correct
Keo1
Landscaping and Irrigating BCS since '91
If its growing we can mow it
You realize Buzz's sons are 19 and 22, right?Quote:
I am wondering if Buzz kids might be interested in coaching and if a&m might provide a similar dynamic that Sampson enjoys at Houston in terms of having his son on staff (this is me just speculating and trying to look for a reason for Buzz to stay long term).
Free asshattery? Thanks…agtrevino07 said:![]()
Sorry to disappoint you with a dumb suggestion in a free online fan forum. I will try my best in the future to fulfill your expectations random basketball fan replying to my random post
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"Look at this," Williams said.
So I did.
Here's how it read: "Make decisions from a balanced perspective. The best decisions are based on facts and data. The person with the best info wins nine out of 10 times. The next 12 months is an information-gathering mode."
Buzz Williams scribbled those words one day in the same spirit with which he documents basically every thought of every day, and, when you get right down to it, those are the words that guided him from Marquette to Virginia Tech because those are the words that consumed him just like each thing that enters his mind seems to consume him.
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Simply put, once Williams decided to go into what he called an "information-gathering mode," his mind wouldn't rest until he had more data than you can imagine. He projected the likelihood of basketball programs not connected to football programs flourishing over the next 10 years in this ever-changing climate of college athletics. He studied how many programs succeed at a high level without some sort of ESPN contract. He estimated whether it was reasonable to expect the next six years at Marquette would duplicate or exceed the previous six. He researched every coach who has been at a high-major program for at least eight seasons to the point where he learned that staying in the same place too long in this era -- especially when you'll be inheriting a new athletic director soon, like he would've been at Marquette -- proves to be a mistake more often than not.
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This, to me, was fascinating because I've never seen a coach care so deeply about contract terminology, if only because most have agents who handle such things. But what I later learned is that Williams does not technically have an agent, that he actually negotiates and even writes large parts of his contracts, and that he learned to do this by filing Freedom of Information Act requests with public universities. He would obtain contracts of football and basketball coaches, study them intensely and highlight things he liked and didn't like.
"I have stacks of contracts," Williams said. "Stacks probably as big as this desk."
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Beyond that, the bar he set at Marquette no longer exists.
He has a fresh contract and fans with fresh sets of expectations.
Williams' move ensures he doesn't have to make three Sweet 16s over the next six years to prove to the world he isn't slipping. He's now in charge of a program that's been to exactly one NCAA Tournament since 1996, that's made just one Sweet 16 ever, and that won a mere two ACC games last season. In other words, the bar is really, really low. And Williams is more likely to spend the next six years outperforming his predecessors at Virginia Tech than he would've been to spend the next six years outperforming himself at Marquette.
Or, at least, that's what the "facts and data" assembled suggest.
The Collective said:
An article after he left Marquette. Read this and then tell me you have any idea on what Buzz might do at any given point...
https://www.cbssports.com/college-basketball/news/new-faces-new-places-why-did-buzz-williams-leave-marquette-for-vt/Quote:
"Look at this," Williams said.
So I did.
Here's how it read: "Make decisions from a balanced perspective. The best decisions are based on facts and data. The person with the best info wins nine out of 10 times. The next 12 months is an information-gathering mode."
Buzz Williams scribbled those words one day in the same spirit with which he documents basically every thought of every day, and, when you get right down to it, those are the words that guided him from Marquette to Virginia Tech because those are the words that consumed him just like each thing that enters his mind seems to consume him.Quote:
Simply put, once Williams decided to go into what he called an "information-gathering mode," his mind wouldn't rest until he had more data than you can imagine. He projected the likelihood of basketball programs not connected to football programs flourishing over the next 10 years in this ever-changing climate of college athletics. He studied how many programs succeed at a high level without some sort of ESPN contract. He estimated whether it was reasonable to expect the next six years at Marquette would duplicate or exceed the previous six. He researched every coach who has been at a high-major program for at least eight seasons to the point where he learned that staying in the same place too long in this era -- especially when you'll be inheriting a new athletic director soon, like he would've been at Marquette -- proves to be a mistake more often than not.Quote:
This, to me, was fascinating because I've never seen a coach care so deeply about contract terminology, if only because most have agents who handle such things. But what I later learned is that Williams does not technically have an agent, that he actually negotiates and even writes large parts of his contracts, and that he learned to do this by filing Freedom of Information Act requests with public universities. He would obtain contracts of football and basketball coaches, study them intensely and highlight things he liked and didn't like.
"I have stacks of contracts," Williams said. "Stacks probably as big as this desk."Quote:
Beyond that, the bar he set at Marquette no longer exists.
He has a fresh contract and fans with fresh sets of expectations.
