South Florida, Georgia Tech and Iona (which made the NCAA Tournament).
Other than sophomore star Kentavious Caldwell-Pope, Georgia didn't have a whole lot of players ready to provide consistent immediate help, so growing pains were expected.
I realize that direct comparisons are impossible, but given the vastly different environments and circumstances, I don't understand how Fox gets nine years and Crean gets four. And I am NOT trying to knock Mark Fox. My point is the same that it has always been. The job is extremely difficult and the margins really aren't as big as most think. But time is often required to establish anything. As Sid put it, people were panicking and crying for Fox's job on a yearly basis back then. It's just not rational. I guess rational doesn't cut it nowadays.