GoldenWarrior11 wrote:Wizard of Westroads wrote:A question: Can't Georgetown do better than Shrewsberry? He's been 2 years at PSU, with one winning season. How does he rate so hight? Just based on what he's doing in the Big Ten tournament? His team was 14-11 a month ago and not in the NCAA, now he's good enough for a top 25 job?
Look at Penn State's basketball program historically and look at this year. It's an incredible coaching performance.
Jasper67 wrote:EMT wrote:https://twitter.com/GoodmanHoops/status/1634579011417374720
Hearing strong indications that PC has run out of patience with Cooley having his hand out every year for his "dream job"
So what are they going to do? Fire him? Doesn’t he have 6 years left on his contract?
billyjack wrote:EMT wrote:https://twitter.com/GoodmanHoops/status/1634579011417374720
Hearing strong indications that PC has run out of patience with Cooley having his hand out every year for his "dream job"
Translation: "EMT is running out of patience with something."
EMT wrote:billyjack wrote:EMT wrote:https://twitter.com/GoodmanHoops/status/1634579011417374720
Hearing strong indications that PC has run out of patience with Cooley having his hand out every year for his "dream job"
Translation: "EMT is running out of patience with something."
https://twitter.com/NCoitABC6/status/1635058314278244354?s=20
GoldenWarrior11 wrote:Jasper67 wrote:GoldenWarrior11 wrote:If you can win at Penn State, you can certainly win at Georgetown.
Yes, but why would you leave Penn State in the first place? Great facilities. Big Ten. Financial security and program that comes with being in the Big Ten. Great resources to deal with NIL challenges.
I can't tell if this is a joke or not, but I'll treat it as a serious response.
Historically, Penn State is a bottom-3 B1G job (w/ Northwestern and Rutgers). There are football-first athletic departments, non-football athletic departments and football-only athletic departments; Penn State values football to the point where it's basketball facilities are very below average and the support of the program was non-existent forever.
The quality of life in University Park also was ranked in the bottom half of the B1G (even before UCLA and USC additions) by conference administrators and coaches. This will only be the program's tenth NCAAT appearance in history (as the school very much ignored basketball for many decades). There was a story years back where Paterno kicked out a men's basketball game that was scheduled so the football team could have a walkthrough.
Now, they have invested in Shrewsberry in recent years to their credit. However, Georgetown, despite the dumpster fire admin created with Ewing, still has the better facilities, brand, location and financial support behind the scenes. Georgetown remains a top-25 job in the country (whereas Penn State is probably somewhere between 40 and 60 with recent investments, IMO). For instance, Penn State is barely within the top-50 in men's basketball revenues annually; Georgetown (again, despite the Ewing era) is still in the top-35.
adoraz wrote:Jasper, I agree with some of what you're saying, but when you start out with a quote like this: What makes Georgetown a top 25 job in college basketball? They were 36th in basketball revenue last year while Penn State was 45th.
Isn't that proving they're a top 25 job? You're saying they were 36th in revenue despite being the worst Power team in the nation for a number of years now? None of those basketball numbers for Penn St, from attendance to revenue, are impressive given this has been their best team in over a decade.
I agree more in terms of TV revenue, especially in a few years, but we have yet to see how much of that will be put into basketball. Generally universities like to run at a profit, which is why you rarely see non-revenue sports with high budgets. Basketball has a profit ceiling and I think we'll see the schools primarily put that money into things like the campus and football. Even as it is right now the Big East isn't getting 5 stars but rather winning with 4 stars and transfers.
I'd say Georgetown is a better job, but I do think it's possible that changes in the future. As for whether I think it'd be a good idea to leave a job at PSU, that's something I'm not so sure about, but I'd be extremely impressed if Georgetown can pull it off.
adoraz wrote:Jasper, I agree with some of what you're saying, but when you start out with a quote like this: What makes Georgetown a top 25 job in college basketball? They were 36th in basketball revenue last year while Penn State was 45th.
Isn't that proving they're a top 25 job? You're saying they were 36th in revenue despite being the worst Power team in the nation for a number of years now? None of those basketball numbers for Penn St, from attendance to revenue, are impressive given this has been their best team in over a decade.
I agree more in terms of TV revenue, especially in a few years, but we have yet to see how much of that will be put into basketball. Generally universities like to run at a profit, which is why you rarely see non-revenue sports with high budgets. Basketball has a profit ceiling and I think we'll see the schools primarily put that money into things like the campus and football. Even as it is right now the Big East isn't getting 5 stars but rather winning with 4 stars and transfers.
I'd say Georgetown is a better job, but I do think it's possible that changes in the future. As for whether I think it'd be a good idea to leave a job at PSU, that's something I'm not so sure about, but I'd be extremely impressed if Georgetown can pull it off.
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