Breaking! Hopkins canned!

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D-train
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Re: Breaking! Hopkins canned!

Post by D-train » Mon Mar 11, 2024 1:26 pm

If Dannen does as good a job replacing Hopkins as he did KDB we will be in business and will be heading into a whole new era of Husky Athletics with two great new coaches....
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Captain 97
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Re: Breaking! Hopkins canned!

Post by Captain 97 » Mon Mar 11, 2024 4:20 pm

Can you imagine the hate coming from Tuscon if we took both their Football Coach and Their Basketball Coach in the same year? :lol:

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D-train
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Re: Breaking! Hopkins canned!

Post by D-train » Mon Mar 11, 2024 4:46 pm

Captain 97 wrote:
Mon Mar 11, 2024 4:20 pm
Can you imagine the hate coming from Tuscon if we took both their Football Coach and Their Basketball Coach in the same year? :lol:
:lol: They would probably post fake videos of Lloyd on a date with a goat...lol
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Donn Beach
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Re: Breaking! Hopkins canned!

Post by Donn Beach » Tue Mar 12, 2024 4:10 pm

D-train wrote:
Sun Mar 10, 2024 12:26 pm
AZOldDawg wrote:
Sat Mar 09, 2024 10:48 pm
Rumor has it they will go after Tommy Lloyd as he is a home town boy plus Arizona appears to have significant financial issues
Wow, Kelso guy. I had never even heard of him. Also was an assistant at Gonzaga. Sounds perfect to me. Bet he would love to come home and coach for a B10 team instead of coach for the Seattle Mariners of College athletics....
I discussed him a week ago on the who will replace Hopkins thread,. He's given as the reason Gonzaga has faded. Few losing him to Arizona. He was the international scout for Few, brought in a lot of the talent, guess he can coach too. Arizona just signed him to a new contract three weeks ago, he's probably not leaving there

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D-train
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Re: Breaking! Hopkins canned!

Post by D-train » Tue Mar 12, 2024 4:22 pm

Donn Beach wrote:
Tue Mar 12, 2024 4:10 pm
D-train wrote:
Sun Mar 10, 2024 12:26 pm
AZOldDawg wrote:
Sat Mar 09, 2024 10:48 pm
Rumor has it they will go after Tommy Lloyd as he is a home town boy plus Arizona appears to have significant financial issues
Wow, Kelso guy. I had never even heard of him. Also was an assistant at Gonzaga. Sounds perfect to me. Bet he would love to come home and coach for a B10 team instead of coach for the Seattle Mariners of College athletics....
I discussed him a week ago on the who will replace Hopkins thread,. He's given as the reason Gonzaga has faded. Few losing him to Arizona. He was the international scout for Few, brought in a lot of the talent, guess he can coach too. Arizona just signed him to a new contract three weeks ago, he's probably not leaving there
Bummer
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Donn Beach
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Re: Breaking! Hopkins canned!

Post by Donn Beach » Tue Mar 12, 2024 6:17 pm

Interesting too he had a written agreement with Gonzaga, he would take over the Gonzaga program when Few retired, he didn't wait.

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D-train
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Re: Breaking! Hopkins canned!

Post by D-train » Wed Mar 13, 2024 12:28 pm

By Jon Wilner
Bay Area News Group
News of Washington coach Mike Hopkins’ dismissal was seconds old when the name game began.

Many published lists of replacement options focused on successful coaches in the Mountain West or those with ties to UW or the Pacific Northwest.

Utah State’s Danny Sprinkle, a Pullman native, is one of the hottest names in the region after leading the Aggies to 26 regular-season wins in his first year.

Boise State’s Leon Rice, Colorado State’s Niko Medved and Brigham Young’s Mark Pope have been attached to the vacancy on Montlake, as well.


So has Washington State’s Kyle Smith, who just collected Pac-12 Coach of the Year honors after guiding the Cougars to a second-place finish.

