I disagree with your assertion that the Jarvae was "strict." He ran according to a Sports Illustrated article from a few years ago the 24th most corrupt basketball program in human history. When he wasn't recruiting sexual predators, women beaters, and crack dealers in waiting he was paying his players under the table.
Odd thing I notice. On the one hand you decry posters whose feelings about Anderson do not allow for gray areas. And yet here, with Jarhead, he's a strict disciplinarian on a hall of fame trajectory who was on the fast track to the sweet 16. Whereas he was on the fast track to 76-112 in the Sunbelt conference
A lot of things were different 24 years ago. Cosby was still America's dad and not the single greatest serial rapist in the history of humankind. Every major program in the country has either directly or indirectly been outed for cheating since that line about Jarvis was penned. The only difference with Jarvis is that he was caught -- and he was only caught because he was fired by a fake AD in the middle of the year which allowed a scandal to develop. I also believe his cheating was of the JV variety -- because everything is JV at St. John's.
I allow for criticism of Jarvis. I have a few of my own...he didn't run an advanced system and wasn't an X's and O's guru. He missed on some huge recruits which cost us some very good ones. He was certainly arrogant and rubbed some people the wrong way.
I don't know if this is true or not, but I heard Carmelo Anthony wanted to come to St. Johhn's since he was originally from Brooklyn and was very proud of his NY roots. Jarvis, I'm told, went hard after the then more highly ranked Lenny Coooke in spite of the red flags. This was when high school players had to be one year removed from their graduating class in order to qualify for the draft.
Jarvis was certainly a flawed coach, but he's better than anything we had since. We could have also avoided the scandal and Norm Roberts years.
No coach has been successful after St. John's and that is really irrelevant to his firing. We fired a coach that took three schools to the dance, had been to multiple Sweet Sixteens, took us to to within a shot of the Final Four three years earlier, won the Big East the year after that, and who made the tournament and won the NIT the two years immediately prior. We fire that guys six games into the 2003-2004 season. We deserved everything that has happened to us since.