http://www.cbssports.com/collegebasketb ... -your-teamCBS Sports' Top 24 College Hoops CoachesCollege basketball coaches draft: Who would you pick to lead your team?Gary Parrish | June 24, 2014 - 7:31 PM ET
So our friends at ESPN launched a series a few weeks back in which they're ranking college basketball coaches in an attempt to determine who's best, and it's been fun to watch unfold but difficult at times to understand because -- and I write this with all due respect -- the rankings, in certain places, just don't make much sense.
Supposedly, credentials don't matter.
It's all about the present.
And yet multiple coaches who haven't accomplished anything notable in years and are hardly on an upward trajectory are ranked ahead of other coaches who currently run nationally relevant programs and/or have careers undeniably on the rise, and I was tempted to do what amounts to an offseason Poll Attacks but decided against it because I wouldn't even know whom to attack. That's because the ESPN rankings are the result of a survey taken by nearly 100 staffers, which means it's impossible to tie any questionable ranking to any one person ... although my guess, from past experiences, is that my pal Jeff Goodman is almost certainly responsible for the majority of the silliness.
Either way, it got me thinking.
How should "best coach" be defined?
Obviously, reasonable minds can disagree on that.
But here's the way I would go about trying to identify the "best" coach:
If you could pick any man to run your college basketball program for the next five years, and you don't have to worry about that man retiring or changing jobs, which man would you pick? Forget credentials. Forget records and recent results. Only look forward. You can pick any man to run your program for the next five years. Which man would you pick?
With that in mind, I roped in some of my colleagues here at CBSSports.com and suggested we have a fun little draft in which we select coaches with the guidance above in mind, and I requested that everybody explain their choices so that you'd know whom to call stupid if something stupid popped up. Gregg Doyel picked first because he's the baldest. What followed was a four-round "snake draft." Here's the result ...
16. Jay WrightTeam: Villanova
Drafted by: Jon Rothstein
Why him? There's not many coaches in America who handle all the different aspects of a program better than Wright. He's great with the media, terrific with alumni, and has proven that he can sustain a national program. Another thing about Wright? He might be the most underrated defensive coach in college basketball. Year after year, people praise Villanova because of its elite guard play, but where the Wildcats really separate themselves is with the way they guard people. After a 13-19 season two years ago, Villanova is back as a Top 10 program and looks primed to stay there. -- Rothstein