They all make sense in some form or fashion, especially given UW’s hiring model: Athletic director Troy Dannen and his lieutenants are understandably interested in the basketball version of Kalen DeBoer, who was hired away from Fresno State after a single winning season and turned Husky football into a powerhouse.

Nothing against that strategy, or against DeBoer, but the Hotline suggests an alternate approach. Instead of hiring the next DeBoer, the Huskies should consider hiring someone closer to what DeBoer is now.

We aren’t referring to coaches at the top of college basketball (Kansas’ Bill Self, Houston’s Kelvin Sampson, etc.). But there are options between the Fresno State version of DeBoer and the current version of DeBoer: Coaches who are already winning at the highest level.

Thanks to conference realignment and the decision to dismiss Hopkins, the Huskies have a golden opportunity to elevate their program.

Big Ten basketball is not Big Ten football, folks.

There are no basketball equivalents of Ohio State and Michigan.

There aren’t even basketball equivalents of Penn State, Oregon and USC.

The conference produces a quality product but is devoid of elite programs with staying power and intrinsic advantages in resources, tradition and brand dominance.

Sure, Purdue’s Matt Painter is a phenomenal coach, but his star player, Zach Edey, is departing and his program is nowhere near blue-blood status.

Michigan State was a Tier 1 blue blood a decade or two ago but has lost ground under 69-year-old coach Tom Izzo.

Indiana and Michigan won’t be confused with Duke and North Carolina.

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The closest thing to a true blue blood in the Big Ten isn’t even in the Big Ten just yet. It’s UCLA, which will join the conference this summer along with Washington, USC and Oregon.

If the Huskies muster enough resources and make the right hire, they could compete regularly for the Big Ten title without fear of being blue-blooded into oblivion by basketball versions of Ohio State and Michigan.

Granted, UW basketball struggles for traction in the Seattle sports market and for support among its football-focused fans, but that’s hardly an intractable position.

The Huskies are building a $60 million, 40,000-square-foot practice facility that’s donor-funded and should energize recruiting in a talent-rich region.

UW is an attractive school for transfers and has an alumni base wealthy enough to support a first-rate NIL (name, image and likeness) program if given good reason.

Also, the broader landscape cannot be ignored: The moment this season ends, Washington becomes a Big Ten basketball program and can claim all the clout and security that comes with it.

The Big Ten and SEC are rapidly consolidating their power across the college sports spectrum. While the emerging hierarchy is most apparent in football, it won’t be long before the disparity seeps into basketball, as well.

The Big Ten offers the best of both worlds for basketball coaches, providing resources and security during a period of industry upheaval while devoid of blue bloods at the competitive center.

Where should Washington turn for Hopkins’ replacement?

Sprinkle and Smith are deserving of positions on Dannen’s short list, just not at the top of his short list — at least not yet.

The Huskies aren’t rolling in cash; they can’t offer the $7 million or $8 million needed to lure winners at the highest level. (Hopkins earned $3.1 million per year and is owed that much as part of the buyout.)

But once again, we direct your attention to the middle ground: The pool of candidates with proven resumes, $4 million-to-$5 million annual salaries with manageable buyouts.

Is Clemson’s Brad Brownell interested in escaping the shadow of Duke and North Carolina?

Would TCU’s Jamie Dixon consider leaving a reshaped Big 12 that will be more challenging than the Big Ten?

How substantial is the buyout portion of TJ Otzelberger’s contract with Iowa State?

Is Porter Moser really committed to Oklahoma?

To be clear: We aren’t suggesting any of those coaches are, or could become, serious candidates in Seattle.

Instead, let them serve as examples of the targets UW should pursue.

A thorough assessment of his candidate pool might lead Dannen to the conclusion that he has better options in Sprinkle, Smith, Rice and Medved.

But because of the Big Ten’s modest competitive landscape, the Huskies should cast a search net wide enough to touch the Big 12 and even the ACC.

They have a chance to elevate one of their two profitable sports programs — not for one season but for many seasons — at a critical moment in the school’s athletic history.
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Re: Breaking! Hopkins canned!

Post by D-train » Wed Mar 13, 2024 10:28 pm

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