Posted by CoachWard95 on 3/16/2017 5:37:00 PM (view original):
Posted by 0nly on 3/16/2017 5:12:00 PM (view original):
Ideally if your goal is to coach a high level team like Illinois UNC try and find a previously human coached non major you qualify for because rebulding a non major is goign to take ~3-4 seasons, then winning enough to qualify for a good job will take between another 3-5 seasons if you are good then whatever high level job you want is most likely going to be another 3-4 season rebuild.
If you're goal is to coach something like Cal, FSU, Purdue, or a midmajor like Utah stay at D2 and jump straight to Big 6, because you can easily find jobs like that you qualify for Big 6 and there is no point coaching a non major in between since it doesn't do anything but extend the time it takes to get to winning at that job.
And wvu is wrong you can get Big 6 jobs with 0 D1 NT wins either coming from D2 or just from 3+ D1 NT bids. C-/D+ jobs with B/B- baseline only require 3 D1 NT bids with solid record/rpi
If you average a S16 or better at D2 you will qualify for Big 6 much quicker than 10-12 seasons. 10 seasons is about what it takes to get a Big 6 job with nothing but 1/2nd round appearances.
So I should wait until I hit 10 seasons at division 2? My goal is to coach every aspect of Hoop Dynasty before I start mentoring. I got 1 nt appearance already.
There is some solid teams right now open in Allen big 6. I was contemplating rather I should wait to get all jobs open or qualify for big 6. I am a program builder myself so I don't mind taking a doormat or and fallen off Duke/NCSU team. What should I do Only?
In all seriousness, Ward (though you probably won't read this because I'm blocked. Or even if you do read it, you'll accuse me of attacking you and not heed a single word), I wouldn't set yourself a goal of "x seasons before I move up to D1." You still have so much about the game to learn, and D2 is a much better place to do that. Judging by your videos so far, you still need to learn what makes a good recruit, for example.
Once you've built a D2 program that can consistently make the NT year in and year out, then I think you'll be ready to try your hand at D1. Until then, don't rush.
Best of luck.