ChestRockwell85 wrote:To be honest, I think until St. John's realizes that being "Transfer U" has not been a successful strategy you will be struggling to string together more than one good year here and there. When it becomes a revolving door program it is very hard to be consistent. Stop looking for transfers, and find those kids who are in the Top 150-100 range who are going to buy in to the program, develop, and stick around for 4 years. That is how you build a program.
With that being said, until that happens, I don't think it will matter who your coach is.
NJRedman wrote:ChestRockwell85 wrote:To be honest, I think until St. John's realizes that being "Transfer U" has not been a successful strategy you will be struggling to string together more than one good year here and there. When it becomes a revolving door program it is very hard to be consistent. Stop looking for transfers, and find those kids who are in the Top 150-100 range who are going to buy in to the program, develop, and stick around for 4 years. That is how you build a program.
With that being said, until that happens, I don't think it will matter who your coach is.
Who cares where the kids come from? For real, there is no difference between a kid who comes right out of high school and a transfer. There is no downside to taking in transfers. The upside is they are more likely to actually stick around since they've already transfered once as opposed to a kid out of HS who has second thoughts.
NJRedman wrote:ChestRockwell85 wrote:To be honest, I think until St. John's realizes that being "Transfer U" has not been a successful strategy you will be struggling to string together more than one good year here and there. When it becomes a revolving door program it is very hard to be consistent. Stop looking for transfers, and find those kids who are in the Top 150-100 range who are going to buy in to the program, develop, and stick around for 4 years. That is how you build a program.
With that being said, until that happens, I don't think it will matter who your coach is.
Who cares where the kids come from? For real, there is no difference between a kid who comes right out of high school and a transfer. There is no downside to taking in transfers. The upside is they are more likely to actually stick around since they've already transfered once as opposed to a kid out of HS who has second thoughts.
ChestRockwell85 wrote:To be honest, I think until St. John's realizes that being "Transfer U" has not been a successful strategy you will be struggling to string together more than one good year here and there. When it becomes a revolving door program it is very hard to be consistent. Stop looking for transfers, and find those kids who are in the Top 150-100 range who are going to buy in to the program, develop, and stick around for 4 years. That is how you build a program.
With that being said, until that happens, I don't think it will matter who your coach is.
adoraz wrote:There are major issues with us becoming "Transfer U":
1. Transfers were unhappy once, so it's very possible they will be unhappy again. And yes, they absolutely will transfer. Just look at Dixon from a couple weeks ago. Look at Owens from last year (didn't even return as a STARTER). Will Simon stay after this year, or go elsewhere and be immediately eligible as a grad (like Owens)? It's rare for us to keep a transfer for more than 1 year, yet they spend 1 year on the bench.
2. High impact immediately eligible transfers, like Heron, are extremely rare. Can't count on players like him as a yearly recruiting strategy.
3. Transfers are easy to recruit, as they take FAR less time than high school students. Staff only needs to be on them for a few weeks/days. That's the big problem, we're NOT recruiting high school students to the extent we should be. We're taking the easy route. Matt is the only one who goes all out. Mullin, Mitch, and GSJ do a mediocre job.
Why do we keep having only 5/6 BE caliber players each year? It's a combination of too many transfers and a lack of HS recruiting.
I like transfers being a big part of our team, but having them be the MAIN part is simply not going to work long term.
REDMEN1415 wrote:ChestRockwell85 wrote:To be honest, I think until St. John's realizes that being "Transfer U" has not been a successful strategy you will be struggling to string together more than one good year here and there. When it becomes a revolving door program it is very hard to be consistent. Stop looking for transfers, and find those kids who are in the Top 150-100 range who are going to buy in to the program, develop, and stick around for 4 years. That is how you build a program.
With that being said, until that happens, I don't think it will matter who your coach is.
Oh I agree, which is why we need another recruiter. Matt's specialty is the transfer game.
Get a assistant that can recruit HS kids. The assistant has to do other things on the staff as well, not just recruit.
Maybe an experienced former HC to help Chris with in game decisions.
NJRedman wrote:adoraz wrote:There are major issues with us becoming "Transfer U":
1. Transfers were unhappy once, so it's very possible they will be unhappy again. And yes, they absolutely will transfer. Just look at Dixon from a couple weeks ago. Look at Owens from last year (didn't even return as a STARTER). Will Simon stay after this year, or go elsewhere and be immediately eligible as a grad (like Owens)? It's rare for us to keep a transfer for more than 1 year, yet they spend 1 year on the bench.
2. High impact immediately eligible transfers, like Heron, are extremely rare. Can't count on players like him as a yearly recruiting strategy.
3. Transfers are easy to recruit, as they take FAR less time than high school students. Staff only needs to be on them for a few weeks/days. That's the big problem, we're NOT recruiting high school students to the extent we should be. We're taking the easy route. Matt is the only one who goes all out. Mullin, Mitch, and GSJ do a mediocre job.
Why do we keep having only 5/6 BE caliber players each year? It's a combination of too many transfers and a lack of HS recruiting.
I like transfers being a big part of our team, but having them be the MAIN part is simply not going to work long term.
Well it hasn't been long term so you don't know that. You pointed out 2 transfers out of how many? 12?
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