Sorry, I didn't realize it was behind a paywall (you can get many Atlantic columns free just by signing up with an email).
There's a bit of a lead-in before the coaching list which I omitted, but the gist is they are not a major program anymore and should target a mid-major coach who has shown the ability to play above their skill level.
Call list (in alphabetical order)By Brian Hamilton (one-time Trib writer)
John Becker, Vermont head coach. Want a do-more-with-less coach, eager for an opportunity in the higher echelons? How about the guy who has won 71.4 percent of his games over 13 years, making five out of a possible 11 NCAA Tournaments and winning the America East regular season title four other times? It’s a jump. It’s a gamble. Becker would have to recruit at a high level outside of his Northeast comfort zone. If DePaul wants a showman, he’s not the guy. But Becker is a proven commodity who wants to prove himself even more.
Rashon Burno, Northern Illinois head coach. DePaul has made two NCAA Tournament appearances since the turn of the century. Burno was on one of those teams. It’d purely be a bet on a former player knowing how to unlock the program’s potential, because Burno’s record is extremely thin (28-51 in DeKalb) and his team lost by 22 to power-conference opponents Marquette and Northwestern this season. But Northern Illinois did take down one such foe: It beat DePaul by 10 on Nov. 25.
Mark Byington, James Madison head coach. Surely another hot name for the carousel after turning the Dukes into a top 25-caliber outfit — an actually enormous feat. We know Byington can coach, but much like Becker, the hesitation might be bringing in a guy not entirely familiar with the Midwest. But then if DePaul is aiming for a national recruiting reach, does that even matter?
Bryce Drew, Grand Canyon. It’s pretty comfortable living out in the desert with measured expectations and ample institutional and fan support for the basketball program. But it’s still a WAC job. And Drew is still a guy who cut his teeth in the Midwest as a player and coach. His three years at Vanderbilt look increasingly like a bad luck-laden blip, given that he’s winning at a 73.6 percent clip at Grand Canyon.
Justin Gainey, Tennessee associate head coach. Playing suffocating defense is a very quick way to compete with lesser talent. Gainey essentially has run Tennessee’s defense the past two years, and the Volunteers led the nation in efficiency in 2022-23 and rank second this season as of Monday. Gainey has a touch of Midwest experience with two stops at Marquette, and the SEC pedigree might catch Peevy’s eye. Is DePaul willing to roll the dice on another assistant coach hire, though?
Josh Schertz, Indiana State head coach. The 48-year-old won 83 percent of his games as a Division II head coach and now has turned a Missouri Valley program into a winner with one of the best offenses in the country. The Sycamores were 16-3 and ranked No. 42 nationally on KenPom.com as of Monday morning with an attack that ranked No. 23 in adjusted efficiency. The trick? Making a ton of shots. Indiana State ranks second nationally in both 2-point shooting (60 percent) and 3-point shooting (41.6).
Rob Senderoff, Kent State head coach. Here is the total of sub-.500 seasons the Golden Flashes have endured since 2011-12: zero. Not one losing season at a job that is no piece of cake, where you have to scour the earth for players and take your chances on recruits. Senderoff’s hire won’t be a tectonic event in the Chicago market. But maybe DePaul shouldn’t worry about that and instead find a guy who’s won at a place not too dissimilar.
Will Wade, McNeese State head coach. As a statement of intent, it wouldn’t be much clearer. DePaul would be going all in on a man who does what it takes to get dudes — and who doesn’t have to deal with as many rules to get them anymore — while also putting a competitive product on the floor. McNeess State is 16-2 and comfortably within the KenPom top 100 as of late January. In fact, the market’s general ambivalence to the sport might work in favor of hiring a guy who started the season on a 10-game, NCAA-imposed suspension.
Brian Wardle, Bradley head coach. He’s built winners from the bottom up at both Green Bay and now Bradley, where the Braves won five games in Wardle’s first season and now have two Missouri Valley Conference tournament championships and one regular season title in the last five seasons. He’s an Illinois native and a Midwest lifer and, at 44, should have the patience and energy for a prolonged build.
And the hire is… Most outsiders believe DePaul won’t risk handing the gig to another assistant — or at least not one without a deep, deep reservoir of experience. And most believe Peevy and Co. should prioritize true, proven basketball coaching aptitude over talent acquisition, given the shape of the Big East. In that case? Bring aboard a mid-major coach like Becker or Senderoff or Wardle and raise the floor, for starters.
_________________ Mr. Trump is unfit for our nation’s highest office.- JD Vance When a clown moves into a palace, he doesn't become a king. The palace turns into a circus. - Turkish Proverb
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