So we fired a coach who runs too much of a freestyle offense and a low resistance defense to hire a coach who runs a free style offense and low resistance defense.
Cluess' teams at Iona have gotten worse each of the past 6 years. Fortunately for him so has his conference.
He's consistently had superior talent in the MAAC and everywhere else before that, a luxury he won't have here.
Lets look at Iona's best wins year by year:
2019: Neutral court over Hartford
2018: Neutral court over Weber St
2017: Neutral court over pre-Martin twin Nevada
2016: @ Monmouth
2015: @ 15-19 Wake Forest
2014: @ Canisius
2013: @ St Bonaventure
2012: @ Denver
2011: Home over Richmond
And this guy was the 2nd option? What a joke. I hope I look back on this 4-5 years from now to see how laughably wrong I was
Don't take this as me advocating for Cluess. As with most hires, who knows how it is going to turn out. But I do see points like this a lot, that I think need some clarification. When Iona is good, like virtually all mid-majors, it is very difficult for them to schedule good teams. And nearly impossible to play good teams at home. Those 2011 and 2012 teams were stocked with Willard's talent, but Willard couldn't win a MAAC tournament game with those teams and won 20 games only once, which got him $1 million at Seton Hall. Those Cluess versions led Wake Forest (ACC school) 41-8 in a game, beat Maryland (ACC) school by 20, beat a very good Nevada team (at home) beat the A-10 Champion Richmond, etc. Those teams don't get to play Duke or Carolina at a neutral site. Statistics are a bench mark, but some times they don't tell the whole story.
Also it was Cluess who brought in MoMo, Glover, and Armand. Not Willard. Willard signed Machado, who had virtually no offers out of HS. Cluess brought in English, who also had few offers out of HS. He ended up the Portsmouth Invitational Tournament MVP. The guy can develop players.