PoconoPony wrote:Dwan wrote:I disagree that doh is a bad recruiter....I think he is either bad at evaluating talent or bad and developing talent or a combo of the two. If you look at how pathetic SMU basketball had been, consider the fact the the DISD coaches hated SMU for firing Tubbs, then look at the kind of offers his first two classes had.....he brought in kids that had offers from Louisville and Stanford among others...well, he was bringing is some highly sought after kids....problem is none of them developed. Is Doh a bad coach or Doh bad at evaluating talent....fair question.
I was not paying attention to basketball during the Tubbs era; however, seriously question the accepted idea on this board that the DISD coaches dislike SMU for his dismissal. I have several contacts on campus who were very close to the program during the Tubbs era and they have very little regard for his ability to coach and particularly for his always critical and negative handling of his players. His players were never positively reinforced, encouraged or complemented. He was always critical and destroyed their confidence. He did restore dicipline to the program. It is my opinion that the DISD coaches recognized his considerable negativity and were reluctant to send kids into that environment. Tubbs challenged the DISD coaches to support him when he got the job with their support. They did not support him when word got out as to his treatment and lack of support to his players. At least that is the picture painted vividly to me by people who were there on a daily basis observing the program. This was a major factor in his firing as it was well known and put at the top of the list for Orsini to immediately address.
Your several contacts close to the program lied to you.
Whomever told you that "This was a major factor in his firing as it was well known and put at the top of the list for Orsini to immediately address." Seem to have not noticed that Tubbs was fired by Jim Copeland, not Orsini, 2 months before Orsini was scheduled to take over. Nor was there ever any mention in the media or SMU's own statements concerning his treatment of the players. The NCAA investigation, which uncovered nothing, was the only reason ever given. Now you're trying to rewrite history, because the old smokescreen fell apart. When your sources cant get something that simple correct, it calls into question everything else they may have told you.
Let me help you out, here is the Dallas Morning News story the day following his firing, verbatim:
[quote=]
Tubbs fired after two years at SMU
08:54 PM CDT on Thursday, April 6, 2006
By CALVIN WATKINS / The Dallas Morning News
SMU basketball coach Jimmy Tubbs was fired Thursday afternoon.
Tubbs had completed only two seasons of a four-year contract signed in March 2004.
Tubbs, 57, declined comment.
Retiring athletic director Jim Copeland made the decision to fire Tubbs and said in a statement, "SMU holds its coaches accountable for high standards of compliance with NCAA rules and university procedures in all areas of their programs."
Copeland refused to answer questions for comment.
SMU officials reached a contract settlement with Tubbs, paying him the remaining two years of his contract in full. Tubbs' attorney, Michael Pegues, did not return a call seeking comment.
Tubbs leaves SMU with a 27-30 record. The Mustangs were 13-16 in 2005-06.
Starting Thursday afternoon, Tubbs began to clean out his office. He took down two pictures, one of him posing with a basketball in front of an SMU sign, the other of a story in a frame. Also Thursday, he informed the players he would not return as coach next season.
Several players expressed shock when told that Tubbs will not return.
"I'm a little hurt," freshman center Bamba Fall said after the 35-minute meeting. "He took it like a man."
Fall, who set a season record for blocks this season, said he's thinking of transferring.
"I don't know yet," he said. "I have to sleep on it."
Dez Willingham, a sophomore point guard from DeSoto, said Tubbs was calm during the meeting with players.
"That was a low blow," Willingham said. "He presented himself well. He always talks to us about dealing with all facets of life. He told us to call him if we needed anything.
"I didn't see this coming. But it's out of our control and it's part of life."
Freshman power forward Brian Morris, who was given the nickname Big Baby by Tubbs, said he was too upset to talk.
Junior forward Donatas Rackauskas, who was not present at the meeting, will now play for his third coach at SMU. Rackauskas was recruited by Mike Dement, who was fired in 2004.
"It's going to be different," he said. "I would never think I would have played for three coaches in my career in college. I just have to make the best of it."
In February, SMU launched an investigation into the program when Max Williams, the grandfather of freshman player Matt Williams, said he gave Tubbs money to purchase meals for players.
Sources said Tubbs paid for meals for Fall and Morris, but out of his own pocket.
SMU officials are also investigating if Tubbs conducted practices for more than the NCAA-mandated 20 hours per week. Tubbs' phone records are also being reviewed to determine if he called prospective recruits more than the NCAA allows.
Copeland said in his statement that is not the sum of the alleged violations in the program.
When Tubbs was hired, Copeland said one of the main reasons was his ability to recruit some of the best players in the area.
Some of the top players have not come to SMU in Tubbs' two seasons.
However, this weekend, SMU was to receive campus visits from South Oak Cliff forward Ronnie Morgan and Collin County Community College forward Eugene Spates, who graduated from Hillcrest.
Tubbs was also in the running for Fort Worth Dunbar guard Chris Roberts. Courtney Wallace, a 6-8 forward from Woodlawn High School in Baton Rouge, La., was also considering SMU. " [/quote]
Do the quotes from Fall and Willingham sound like they were glad to see the coach leave, because they had been so horribly abused by him? Does the article mention anything like that, anywhere? If it does, you will have to show it to me. It does, however, clearly state that Tubbs was fired by Copeland, not Orsini, in direct contradiction of the picture you so vividly paint in your own imagination. It talks at length about the investigation, and Copelands claims that there were more serious violations, claims that the NCAA's own investigation eventually proved false.
This post is getting too long, so I'll address your most preposterous claim in a seperate post.
Try not to choke on the Kool-Aid.