He is apparently a “people person” who is well versed in several variants of the “Princeton offense” (which basically involves having a lot of good shooters on the floor to spread the floor, with lots of precise passes and back door cuts to penalize an over agressive defense):
as someone who spent many years as recruiting coordinator at Dartmouth, he will be looking to a very similar pool of players when attempting to lure recruits to Williamstown.
He was heavily involved in recruiting at Dartmouth for 11 years (that’s a long time to be an assistant anywhere). Dartmouth is never at the top of Ivy bball so he’s probably got a pretty good idea of how difficult it is to recruit for highly selective school. I think it’s reasonable to assume that Sheehy is a pretty good judge of his ability as a bball coach too.
Wow HWC, what a shock, as usual your reflexive anti-athletic bias rears its ugly head. First, Dartmouth is a pretty big “exception” considering that is where he spent the bulk of his coaching career (over a decade) and where he was associate head coach and head of recruiting (so basically he spent ten years recruiting exactly the type of players he will be bringing to Williams, maybe plus a few inches in vertical and minus a few points on the SAT). Also, I wouldn’t say Creighton is a school where students are not expected to read and write, it’s not like that is a school where the players aren’t graduating. He also coached with some of the most respected basketball minds in the country, coaches known for very complicated systems that require a lot of intelligence to run successfully (there is a reason the offense originated at Princeton) and which rely as much on teamwork and smart decisions as on athletic ability. Plus he originally comes from a small school background. Or, to si, up in more terse fashion, you are completely clueless.
Good point HWC, Dartmouth is a pretty crap school; not sure why I would have thought that Dartmouth graduated were literate, my apologies. Of course, save for graduates of Reed, Swarthmore, St. John’s, UChicago, or any other self-styled “intellectual” school with a history of hostility towards athletics, no educational institution in the US is worth a lick of salt in your book, right?
From its context, seemed sure as hell to be rhetorical to me. But then again, my reading and writing comprehension skills are, like my Dartmouth counterparts, sadly deficient.
Another article about Maker, this one from his high school hometown paper:
“Williams represents everything that’s good about college,” Maker said. “It’s a top liberal arts college, and to me its academic level makes it seem like a mini-Stanford.”
July 8th, 2008 at 3:55 pm
A few more links on Maker:
He is apparently a “people person” who is well versed in several variants of the “Princeton offense” (which basically involves having a lot of good shooters on the floor to spread the floor, with lots of precise passes and back door cuts to penalize an over agressive defense):
http://biggreenalertblog.blogspot.com/2007/03/princeton-basketball-stunner.html
and he was a finalist last year for the Princeton head coaching opening:
http://www.dailyprincetonian.com/archives/2007/04/18/news/18136.shtml
as someone who spent many years as recruiting coordinator at Dartmouth, he will be looking to a very similar pool of players when attempting to lure recruits to Williamstown.
July 8th, 2008 at 8:24 pm
OK. I give up.
What about this guy’s resume screams “Williams College”?
With the possible exception of Dartmouth, has he ever coached at a college where students are expected to read and write?
July 8th, 2008 at 9:45 pm
He was heavily involved in recruiting at Dartmouth for 11 years (that’s a long time to be an assistant anywhere). Dartmouth is never at the top of Ivy bball so he’s probably got a pretty good idea of how difficult it is to recruit for highly selective school. I think it’s reasonable to assume that Sheehy is a pretty good judge of his ability as a bball coach too.
July 8th, 2008 at 9:46 pm
Wow HWC, what a shock, as usual your reflexive anti-athletic bias rears its ugly head. First, Dartmouth is a pretty big “exception” considering that is where he spent the bulk of his coaching career (over a decade) and where he was associate head coach and head of recruiting (so basically he spent ten years recruiting exactly the type of players he will be bringing to Williams, maybe plus a few inches in vertical and minus a few points on the SAT). Also, I wouldn’t say Creighton is a school where students are not expected to read and write, it’s not like that is a school where the players aren’t graduating. He also coached with some of the most respected basketball minds in the country, coaches known for very complicated systems that require a lot of intelligence to run successfully (there is a reason the offense originated at Princeton) and which rely as much on teamwork and smart decisions as on athletic ability. Plus he originally comes from a small school background. Or, to si, up in more terse fashion, you are completely clueless.
July 9th, 2008 at 7:35 am
Isn’t it generally acknowledged here that a wide range of personal backgrounds can be the basis for one’s high performance in the future?
July 9th, 2008 at 10:30 am
Hey HWC, check out this article, which focuses in part on Maker’s relationship with his former players at Dartmouth:
http://www.thetranscript.com/sports/ci_9826816
Would you like to retract your ill-considered and ill-informed critique?
July 9th, 2008 at 10:31 am
Possible exception. I said possible exception, i.e. that Dartmouth is a possibly a place where students are expected to read and write.
July 9th, 2008 at 10:37 am
It was a question, not a critque.
July 9th, 2008 at 10:39 am
Good point HWC, Dartmouth is a pretty crap school; not sure why I would have thought that Dartmouth graduated were literate, my apologies. Of course, save for graduates of Reed, Swarthmore, St. John’s, UChicago, or any other self-styled “intellectual” school with a history of hostility towards athletics, no educational institution in the US is worth a lick of salt in your book, right?
July 9th, 2008 at 10:42 am
From its context, seemed sure as hell to be rhetorical to me. But then again, my reading and writing comprehension skills are, like my Dartmouth counterparts, sadly deficient.
July 9th, 2008 at 10:42 am
That’s certainly the way Ephmen viewed it when I was at Williams.
Kind of like the assessment a Sox fan makes of the NY baseball team, “Yankees Suck”.
July 9th, 2008 at 10:44 am
BTW, in between your ad hominem attacks, you answered my question. I had not considered the prep school recruiting experience at Dartmouth.
July 9th, 2008 at 10:53 am
hwc:
It was a loaded question and you know it. Everyone knows your m.o., so you might as well be honest.
July 9th, 2008 at 11:02 am
Coach Maker:
Welcome to Williams! You bring an exciting wealth of experience to the Athletic Dept. and we look forward to the upcoming season.
Go Ephs!
P.S. Ignore the one naysayer here…he is the resident anti-Williams blogger on the site…
July 12th, 2008 at 8:46 am
Another article about Maker, this one from his high school hometown paper:
“Williams represents everything that’s good about college,” Maker said. “It’s a top liberal arts college, and to me its academic level makes it seem like a mini-Stanford.”
Welcome to Williams, Coach.
July 12th, 2008 at 8:47 am
I’m not good with linking and deleted, rather than making this cite available: http://thecalifornian.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20080712/SPORTS/807120317/1006