Williams' move ensures he doesn't have to make three Sweet 16s over the next six years to prove to the world he isn't slipping. He's now in charge of a program that's been to exactly one NCAA Tournament since 1996, that's made just one Sweet 16 ever, and that won a mere two ACC games last season. In other words, the bar is really, really low. And Williams is more likely to spend the next six years outperforming his predecessors at Virginia Tech than he would've been to spend the next six years outperforming himself at Marquette.
Or, at least, that's what the "facts and data" assembled suggest.
idk...Quote:
I mean that reads like he is probably gone after this season. 6 years in one place, long enough. Not to mention losing 8 players and Solo and Payne would be free to transfer.
I really don't think that flying from Bloomington to Los Angeles or Seattle is so much different than flying from College Station to Columbia, SC or Gainesville,FL in a way that's going to move the needle on anything.Quote:
If you are any coach in the SEC considering a move to the Big 10, then you have to factor having to fly coast-to-coast for road games…L.A. to Nebraska to the NE.
100% chance that if Buzz were seriously considering that job he'd have total travel distances/flight hours and total nights spent in hotels during conference play in whatever spreadsheet he was using to analytically compare the two jobs. 100% chance. Because that is the type of guy that he is.20ag07 said:I really don't think that flying from Bloomington to Los Angeles or Seattle is so much different than flying from College Station to Columbia, SC or Gainesville,FL in a way that's going to move the needle on anything.Quote:
If you are any coach in the SEC considering a move to the Big 10, then you have to factor having to fly coast-to-coast for road games…L.A. to Nebraska to the NE.
Buzz is 52, so I don't think he's making choices yet based on the weather, or spending 2 extra hours on a plane twice a year.Quote:
You could be right about driving a relocation decision but if all other things are equal …. Which they never are. Weather also a consideration .
I assume your'e class of 07 and I'm '81. The older you get the more these kinds of things matter imo.
And that's the only time during the season they had an extended road trip. One time.Quote:
Current upcoming situation, Rutgers making a road trip to Washington and Oregon. Total travel days for that 2 game road trip - 6 days.
UCLA Coach Goes Off On New Big Ten Travel Schedule | OutKick20ag07 said:And that's the only time during the season they had an extended road trip. One time.Quote:
Current upcoming situation, Rutgers making a road trip to Washington and Oregon. Total travel days for that 2 game road trip - 6 days.
Guess what- for March Madness, if you last, you're going to going to be on a "6 day extended road trip", so you want your guys to be ready.
How many days did we spend on the road for the Vegas tourney, or the Bahamas, or any of those things?
It's laughable to think that one trip in the whole year is going to drive anything in this business.
He's been a massive grouch all year. Like dude is just finding new things to ***** about each day.Pumpkinhead said:UCLA Coach Goes Off On New Big Ten Travel Schedule | OutKick20ag07 said:And that's the only time during the season they had an extended road trip. One time.Quote:
Current upcoming situation, Rutgers making a road trip to Washington and Oregon. Total travel days for that 2 game road trip - 6 days.
Guess what- for March Madness, if you last, you're going to going to be on a "6 day extended road trip", so you want your guys to be ready.
How many days did we spend on the road for the Vegas tourney, or the Bahamas, or any of those things?
It's laughable to think that one trip in the whole year is going to drive anything in this business.
Mick Cronin appears to be one PAC-12 forced to Big-10 coach who hates the Big-10 travel schedules. Of course, he's been exceptionally moody about lots of things this season.
He seems to not like how many times he's had to see the Statue of Liberty while landing in a flight from L.A.
Maybe this needs a separate thread, but are schools really going to continue doing this nonsense? Miami traveling to northern California is just not sustainable, right?bobinator said:
I think the travel thing is a much bigger consideration for USC, UCLA, Washington and Oregon than it is for the more midwest located schools like Indiana. I don't know that it's a big enough consideration to matter to a coach thinking about taking a job, but it's definitely bigger for those schools than it is for Indiana.
Again, they did that one time.Quote:
Maybe this needs a separate thread, but are schools really going to continue doing this nonsense? Miami traveling to northern California is just not sustainable, right?
So…the coaching staff and players fly. The difference between a three hour and six hour flight is annoying but negligible._lefraud_ said:Maybe this needs a separate thread, but are schools really going to continue doing this nonsense? Miami traveling to northern California is just not sustainable, right?bobinator said:
I think the travel thing is a much bigger consideration for USC, UCLA, Washington and Oregon than it is for the more midwest located schools like Indiana. I don't know that it's a big enough consideration to matter to a coach thinking about taking a job, but it's definitely bigger for those schools than it is for Indiana.