College basketball is a business, like it or not.
The product on the court or field should be relative to the investment. It's how the free market works, I'm sure you're aware. This is just one minor caveat, but it matters none the less.
I've seen you ask others why Marlin is a "bad" X & O coach. I've yet to see anyone come on and support why he's a good coach, as everyone likes to say. I have friends, close and far away from the program, that both say he's a great guy and appreciate him as a coach. I'm not disparaging those people, as I like and respect them very much. But I am curious, what exactly makes him a "good" coach?
I do know that passing and spacing are one of the building blocks of offensive basketball. Do coaches teach it at the D1 level? I don't know. But I do know, that the teams that do it intelligently are usually pretty damn good. My biggest gripe from an X & O standpoint, is that we are awful, AWFUL when spacing the floor and making the correct passes. Bryce Washington (and Shawn really improved in this department in 2016) are the best passers on the team.