Jay Wright to Retire

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Foad

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Re: Jay Wright to Retire
« Reply #20 on: April 26, 2022, 04:12:40 PM »
When was St Johns a blue blood program?

If you think we're going to argue about what words mean - When I use a word, Humpty Dumpty said in rather a scornful tone, it means just what I choose it to mean, neither more nor less - you're going to be disappointed. Blue blood I used meaning having dynastic energy. SJU had that from the wonder five forward, through Lapchick and a bit of Louie, until Mahoney killed it. I'd have thought that as a proud alum you'd have known that, but maybe no high school senior at Barstool Sports has made a blog post about it, so you missed it.

Re: Jay Wright to Retire
« Reply #21 on: April 26, 2022, 04:15:32 PM »
Nova wasn't a blue blood, it became one. It is one now, blue blood meaning dynastic.

My point is only this. There aren't many programs that go from being blue bloods - prominent in the national conversation - over a period of time to not being in the national conversation. This because the factors that create dynastic programs are for the most part baked into environments of those programs. Indiana isn't quite the Indiana of Hoosiers but it has the potential energy to be and meanwhile everyone knows who the coach is. UCLA and Kentucky will always be part of the national conversation. Louisville took a bit of a misstep but will be back in less time than it took Scot Drew to pay off enough recruits to win a NC. Even Syracuse is going to survive Boeheim's departure, there being no shortage of corrupt used car dealers in upstate NY.

The programs that haven't survived are socio-economically unique: St John's, DePaul, throw in Georgetown. Go back further: Columbia, NYU. Notice any similarities? It's not religion, Providence and Notre Dame are fine. How many people are there in the information age who are going to commit to four years of garbage basketball at an academically disadvantaged mediocre school in shitty part of a dying city where everyone's priority is defunding the police. I was in Manhattan recently, it smalls like Dinkins is mayor. Whereas otoh they can go to Idaho and be on the telly three times a week.

I sometimes wonder whether Lou picked Mahoney for spite, knowing he'd fail, the same way Tiberius championed Caligula.

When was St Johns “dynastic”?

Foad

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Re: Jay Wright to Retire
« Reply #22 on: April 26, 2022, 04:26:58 PM »
When was St Johns “dynastic”?

When was St Johns “ a blue blood program”?

If you think we're going to argue about what words mean you're going to be disappointed

You really are exquisitely stupid. Don't ever change. Except you screen name obviously, you'll want to change that every time your absurd opinions become too humiliating for you to bear. Then you'll become ProudRedAlum4Ever and no one will know that it's you.

Marillac

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Re: Jay Wright to Retire
« Reply #23 on: April 26, 2022, 04:27:14 PM »
When was St Johns “dynastic”?

How many posts do you plan on arguing the meaning of words? I honestly can’t tell if you are just an insufferable, imbecilic contrarian or a brilliant and dynastic troll.

Re: Jay Wright to Retire
« Reply #24 on: April 26, 2022, 05:01:32 PM »
You really are exquisitely stupid. Don't ever change. Except you screen name obviously, you'll want to change that every time your absurd opinions become too humiliating for you to bear. Then you'll become ProudRedAlum4Ever and no one will know that it's you.

Noted that you are another one entirely unaware of how clueless and unknowledgeable you really are. No wonder you think that someone who brings this to light sucks.

ras

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Re: Jay Wright to Retire
« Reply #25 on: April 26, 2022, 06:33:19 PM »
Nova wasn't a blue blood, it became one. It is one now, blue blood meaning dynastic.

My point is only this. There aren't many programs that go from being blue bloods - prominent in the national conversation - over a period of time to not being in the national conversation. This because the factors that create dynastic programs are for the most part baked into environments of those programs. Indiana isn't quite the Indiana of Hoosiers but it has the potential energy to be and meanwhile everyone knows who the coach is. UCLA and Kentucky will always be part of the national conversation. Louisville took a bit of a misstep but will be back in less time than it took Scot Drew to pay off enough recruits to win a NC. Even Syracuse is going to survive Boeheim's departure, there being no shortage of corrupt used car dealers in upstate NY.

The programs that haven't survived are socio-economically unique: St John's, DePaul, throw in Georgetown. Go back further: Columbia, NYU. Notice any similarities? It's not religion, Providence and Notre Dame are fine. How many people are there in the information age who are going to commit to four years of garbage basketball at an academically disadvantaged mediocre school in shitty part of a dying city where everyone's priority is defunding the police. I was in Manhattan recently, it smalls like Dinkins is mayor. Whereas otoh they can go to Idaho and be on the telly three times a week.

I sometimes wonder whether Lou picked Mahoney for spite, knowing he'd fail, the same way Tiberius championed Caligula.
I have to admit Mahoney was a bad choice considering the status the program had at the time. One of many stupid mistakes the administration has made over the years.

