Out of the 7 seasons Fred has coached, two of them have been complete rebuilds and one has been a year in which there was a pandemic lol. Context is incredibly important. The fact that you honestly believe Fred should be winning in year two at the worst P5 basketball school in the country, in a COVID year, with entirely new players is ridiculous.If TJ's done nothing but lose at UNLV, then don't hire him. I don't know his exact record there and honestly am not interested enough to look it up.
John Beilein has won consistently at the college level. He has 27 seasons in Division 1 NCAA and an overall winning record as a coach. He's had a winning record at every stop in the NCAA. One year of terrible results in the NBA is a fluke, showing he's just not good at the NBA level. He's had only 4 seasons below .500 in the NCAA, having winning seasons in 85% of the years he's coached D1 NCAA. He's never had back to back losing seasons in his career. I'm not saying hire Beilein, but I'd be open to hiring him. His track record is entirely different than Hoiberg's.
Hoiberg has coached 2 consecutive seasons of losing basketball in the NCAA, and 2 consecutive losing seasons in the NBA before that. But throw out the NBA. In the NCAA he's got a track record of having winning seasons 4 out of 7 years, only about 57% of the time. Losing is becoming a pattern for Hoiberg. He can still break out of it, but imo it's not justified for us to take a chance on a coach who is on a downward trend.
And I guess John Beilein gets a pass for "just not good at the NBA level", while Fred gets the label as a bad coach.. I mean, you really flip flopped your stance there lol. Fred going to a pathetic school like Nebraska is his own fault, but you can't tell me if John Beilein would go to DePaul next year he'd be hanging banners in his second year.