flyerlax06 wrote:Bill Marsh wrote:Jermaine Lawrence will be playing at Manhattan next year. Looks like it won't take Steve Masiello long to have another impact year, assuming that Masiello himself resolves his academic problems and earns his degree this summer. I hope that Manhattan has locked up Masiello for the next 5 years in return for saving his butt after Masiello's USF debacle a couple of months ago.
http://collegebasketballtalk.nbcsports. ... manhattan/
Even if they locked Masiello up for 40 years, coaching contracts aren't worth the paper they are written on. I can't imagine a buyout would be that prohibitive that he would stay for the entire term. I'm sure it's high this year and lowers each year over the life of the contract.
Bill Marsh wrote:flyerlax06 wrote:Bill Marsh wrote:Jermaine Lawrence will be playing at Manhattan next year. Looks like it won't take Steve Masiello long to have another impact year, assuming that Masiello himself resolves his academic problems and earns his degree this summer. I hope that Manhattan has locked up Masiello for the next 5 years in return for saving his butt after Masiello's USF debacle a couple of months ago.
http://collegebasketballtalk.nbcsports. ... manhattan/
Even if they locked Masiello up for 40 years, coaching contracts aren't worth the paper they are written on. I can't imagine a buyout would be that prohibitive that he would stay for the entire term. I'm sure it's high this year and lowers each year over the life of the contract.
You're right of course.
Just saying that they saved his career. Had they not kept him, he would have been unemployed and hoping to get a job flipping burgers. Now he has a second chance at life as a D-1 coach and has just landed the biggest recruit in school history. With Masiello's coaching ability, guaranteed that Manhattan will make another big splash within the next 2 years and he will be a hot coach all over again. Point being that he owes Manhattan big time.
flyerlax06 wrote:And to say he would be lucky to get a job flipping burgers is not accurate. He likely would have taken the year to finish his degree and then he would have most likely been given an assistant coaching job somewhere because of his connections with Pitino - maybe even at Louisville if there was an opening. He has proven he can win and so in a few years he would likely be given another chance as a HC as well. Even George O'Leary is still a head football coach.
Bill Marsh wrote:flyerlax06 wrote:And to say he would be lucky to get a job flipping burgers is not accurate. He likely would have taken the year to finish his degree and then he would have most likely been given an assistant coaching job somewhere because of his connections with Pitino - maybe even at Louisville if there was an opening. He has proven he can win and so in a few years he would likely be given another chance as a HC as well. Even George O'Leary is still a head football coach.
Check out this piece by nationally syndicated writer, Gregg Doyel:
http://www.cbssports.com/collegebasketb ... nd-loyalty
If Manhattan doesn't bring back Masiello, he's most likely out of work for a year. Maybe he latches on in a few weeks as an assistant on a buddy's staff, or maybe mentor Rick Pitino calls in a favor and gets Masiello a job at the end of one of his buddy's benches. But probably not. Jobs are filling up this spring, and Masiello is toxic. He's not a guy you can add to your staff and win the press conference if you're the next coach at, say, California. Not so soon after his national embarrassment.
So what I'm saying is, Steve Masiello was probably at least a year away from becoming even an assistant coach in Division I -- and therefore another handful of years from getting another shot as a head coach -- until Manhattan decided to bring him back.
Hey, look at George O'Leary. He didn't stay toxic forever. He rehabbed his image as an assistant with the Vikings, Central Florida hired him in 2004, and this past season UCF won 12 games and reached the Fiesta Bowl, where it defeated Baylor.
In a year or two, Steve Masiello could have that chance.
flyerlax06 wrote:Bill Marsh wrote:flyerlax06 wrote:And to say he would be lucky to get a job flipping burgers is not accurate. He likely would have taken the year to finish his degree and then he would have most likely been given an assistant coaching job somewhere because of his connections with Pitino - maybe even at Louisville if there was an opening. He has proven he can win and so in a few years he would likely be given another chance as a HC as well. Even George O'Leary is still a head football coach.
Check out this piece by nationally syndicated writer, Gregg Doyel:
http://www.cbssports.com/collegebasketb ... nd-loyalty
I mean he basically says the same things I said in my post above:If Manhattan doesn't bring back Masiello, he's most likely out of work for a year. Maybe he latches on in a few weeks as an assistant on a buddy's staff, or maybe mentor Rick Pitino calls in a favor and gets Masiello a job at the end of one of his buddy's benches. But probably not. Jobs are filling up this spring, and Masiello is toxic. He's not a guy you can add to your staff and win the press conference if you're the next coach at, say, California. Not so soon after his national embarrassment.
So what I'm saying is, Steve Masiello was probably at least a year away from becoming even an assistant coach in Division I -- and therefore another handful of years from getting another shot as a head coach -- until Manhattan decided to bring him back.
Hey, look at George O'Leary. He didn't stay toxic forever. He rehabbed his image as an assistant with the Vikings, Central Florida hired him in 2004, and this past season UCF won 12 games and reached the Fiesta Bowl, where it defeated Baylor.
In a year or two, Steve Masiello could have that chance.
flyerlax06 wrote:I didn't leave out that he would be out of work for a year. By saying he would take the year to finish his degree I was saying he wouldn't be working for a year. You are really digging deep with this one. I'm not commenting about Manhattan's handling of this or if they did a nice thing for him. My comments were about Masiello being able to find work again - first as an assistant somewhere and then maybe down the line as a HC again in a few years because he has proven he can win. We are saying the same thing. I'm not saying he's going to get the job at Duke in 5 years. You also have to put the O'Leary stuff into context with the time. 2001 was a totally different world in terms of social media and attention span. In today's world, a black mark on someone can be forgotten in a year or two if he lays low. You would have to endure the initial press conference upon hiring him and then everyone would forget about it once the games start.
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