Re: Jay Wright to Retire
« Reply #26 on: April 26, 2022, 07:10:30 PM »
If you think we're going to argue about what words mean - When I use a word, Humpty Dumpty said in rather a scornful tone, it means just what I choose it to mean, neither more nor less - you're going to be disappointed. Blue blood I used meaning having dynastic energy. SJU had that from the wonder five forward, through Lapchick and a bit of Louie, until Mahoney killed it. I'd have thought that as a proud alum you'd have known that, but maybe no high school senior at Barstool Sports has made a blog post about it, so you missed it.

St Johns was never dynastic or a blue blood under Looie. That is a laughable comment.

Re: Jay Wright to Retire
« Reply #27 on: April 26, 2022, 07:29:18 PM »
Jay Wright leaving door open to returning to coaching at the NBA level but not right away. Of course an offer he can't refuse could hasten that decision. Knicks or Nets should have interest.

ras

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Re: Jay Wright to Retire
« Reply #28 on: April 26, 2022, 07:30:42 PM »
St Johns was never dynastic or a blue blood under Looie. That is a laughable comment.
I believe under Looie we were number 3 in all time wins.

Re: Jay Wright to Retire
« Reply #29 on: April 26, 2022, 09:46:12 PM »
I believe under Looie we were number 3 in all time wins.
We were ranked third and fourth in all time wins and winning percentage in the 70's. Oh how the mighty have fallen (and seemingly can't get up).

Re: Jay Wright to Retire
« Reply #30 on: April 26, 2022, 10:44:31 PM »
We were ranked third and fourth in all time wins and winning percentage in the 70's. Oh how the mighty have fallen (and seemingly can't get up).

We were a program with a long history. We weren’t any dynasty in the 1970s or any time since.

Re: Jay Wright to Retire
« Reply #31 on: April 26, 2022, 11:00:21 PM »
We were a program with a long history. We weren’t any dynasty in the 1970s or any time since.
Sounds like by your standards the only blue blood dynastic program in the history of college basketball would be UCLA and only for a period of 12 years. Not the way it works in most people's minds where you take in the whole history of the program.

Re: Jay Wright to Retire
« Reply #32 on: April 27, 2022, 05:20:41 AM »
Sounds like by your standards the only blue blood dynastic program in the history of college basketball would be UCLA and only for a period of 12 years. Not the way it works in most people's minds where you take in the whole history of the program.

That is a misstatement. Blue bloods win multiple championships over time. Blue bloods make multiple final fours over time. Blue bloods are contenders to go deep in the tournament more years than not over time. St. John’s was never at that level under Lou C or since. I’m not blaming Louie, we just weren’t at that level as a program.

Foad

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Re: Jay Wright to Retire
« Reply #33 on: April 27, 2022, 06:24:37 AM »
Blue bloods ... Blue bloods ... Blue bloods



Re: Jay Wright to Retire
« Reply #34 on: April 27, 2022, 04:27:44 PM »
That is a misstatement. Blue bloods win multiple championships over time. Blue bloods make multiple final fours over time. Blue bloods are contenders to go deep in the tournament more years than not over time. St. John’s was never at that level under Lou C or since. I’m not blaming Louie, we just weren’t at that level as a program.

You should pay attention to FOAD who likely forgot more about college basketball than you could ever know.

As for being a Proud Alumn, you are starting to sound more like a proud Mary.  I don't want to get stuck on adjectives with you but St. John's from the 50's through the 80's and through a span of over 50 years was synonymous with perennial success in college basketball. From the Frank McGuire final four years to Joe Lapchick's NIT championship years to Lou Carnesecca final four years in the 80's, few programs on the  northeast maintained the annual success and winning culture than St. John’s.  As someone mentioned at one point under Lou Carnesecca SJ was around 5th in all time wins.
Even today, after the precipitous fall from perennial national power, St. John's is still 9th in total wins.
There are schools like Syracuse, Georgetown, Gonzaga, Louisville, Connecticut, Arkansas, Villanova to name a few that are well below St. John's in win totals.  That is still a selling point. We have coaches and players in the Hall of Fame.
As for winning national championships, your example of success is microscopic in comparison to reality.
Only a handful of schools have one more than 4 national championships. Outside of a handful of blue bloods like Ucla, Kentucky and North Carolina, most blue bloods have won only ONE national championship.
As previously stated, piss poor decision making by our very provincial thinking Vincentian leadership, has led to a moribund program that is St. John's today but it could literally change in a season.
Coaches like Brian Mahoney, Norman Roberts and Chris Mullin had no business coaching college basketball.
Finally, I look forward to your valuable insight in future discussions.
WE ARE......

Re: Jay Wright to Retire
« Reply #35 on: April 27, 2022, 04:30:13 PM »
Nice post Rotten.

Marillac

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Re: Jay Wright to Retire
« Reply #36 on: April 27, 2022, 05:46:09 PM »
You should pay attention to FOAD who likely forgot more about college basketball than you could ever know.

