ADVERTISEMENT

coaching zish: could go eithet way

this might be notification for henton's position, or for a new guy coming in

I've been told Cooley is exploring options to bring more staff in.
meaning ops, ops assistant, workout guy, special assiatant could be used to expand bench

Plea to the Hoyareport Community

Georgetown basketball has tormented me for a long time. Last season I didn't watch one Big East game. That's how bad the Hoyas made me feel. And I know I wasn't alone in that.

We do not have high major football so for college sports this is all we have.

Can we agree as a group to not dwell on the past and move forward? And can we stop FUD'ing Cooley and the program and the AD until we see this play out?


I feel so good about what has happened in the last two weeks and I get that we are all conditioned to expect the worse -- but can we just be collectively more positive going forward at least for a while (including me)?


I am ready for good things. Let them come!!


note for non-crypto people: FUD = fear uncertainty and doubt

Potential Hoyas Fansourced NIL Collective

We hope to have some information on this today via the Hoya Hoop Club


we will need help marketing on:

1) Here
2) Hoyatalk
3) Twitter
4) Casual

and whatever other communities you guys suggest if this comes to fruition

I imagine we'll assess the interest from HHC and then have them clear it with Lee Reed or Coach Cooley or both


maybe we can actually get this done --- baby steps

The Athletic: Big East Article

UConn’s national championship validates the Big East’s basketball-first plan​

HOUSTON, TEXAS - APRIL 03: Andre Jackson Jr. #44 of the Connecticut Huskies celebrates with teammates after defeating the San Diego State Aztecs 76-59 during the NCAA Men's Basketball Tournament National Championship game at NRG Stadium on April 03, 2023 in Houston, Texas. (Photo by Gregory Shamus/Getty Images)

By Eamonn Brennan
Apr 4, 2023
39


HOUSTON — It looks obvious in retrospect. At the time it was anything but. College athletics had entered a collective delirium. There was a panic in the herd. The conventional wisdom was simple: Football would dominate everything. Traditional geographic rivalries woven into the culture of the sport, into the very fiber of lifelong fans’ lives, were less important than the strange sudden need to scramble around for TV dollars, those of which would be accorded to whomever could offer broadcasters the most attractive, widespread slate of college football inventory.

A years-long run on the bank had begun in 2009, when Big Ten commissioner Jim Delany realized he could ask for more money per Big Ten Network subscriber if the league could bundle itself into cable packages in major markets on the East Coast. This was not a particularly romantic reason to shake the foundations of collegiate sport, but he wasn’t wrong. Shortly thereafter, the B1G poached football-obsessed Nebraska from the Big 12. The Pac-10 agreed to offer membership to a host of Big 12 teams, including Texas schools as big as the University of Texas itself, existentially threatening no less a basketball blue blood than Kansas, where the inventor of the sport was also the very first coach. In 2012, the Big Ten took Maryland — a charter member of the ACC whose athletics department had been financially bereft, which leaped at the chance to make that sweet BTN cash — and ripped it out of the league it had helped found, where its fans felt culturally at home.
The anxiety soon spread to the Big East, a 16-team league with an identity crisis. Big East schools that played Division I football were drunk on dreams of playing football on bigger, larger stages. In 2012, West Virginia decamped to the Big 12. In 2013, Syracuse, Notre Dame and Pittsburgh announced they would leave for the ACC. “There was a tension between football schools and basketball schools,” Big East commissioner Val Ackerman said, standing on the NRG Stadium floor after Monday night’s national title game. “There was a sense of greener pastures with football.”
What happened next was kind of amazing, and remains the best thing to come out of any wave of conference realignment in recent history: The seven Catholic Big East schools took their ball and went home. Or, rather, they took their ball, went across the street, and built a whole new gym for themselves to play in, more or less from scratch. “They made a very courageous move,” Ackerman said.
And look at them now.

UConn’s fifth national title, sealed with another dominant performance in a tournament full of them, was the Big East’s third since the great schism of 2013. UConn won another in 2014, while it was a member of the American Athletic Conference, so we won’t officially count that — someone in the AAC league office’s head would probably explode — but it is undeniably true that programs which are now Big East members have won four of the last 10 national championships. The first two New Big East titles were won by Villanova, one of the relatively small, brave Catholic schools that decided to be true to itself and prioritize basketball, where a brilliant coach had turned one of history’s great underdogs into an annual powerhouse. The most recent was achieved by a program that chased the football dragon, lost itself culturally, and had to come home to fully restore its once-and-future glory.
“What we have,” Ackerman said, “is pretty special.”


It would be hard for even the most entrenched of partisans to argue. Dan Hurley called it the best league in the country from the dais Monday night, and while coaches always say that about their conferences, he did at least present a reasonable case: “We were the most successful in the NCAA Tournament, and we have the national championship,” Hurley said. “So we were the best league in the country this year.” Agree with that or not — the Big 12 was extremely good, after all, aspects of its postseason performance notwithstanding — the Big East was very high on any list of the most fun. Any time any two of the top five teams in the league played, it was a television event worth tuning into, featuring high-level, flowing offensive basketball. Shaka Smart’s retooled Marquette was a revelation. Xavier, in its first year under Sean Miller, played top-10 offense at an appealingly high pace. Creighton was a fourth top-15 team in adjusted efficiency, one that came a bucket away from playing in the Final Four.
Fox Sports broadcaster Gus Johnson elevates most calls he’s on, the perfect complement to the rowdy (and at, for example, Providence, especially drunken) environments in professional gyms in the Northeast. The conference tournament at Madison Square Garden is the most goosebump-inducing postseason event outside of the NCAA Tournament, the perfect cultural coda to every finished season of Big East ball.
It is hard to imagine this stuff not existing in its current form, but the reality is hardly farfetched. Indeed, the timing in 2013 was particularly fortuitous. “The Big East needing a new TV home, and Fox just so happening to be launching Fox Sports 1, this new cable network and needing the programming, that was the marriage,” Ackerman said. “The schools were fortified by that.” Still, it wasn’t initially clear which half of the schism would be called the Big East. The cultural cachet that comes with the name could have wound up with the American Athletic Conference, which instead had to be branded from nothing — probably befitting its hodgepodge (and extremely football-oriented) composition.

masons staff

to be announced next week I think

heard from coaches, expected to be announced

1) Louis 'bird' hinnant. former bc player under Cooley (asst) coached last at Lowell. did really good job there

2) "st. Bonaventure guy"

3) guy associated somehow with mussellman at Arkansas. this cat was demanded by administration

Tony seems to have put together a younger staff.

Question on Cooley & Outreach

We all know how bad the prior few staffs have been at reaching out to the local hoops community. Clearly, Cooley has a different communication style (ie he actually communicates). Question for those who know, at Providence, did he run open practices or invite local programs to come watch? Did he network with the AAU programs, run camps, etc.? Did he do all the stuff Ron says we should have been doing all these years? Ron, if you know, I’d like you to compare what he did at Provy and if you think it would be enough here if he did the same.
ADVERTISEMENT

Filter

ADVERTISEMENT