You've previously admitted it was "
careless" (very generous) to suggest Davis was a "DEI hire," very unfortunate to see you're doubling down a few months later.
The guy hasn't exactly lit the D-1 world on fire, has he? He did a very good job at his alma mater, Randolph-Macon. But Randolph-Macon is a D-3 school.
Based on tenures at Bucknell and UNH, it very much appears he can win with someone else's players, but once it's his own guys, the program craters.
Nathan Davis Coaching Record
www.sports-reference.com
Dave Paulsen Coaching Record
www.sports-reference.com
Bill Herrion Coaching Record
www.sports-reference.com
Based on all the available evidence, it appears Davis (like Souza and Weinrebe, both white guys the last time I checked) simply isn't ready for D-1 prime time, unless he's coaching someone else's players (and in Weinrebe's case, he even failed at that). Not surprisingly, there were more of those players at Bucknell (and for longer) than there were at UNH post-Herrion. And when someone drives any program into a ditch as quickly as Davis has at UNH, it invites a lot of questions. Some may even be uncomfortable. This time last season, and even this year before conference play, I kept an open mind on a turnaround. It's not happening (yet) ...
But Davis' job performance has been at the bottom of it all, and he has no one else to blame but himself if he can't turn things around. And based on his career to date, a turnaround does not appear to be imminent. He does have two more years left on his contract though. So at least at this point, there are indeed three (3) catastrophic hires on AD Rich's CV, all of whom have dragged their respective programs further back from past successes. You can put them in any order you'd like. Personally, I'd rank them from worst to "best" as follows (and I'm open to anyone challenging these rankings):
(1) Weinrebe - inherited perennial D-1 powerhouse under Hubbard, morphed into a losing record and out of NCAA tourney in 2 seasons. Bravo?!?
(2) Souza - inherited a program coming off a long period of national contention and a short down period, and spent a decade drilling further down;
(3) Davis - Inherited a historically mediocre program at its crest of mediocrity (4 straight non-losing seasons), rediscovered abysmal in 3 short seasons
If you think Davis' performance this past season has done anything to dispel his doubters, and you want to have an open discussion where we can act like adults, I'm game for that. That's why I'm responding to you, and not the idiot who throws around pejoratives like they are penny candy at a holiday parade ...