CCC is definitely BEHIND SCHEDULE, as compared to how each of his immediate THREE predecessors did by his second season.
The numbers tell the story.
By his second season, Byrdsong won FIVE (of 18) B1G games -- what then seemed unreal -- and earned the cat's second ever NIT bid. Suffice it to say that in SEVEN seasons, coaching legend Bill Foster never managed to win more than 3 B1G games, and most seasons won exactly 2. If we use 2 as the reference number of wins during BF's regime, by his second year Byrdsong won two-hundred-fifty percent that figure, and almost doubled BF's max number of B1G wins in any one season (3). 5 B1G wins was HUGE for NU, back then, and came in RB's SECOND season.
Kevin O'Neill also made significant improvements by his second season (over the level he found). He won six (of 16) B1G games, and earned another NIT berth. 6 was one more win than RB's best B1G season, and in only 16 tries (vs RB's 18). Furthermore it was triple the number of B1G wins during each RB's final two seasons (again in a shorter conference season). A 6-10 (2 games under .500) B1G record was HUGE for NU back then, and came in KO's second season.
BC also achieved by his second season a significant improvement over the level in which he found the program. He went 7-9 (just one game under .500) in the B1G. That was one win over KO's best season, and a huge improvement over KO's final season (in which he won zero B1G game). If we ignore KO's final season as an anomaly, his average number of B1G win was 4.5 (of 16). BC could at best improve 11.5 over that level (if he won every B1G game). By his second season he achieved an improvement of 7-4.5=2.5 which is 22% of the maximum possible improvement he could have achieved (by winning every B1G game).
By the end of his second season, CC has won 6 B1G games (of 18), same as in his first season. If we ignore BC's final season as an injury-caused anomaly (as we did in the case of KO), the program representative number of B1G wins under BC was 7.5 (of 18) plus an NIT bid. CC's maximal possible improvement over that would be 18-7.5=10.5. He instead fell 1.5 games below BC's typical B1G level.
OBVIOUSLY CC IS BEHIND SCHEDULE.
Of course no one is arguing he should be fired. He simply hasn't YET improved the cats B1G w/l record over their previous typical level(as did all three of his recent predecessors).
P.S. All his predecessors played their second season mostly with the previous coach's players, who were recruited for a difference system of play, and all faced some level of adversity (key injuries, transfers, etc).
P.P.S. All 3 recent predecessors actually suffer a significant drop in performance in their third season. Let us hope history won't repeat itself.
The numbers tell the story.
By his second season, Byrdsong won FIVE (of 18) B1G games -- what then seemed unreal -- and earned the cat's second ever NIT bid. Suffice it to say that in SEVEN seasons, coaching legend Bill Foster never managed to win more than 3 B1G games, and most seasons won exactly 2. If we use 2 as the reference number of wins during BF's regime, by his second year Byrdsong won two-hundred-fifty percent that figure, and almost doubled BF's max number of B1G wins in any one season (3). 5 B1G wins was HUGE for NU, back then, and came in RB's SECOND season.
Kevin O'Neill also made significant improvements by his second season (over the level he found). He won six (of 16) B1G games, and earned another NIT berth. 6 was one more win than RB's best B1G season, and in only 16 tries (vs RB's 18). Furthermore it was triple the number of B1G wins during each RB's final two seasons (again in a shorter conference season). A 6-10 (2 games under .500) B1G record was HUGE for NU back then, and came in KO's second season.
BC also achieved by his second season a significant improvement over the level in which he found the program. He went 7-9 (just one game under .500) in the B1G. That was one win over KO's best season, and a huge improvement over KO's final season (in which he won zero B1G game). If we ignore KO's final season as an anomaly, his average number of B1G win was 4.5 (of 16). BC could at best improve 11.5 over that level (if he won every B1G game). By his second season he achieved an improvement of 7-4.5=2.5 which is 22% of the maximum possible improvement he could have achieved (by winning every B1G game).
By the end of his second season, CC has won 6 B1G games (of 18), same as in his first season. If we ignore BC's final season as an injury-caused anomaly (as we did in the case of KO), the program representative number of B1G wins under BC was 7.5 (of 18) plus an NIT bid. CC's maximal possible improvement over that would be 18-7.5=10.5. He instead fell 1.5 games below BC's typical B1G level.
OBVIOUSLY CC IS BEHIND SCHEDULE.
Of course no one is arguing he should be fired. He simply hasn't YET improved the cats B1G w/l record over their previous typical level(as did all three of his recent predecessors).
P.S. All his predecessors played their second season mostly with the previous coach's players, who were recruited for a difference system of play, and all faced some level of adversity (key injuries, transfers, etc).
P.P.S. All 3 recent predecessors actually suffer a significant drop in performance in their third season. Let us hope history won't repeat itself.