OmahaGuy wrote:Yup. DePaul is set to hire Stubblefield. Pretty underwhelming hire IMO as he wasn't on my short list but he and Dana took a mediocre Oregon program and built them into one of the premier programs in the country. He should absolutely be given a chance
Demon22 wrote:For what it's worth, Stubblefield's resume is similar to the most successful post-Meyer coach in school history - Dave Leitao v1.0. He's also got a very similar profile to Kenny Payne, who was always considered a favorite:
* Highly-paid, high major assistant coach
* Limited/no Head Coaching Experience
* Known as excellent recruiting and player development coaches
* Close ties to Nike
* Both were assistants at Oregon
One theory... Highly-paid assistant coaches at high major schools are something of a market inefficiency. How so? The theory as to why Kenny Payne never got offered a job goes something like this... Payne was already earning $900,000/year at Kentucky. In order for him to leave a stable, high-paying coaching job, he'd have to be compensated financially. There aren't a lot of mid-majors out there that can afford to pay more than $900,000/year. And the high-major schools that can afford it, are usually looking for coaches with head coaching experience.
I saw someone suggest that Stubblefield is the kind of hire that someone like UIC or Bradley would have made. I checked the salaries - Stubblefield was making more as an assistant coach at Oregon than either Brian Wardle (Bradley) or Luke Yaklich (UIC) are making as Head Coaches. The schools that he has been connected to in the past (New Mexico State, Fresno State, UNLV) all tend to be on the higher end of the spectrum in terms of salary for mid-major head coaches.
I think this is a swing for the fences. I think this is DeWayne Peevy trying to identify someone who was in the same awkward professional situation as Kenny Payne was for a number of years at Kentucky.
Apparently, assistant coach Tim Anderson is sticking around. Not sure that's being forced on Stubblefield as much as Anderson's earned his stay, especially considering the work he put into developing Max Strus and Paul Reed, and the fact that he was the lead recruiter for Ahamad Bynum, who I think is a Top 50 high school senior.
Wouldn't be shocked if Marc Hsu sticks around, as well.
I hope Shane Heirman is renting.
GoldenWarrior11 wrote:However, at this stage, DePaul cannot afford to invest in an unproven commodity.
Keeping any of the assistants, especially more than one of them, is a major red flag.
If anything, it only fuels the perception that DePaul admin continues to force its way onto head coaches without letting them choose a staff to place around them.
No proven head coach, or up-and-coming head coach, will ever want to take a job if it is mandated who they keep or hire on staff, and that's not what high-major basketball programs do or how they operate. If that is what ultimately kept Payne from taking the job (as Woodson left for IU), that is a red flag.
Frankly, touting the Stubblefield as a solid hire because he is similar to Leitao is a losing argument. Leitao never should have been brought back a second time (as many media in Chicago argued when it happened). He made the tournament his second year thanks to the players that Pat Kennedy recruited (Delonte Holland, Drake Diener, Quemont Greer and Andre Brown).
In summary, this hire does nothing to change perceptions about DePaul Men's Basketball in the near term.
MUPanther wrote:Let's hope it works. Bit of a messy past. Stubblefield was implicated in the Brian Bowen bag dropping recruitment.
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