Posts tagged Mark Fox

A Tale of Two Marks

For all the Mark Richt “hot seat” talk flowing from Birmingham like pollution from a smokestack, Mark Fox is quietly going about his business and getting national praise in the process.

From ESPN’s College Basketball Nation blog:

Put it all together, mix in Fox’s impressive coaching acumen and you have a recipe for sudden and unusual Peach State success. Believe it or not, the Georgia Bulldogs could very well be an SEC force in the coming years. And it’ll be Georgia boys in the jerseys to boot. What fan wouldn’t love that?

I am sure the question is rhetorical, but the answer lives in Techwood.

Trey to Stay May Not Be the Way

Coach Mark Fox certainly changed the attitude of the Georgia Bulldogs basketball program in his first year. Trey Thompkins and Travis Leslie were a big part of the turn-around. Both players are now considering their options regarding turning pro, or remaining in school.

Tim Tucker has a great primer on the time line for under-classmen making their decisions.

Most would agree Travis Leslie should stay in school. His game is still too raw to solicit a guaranteed NBA contract. Thompkins is closer, but no sure fire first round pick. Under normal circumstances, both would probably stay in school. But this year, things are different.

ESPN.com’s Eammon Brennan explains why:

In 2010, lots of people who’d be better off not entering the NBA draft are going to, with utmost certainty, be entering the NBA draft. Prepare yourself.

Why? Quite simply, the NBA’s potential lockout looms over the 2011 season and the 2011 NBA draft like the big money-sucking vacuum out of that weird animated Goodyear commercial that’s been on every tournament telecast since March 18. With the chance the draft won’t be around next year, or, if it is, that teams won’t be able to offer their draftees contracts until an ongoing dispute between owners and the NBA players’ association is settled, pretty much everyone who has even an outsider’s shot at the NBA this year is going to be testing those waters early and often.

It is easy for me, or anyone not faced with this decision, to sit here and say Trey should stay in school. Obviously his game would benefit with another year of tutelage, but lure of the NBA has to be difficult to pass up.

I will not be surprised at all if Trey declares. It all depends on who he listens to. Coach Fox is sure to suggest he is better of staying. I have no doubt there are many around Trey telling him he is ready, especially those that stand to benefit from his success.

Whatever he decides to do, I pray he makes the right decision.

Evans Choice Looking Better and Better

This time last year, the Georgia Bulldogs, led by Damon Evans, were searching for a basketball coach. Georgia was not alone, Alabama and their AD, Mal Moore, were also in the market for a new basketball coach. The two schools could not have been more different in their methodology towards the hire.

Anthony Grant was the young, up-and-comer, in the coaching ranks. He had been a part of building Florida’s basketball program into a back-to-back title winner. On his own he was very accomplished at Virginia Commonwealth. Everybody wanted him, myself included.

Mal Moore was the first to interview Anthony Grant. Mr. Moore did not allow any other schools an opportunity. $2 million and a stare down from Nick Saban was all it took. Alabama had its man.

Meanwhile, there was a lot off hand-wringing and teeth-gnashing going on in the Bulldog Nation. Damn Evans was being questioned publicly, most notably by the AJC’s muckrakers. Dawg blogs and message boards were ablaze with rumors and complaints. Alabama had Grant, Evans appeared to be suffering from paralysis from analysis.

While Damon Evans was being methodical and deliberate, many of us fans were ready to settle for Oliver Purnell, Leonard Hamilton, or Mike Davis. Mike Anderson had rebuffed us according to the media. I was speculating on Sam Mitchell. This was getting embarrassing.

Finally word came, Damon Evans had found his man and he was Mark Fox. Mark Fox? Who the hell is that?

It turns out Mark Fox is one helluva a basketball coach. Mark Fox is a man that paid his dues, believes in fundamentals, and actually teaches the game of basketball. He took a moribund basketball team and began the process of rebuilding.

Rebuilding began with the basics, hard work and fundamentals. An assist should also be credited to Pitt’s Jamie Dixon, who coached Trey Thompkins on the USA Under-19 summer team. But make no mistake, Coach Fox re-made this team physically and mentally.

On the floor results, in terms of wins and losses, may not fully support my claim that Georgia has a men’s basketball program once more, but work ethic and knowledge of the game is often hard to quantify.

Mark Fox and Georgia would go on to beat Anthony Grant and his Alabama squad. Who knows what would have happened if the game would have been played in Tuscaloosa? Setting aside that game and both teams win-loss records, which coach provided their program the bigger boost?

I will refer to the most un-scientific of barometers, the muckrakers. The AJC’s talented duo of Mark Bradley and Jeff Schultz have yet to find/create anything negative to print about Coach Mark Fox. Anthony Grant…. meet Mr. Paul Finebaum.

However, the Tide (17-15) was snubbed by the NIT, although many area fans late to the party were still impressed with the $2 million-a-year man. Count me among those who were underwhelmed.
The excuse heard by some Tide fans about the lackluster season concerned depth and lack of top-flight players. That always happens in a transition year when the previous coach is fired. However, what bugged me most was the lack of buzz around the program and the lack of effort by Grant to create any.

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Unlike football, basketball is a personalized sport. You can reach out and touch the coach. In Grant’s case, he seemed to be going through the motions, immune to the faceless crowd cheering him on.

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Perhaps that’s the rub with Grant. Perhaps he looks miserable all the time because he realizes he took the wrong job. Perhaps he doesn’t care about interacting with the public because he realizes this place is even more football crazy than he was led to believe. And he was warned. However, $2 mil a year and low expectations were tough to turn down.

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My concern about Grant is that he appears to be biding time, hoping to get the Tide on an uptick before immediately fleeing for a better job in a more desirable locale.

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I just wish that once in awhile, Anthony Grant would act like he really wants to be here.

Obviously, Finebaum’s job is to stir crap up. Normally, however, Finebaum directs his fire away from Tuscaloosa, preferring to pick on Auburn or attack those deemed to be a challenge to the all-mighty Tide.

For what it is worth, I think Coach Mark Fox is very happy to be in Athens!

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