(vol_freak @ Apr 18 said:If you look at Tennessee basketball over the last 25 years, Jerry Green is not the worst coach we ever had. I'm not saying he is a great coach but he did more than anyone else here in a LONG time.
Congrats on him going to Indiana.
Didn't you just feel like Green was forced on us.(utvolpj @ Apr 18 said:I'll agree he did win a lot of games. Maybe it was just the way he carried himself or some of the comments made about people trying to support him. Maybe he just got screwed by Dickey. Whatever the case, I just never felt a connection with the guy or felt like he really fit into the UT family. And for me that's necessary in order to be a fan of his. :dunno:
(vol_freak @ Apr 18 said:If you look at Tennessee basketball over the last 25 years, Jerry Green is not the worst coach we ever had.
Green is not a great guy. He's a first rate a$$.(cotton @ Apr 18 said:That honor would probably have to go to Wade Houston, which shows that you should not make coaching hires based solely on recruiting one player (are you listening Houston Nutt?)
Green may be a great guy, and he did win a lot of ball games, but I don't think anybody would argue that he never got the most out of his teams.
On a side note, does the fact that he is taking the IU job mean that he is off the UT payroll?
(hatvol96 @ Apr 18 said:Green is not a great guy. He's a first rate a$$.
I just find it hard to believe that that group of players was much more talented than four 20 win seasons, 4 NCAA tourneys and a Sweet16. It was the winningest run in school history. I don't think they underperformed all that much. He had no NBA talent on that team, developed or not.(therickbol @ Apr 18 said:Green was good at something. Just because he was a horrible coach does not mean he couldn't do something right. Obviously he did a little something right. He was a used car salesman who was a "players coach" and let them run the team. That is attractive to some players. They enjoyed the freedom. No discipline meant they could party, do drugs, whatever they wanted to because they were not worried about being repremanded. But, his ability to coach ended there (if you want to call that ability). You always hear about those coaches that have lots of talent and people say all they do in practice is "roll a ball onto the floor and say go at it." Well, that was probably the extent of his "teaching" part of being a coach. His players didn't improve. They wasted talent that was far greater than what it achieved. And, he did it all while having no connection to the fans. You notice the capacity he is serving in now involves him being behind the scenes as DBO. That is not a coincidence.