Did anyone read Jeff Goodman’s ESPN article. He’s typically a d**k to UC but this was a fair assessment & good read. I’ll try & post in a few but guys every point that’s been brought up on our threads...maybe this group should write articles for publication. Not to ESPN though.
+1 with everything above.... glad "Dickman" spoke to
"more than 30 former Uconn players, coaches and others close to the program about what's wrong with the program -- namely, the product on the court, the recruiting classes and Ollie's leadership." Telling is that the Uconn guys "who want to be real" are staying anonymous.
Like you said Shaggy, we could have written the article, but now it's coming out of the mouth of Uconn people on the inside, not some loud mouth like me on this message board. Though at least I wasn't some lemming waiving my pom poms and knew KO stopped working, clear as day in fall of 2016. What is also shocking
is he still thinks he's Golden St. trying to play positionless BB with a bunch of 6-2 guards and 185lb forwards who are undersized & forced to guard mismatches, all over the court...."
Under Calhoun, UConn was perennially one of the nation's top offensive rebounding teams. Since 2013, the Huskies have been lackluster on both the offensive and defensive glass. "They lost their identity," an ex-UConn coach said."
But at least it's in print from his peers on the Worldwide leader and he has nowhere to hide... even JC wouldn't cover his back in the article....the best he'll do is waive pom poms for him...some others:
"Nobody wants to fling dirt on a family member," one ex-Husky said. "But at the end of the day, I want what's best for the program and Kevin's not what's best for the program right now."
You have to put this on KO," one former UConn player said. "There's just not enough talent."
Ollie was in the mix for current Kentucky freshman Hamidou Diallo and also had a signed commitment from freshman guard Makai Ashton-Langford, who ended up choosing Providence. Sources with direct knowledge of both recruitments said Ollie's lack of effort cost him in both cases. "If you don't get out to see kids as much as other guys, it makes it much more difficult to evaluate them," added a former UConn assistant.
"There's nothing wrong with taking transfers, but now UConn is taking guys that just aren't good enough," an American Athletic Conference coach said.
"KO's a great guy," one former UConn assistant said. "But he's not getting paid $3 million to be a great guy."