Not to be calling the season short at this point, but there are things that we need to start to consider, as well as the administration. The last time we won the conference tournament was 1988 and the last regular season title was 1996. Those are primary goals that need to be achieved, and it has been way too long (and that is an understatement of massive proportions) for our program. We had traditionally been the power in the conference, but now I hear excuses and rationales for Creighton ("the Omaha market" and alumni base--these make me laugh) and SIU (state university and alumni base). But let us face it, we are in the longest drought since the Joe Stowell years (we love you coach, but let's face it, your stint, coincidentally mostly during the 1970s, was the basketball version of the Jimmy Carter years), when we as a program were left behind during the development of the modern college game.
The years of NITs and one title and NCAA appearance under Molinari were enough to string us along. The NCAA tournament success of 2 years ago was great, but it may be effectively turning into a one-off experience of sorts. Yes, we may have made the NIT last year, with a total of two years of consecutive post-season play, but I would say that so far that this indicated that the program as a whole has turned positive, but not successful. Granted, dozens of other schools would be envious of this, but Bradley is not and should not fall prey to such thinking. I think we may have. I have heard first hand from prominent alumni and even faculty and staff I won't name, especially during the 2005-2006 campaign, that they would prefer the NIT over the NCAA because we could stay at home and maybe win one or two (I hope they felt like dumb-a**** after that season).
The standard for this school was set from the 1930s to the 1960s, and it was resurrected in the 1980s. We should not settle for mediocity, period. Two years ago was considered the pivotal season for Jimmy as a coach, but I believe this season is pivotal for Bradley as a program. This season is huge, and the players need to know it, and the coaching staff need to know it. In all honesty, I think it was just not optimism on this board, but a straightforward, realistic expectation at the start of this season that this team, this program, should win the regular season and/or conference title(s). We should have not only expected, but also demanded no less.
I am afraid the Ruffin injury may wind up being used as more of an excuse than a justification. We were not firing on all cylinders as a team before he was hobled. 10 and 2 for now should have been the expectation, but it was not met. I am hapy for the conference that Creighton and SIU went from decades of mediocrity in the middle of the pack with occasional success to now being excellent programs. It just is that I wish I could say that they had joined us at that level instead of the roles being reversed. I am also quite leary that this season will fall short and be an NIT year, and that next season will be no better with recruits that do not develop. If that winds up being that case, irregardless of reasons and rationales, we will have risen not to the program we once were or should be, but we will have made no more progress than from a horrible under .500 program to one that just gets by enough to placate the fan-base, alumni, and admiinstration into thinking they have an acceptable one. Acceptable is not enough--sustained success and trophies are the standards lest we forget. I hope the guys prove this post to be nothing more than a post of presumptious pessimissm. The time is now, the heart of the season is just now beginning--guys, team, show that you have the heart, show that you have the talent, show that you are champions.
The years of NITs and one title and NCAA appearance under Molinari were enough to string us along. The NCAA tournament success of 2 years ago was great, but it may be effectively turning into a one-off experience of sorts. Yes, we may have made the NIT last year, with a total of two years of consecutive post-season play, but I would say that so far that this indicated that the program as a whole has turned positive, but not successful. Granted, dozens of other schools would be envious of this, but Bradley is not and should not fall prey to such thinking. I think we may have. I have heard first hand from prominent alumni and even faculty and staff I won't name, especially during the 2005-2006 campaign, that they would prefer the NIT over the NCAA because we could stay at home and maybe win one or two (I hope they felt like dumb-a**** after that season).
The standard for this school was set from the 1930s to the 1960s, and it was resurrected in the 1980s. We should not settle for mediocity, period. Two years ago was considered the pivotal season for Jimmy as a coach, but I believe this season is pivotal for Bradley as a program. This season is huge, and the players need to know it, and the coaching staff need to know it. In all honesty, I think it was just not optimism on this board, but a straightforward, realistic expectation at the start of this season that this team, this program, should win the regular season and/or conference title(s). We should have not only expected, but also demanded no less.
I am afraid the Ruffin injury may wind up being used as more of an excuse than a justification. We were not firing on all cylinders as a team before he was hobled. 10 and 2 for now should have been the expectation, but it was not met. I am hapy for the conference that Creighton and SIU went from decades of mediocrity in the middle of the pack with occasional success to now being excellent programs. It just is that I wish I could say that they had joined us at that level instead of the roles being reversed. I am also quite leary that this season will fall short and be an NIT year, and that next season will be no better with recruits that do not develop. If that winds up being that case, irregardless of reasons and rationales, we will have risen not to the program we once were or should be, but we will have made no more progress than from a horrible under .500 program to one that just gets by enough to placate the fan-base, alumni, and admiinstration into thinking they have an acceptable one. Acceptable is not enough--sustained success and trophies are the standards lest we forget. I hope the guys prove this post to be nothing more than a post of presumptious pessimissm. The time is now, the heart of the season is just now beginning--guys, team, show that you have the heart, show that you have the talent, show that you are champions.
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