As for being a Proud Alumn, you are starting to sound more like a proud Mary.  I don't want to get stuck on adjectives with you but St. John's from the 50's through the 80's and through a span of over 50 years was synonymous with perennial success in college basketball. From the Frank McGuire final four years to Joe Lapchick's NIT championship years to Lou Carnesecca final four years in the 80's, few programs on the  northeast maintained the annual success and winning culture than St. John’s.  As someone mentioned at one point under Lou Carnesecca SJ was around 5th in all time wins.
Even today, after the precipitous fall from perennial national power, St. John's is still 9th in total wins.
There are schools like Syracuse, Georgetown, Gonzaga, Louisville, Connecticut, Arkansas, Villanova to name a few that are well below St. John's in win totals.  That is still a selling point. We have coaches and players in the Hall of Fame.
As for winning national championships, your example of success is microscopic in comparison to reality.
Only a handful of schools have one more than 4 national championships. Outside of a handful of blue bloods like Ucla, Kentucky and North Carolina, most blue bloods have won only ONE national championship.
As previously stated, piss poor decision making by our very provincial thinking Vincentian leadership, has led to a moribund program that is St. John's today but it could literally change in a season.
Coaches like Brian Mahoney, Norman Roberts and Chris Mullin had no business coaching college basketball.
Finally, I look forward to your valuable insight in future discussions.
WE ARE......


What do you mean by basketball?

 - Proud Alum

Re: Jay Wright to Retire
« Reply #37 on: April 27, 2022, 06:16:28 PM »
You should pay attention to FOAD who likely forgot more about college basketball than you could ever know.

As for being a Proud Alumn, you are starting to sound more like a proud Mary.  I don't want to get stuck on adjectives with you but St. John's from the 50's through the 80's and through a span of over 50 years was synonymous with perennial success in college basketball. From the Frank McGuire final four years to Joe Lapchick's NIT championship years to Lou Carnesecca final four years in the 80's, few programs on the  northeast maintained the annual success and winning culture than St. John’s.  As someone mentioned at one point under Lou Carnesecca SJ was around 5th in all time wins.
Even today, after the precipitous fall from perennial national power, St. John's is still 9th in total wins.
There are schools like Syracuse, Georgetown, Gonzaga, Louisville, Connecticut, Arkansas, Villanova to name a few that are well below St. John's in win totals.  That is still a selling point. We have coaches and players in the Hall of Fame.
As for winning national championships, your example of success is microscopic in comparison to reality.
Only a handful of schools have one more than 4 national championships. Outside of a handful of blue bloods like Ucla, Kentucky and North Carolina, most blue bloods have won only ONE national championship.
As previously stated, piss poor decision making by our very provincial thinking Vincentian leadership, has led to a moribund program that is St. John's today but it could literally change in a season.
Coaches like Brian Mahoney, Norman Roberts and Chris Mullin had no business coaching college basketball.
Finally, I look forward to your valuable insight in future discussions.
WE ARE......

This post is typical of the unrealistic ignorant expectations of some of our fan base. You seemed to miss that I made my comment about St John's from the 1970s onward. We were never "synonymous with perennial success" at the level of any blue blood program during that period. We were known as a good, scrappy program with decent levels of success that hit a high point with the Final Four appearance. In the 1970s we made it past the first round of the NCAA Tournament just once. In the 1980s, the heyday for the program for the last 50 years, we made it past the second round of the NCAA Tournament twice.
It's nice that we won a bunch of games in the 1910s and 1920s, and couple of championships during World War II, but that in no way made us a national power in the 1970s on.
We absolutely have made some bad hiring decisions the last 30 years. But this program cannot change to a championship contender in a season. Not with the awful facilities and lack of major alumni funding. We can become a respectable winning team however, and the fans should give Anderson the chance and the time to build us up again, and Cragg the time to improve our facilities to support a winning program.
« Last Edit: April 27, 2022, 06:18:34 PM by Proud Alumn »

Foad

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Re: Jay Wright to Retire
« Reply #38 on: April 27, 2022, 07:06:25 PM »
We were never "synonymous with perennial success" at the level of any blue blood program

And no one said St John's was, thus is your strawman DOA.

Anyway: what exactly Proud Alum are you as an alum "proud" of, if not St John's place as a program on the national basketball scene? It's stellar academic reputation? All the chubby bitches who went there because they couldn't hack the academic rigors of CW Post and Iona? Pray tell WTF is Proud Alum so proud of that Proud Alum felt compelled to create the screen name Proud Alum in an obscure corner of the internet dedicated to the past grandeur of St John's basketball other than the past grandeur of St John's basketball? Get back to me about that, stupid.

 

Re: Jay Wright to Retire
« Reply #39 on: April 27, 2022, 07:18:15 PM »
And no one said St John's was, thus is your strawman DOA.



Your exact words: "Blue blood I used meaning having dynastic energy. SJU had that from the wonder five forward, through Lapchick and a bit of Louie, until Mahoney killed it."

Maybe you should use that humpty dumpty quote on yourself.
« Last Edit: April 27, 2022, 07:19:12 PM by Proud Alumn »