by GoldenWarrior11 » Sat Mar 21, 2020 3:00 pm
Very conflicted times as a Marquette fan.
It is a bitter pill to swallow to realize that Markus will have graduated without a single tournament win while at Marquette, and it is an ever-expanding red flag for Wojo's tenure that we will now be entering year seven without a single tournament win. The frustrations within the MU fan base is that Wojo, by appearance, is the ideal representative/coach for the men's basketball program under its present leadership moving forward. He has a championship pedigree, is young, is an outstanding ambassador and representative of the university, his teams graduate and his players are excellent representatives on/off the court as well. However, none of that has equated to a sustainable winning program that is capable of tournament berths/wins annually. Despite game-changing players and high-ranked recruits in guys like Henry Ellenson, Sam and Joey Hauser and Markus Howard, the team's play continues to rely on one player contributing to an overwhelming majority of the production, while other complimentary players regress and/or fail to meet expectations development-wise. The team's/program's defense, especially coming from a defensive-first coach, continue to underwhelm and disappoint. Another red flag is the said relationships with in-state basketball recruits (like the Ellensons, the Hausers), who have all left the program with very public frustrations with how they were handled and/or utilized. Perhaps the biggest red flag entering year seven is that MU is currently projected to be well-outside the tournament field next year with an immensely young roster, no true point guard and, as of now, no go-to scorer that Wojo has depended on in every season at the helm.
On the positive side, we do have a group of solid complimentary players returning next year in John, Bailey, Cain, McEwen, Torrence and Elliot, and a high-ceiling recruiting class in Garcia, Lewis and Ighodaro (all 6-7 or taller). If we can land Mane, it would be a top-10 recruiting class nationally hands-down. However, with Mane being a well-known one-and-done, I strongly question his addition as helping the program long-term. I doubt we end up getting him anyways. The team desperately needs a transfer to help the guard position, which - given the right one - could help propel the group into a bubble team; however - between Chartouny and McEwen - I have little confidence in finding an immediate plug-and-play option that will work. Assistant coach, Stan Johnson, just got named LMU's head coach yesterday. I am a huge fan of Stan's and wish him nothing but success. He was without question our top recruiter (landed Markus), so it is imperative that Wojo fill that role with an experienced recruiter/coach that can help keep that momentum going. Hopefully, none of our recruits decommit with Stan's departure. Stan is the second Wojo assistant to get a head coaching gig in the past 12 months (Brett Nelson took over Holy Cross this past season). Regardless of the on-court success, it is a great testament to Wojo that his assistants are rising to become D1 HCs. He is obviously preparing them well for the next step.
Ultimately, I think Marquette misses the tournament next year, which would be just two appearances in seven years, and zero wins. I find it hard to envision Marquette firing him, but I also find it hard to believe Wojo would be welcome to stay either. It would be a very tough sell to retain any head coach with our history, spending and expectations on the basketball program with that level of success (or lack there of). Perhaps a mutual separation would be on the horizon, for both sides to save face? Honestly not sure. If our job does open, Brian Wardle would likely be the top-candidate to fill it. His status as an alum, successful and experienced head coach (something Wojo did not have coming in), and ability to take two separate programs to the top of their respective conferences (UWGB and Bradley) to 20-win seasons would be an excelling selling point to the fan base that is starving for a return to the top-half of the Big East, especially coming off the runs from Tom Crean and Buzz Williams.