Originally posted by KC Shox
1. The argument only holds up if Marshall fails to succeed over the long term at WSU. Clearly if all his tenure is like this year, the Katz argument will hold up, but it is way too early to proclaim that. If he succeeds at WSU, he will be in an even better position for a "bigger" job, having proven he can rebuild a team in a tougher conference.
2. The reason that Marshall left Winthrop is that, while knowing he had the league wrapped up, he also knew that winning his league would not get him a good NCAA seed. The fact is that if he wins the Valley at WSU he will be in a better position in the NCAA's than he was at Winthrop.
3. The assumption that South Carolina is a better job than WSU should not be a given for several reasons.
A) In the first place, the reason that their coach resigned was because, in spite of very little fan support, the expectations were ridiculous. Basically, the South Carolina coach would have minimal resources and be under constant threat of being fired for not meeting unrealistic expectations. The exact opposite is true at WSU. Huge fan support without the constant threat of being canned.
B) Remember that the reason we have Aaron Ellis is that S. Carolina has funky entrance requirements that mean that some players who have cleared the NCAA can't get in.
C) Winning the conference is out of the question and getting enough wins for the NCAAs is tough. Remember, just in the SEC EAST, USC would be trying to beat out Florida, Kentucky, Tennessee, and Vanderbilt. Does anyone really think that getting through that makes USC an easier place to get to the NCAAs than WSU, even with more bids for the SEC than for the MVC?
4. The whole premise of moving to WSU being a bad idea because it cost him the USC job contradicts his basic premise that it was a bad idea to leave Winthrop where he was winning to go to a bigger, tougher conference where he would have to rebuild a team.
If he assumes that Marshall's tenure at WSU will be a failure, why wouldn't his tenure at USC be a failure (and likely a quicker firing)?
If he assumes that Marshall just had a tough first year and is a good enough coach to compete in the rugged SEC East, then won't he be good enough to make WSU compete for a Valley title and be back in the running for jobs similar or better than USC?
Either Marshall is in over his head at a program larger than Winthrop, in which case he would fail anywhere he went, or he is a good coach and will eventually succeed. You can't have it both ways.
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