The best thing for him to do at the time was to not say it at all because the perception to the fan base is that “this is acceptable.” It’s PR 101. I never hear Napier tell the media that other teams celebrate like they win the Super Bowl after they beat us because we are some kind of juggernaut. If anything, he always says that “we still have work to do.”
Outside of you and a few other fans that say that they know they can do better, I don’t usually get that vibe from them.
It is funny how people can take one single word and interpret it in opposite ways.
I honestly don’t understand how anyone could think he meant that our fan base had low expectations given basic context.
First of all, let’s be honest. We’re one of the few Belt fan bases who even gives a damn about college basketball. Second, besides maybe Georgia State, I don’t know of any other Belt team whose fans have higher expectations than ours. Third, we know that having a fan base with high expectations is not good for a coach’s job security. Because this article is about good vs. bad coaching jobs, “high expectations” will naturally fall under the “where they lose” category.
We don’t have high expectations. We have realistic expectations. Big Guppy just has excuses. He hasn’t had a win against a top 100 program. He isn’t very good against top 200 programs either. Our scheduling is terrible until this year when Maggard got involved.
Big Guppy is all about reaching weak milestones/contract infinitives. Padding your schedule to tech them is almost like stealing. Farmer allowed him to do so because he was a small time AD.
10 years: 1 NCAA tournament appearance and 1 Regular Season Conference Championship. Average finish in SBC play~4th and 58% winning percentage = 2 extensions, several raises and bonuses and larger coaching salary pool. All this = Fans High and Unrealistic expectations.
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