Fowler’s Fate May Rest in Lowe’s Hands (Updated 11/7)

We are pretty busy this morning and don’t have a lot of time to comment right now. We saw this artice in the Fayetteville Observer and figured it would generate some comments from you so we wanted to get it on the site. More later.

In our archives we ran across this old entry from April 23rd focusing on some comments from Caulton Tudor.

Since landing the job in September 2000, Fowler hasn’t faced anything nearly as important as the task at hand.

Right or wrong, the short- and long-range performance of the next coach will become Fowler’s responsibility. That sort of accountability comes with the keys to the AD’s office at most major colleges. It’s unavoidable.

For all practical purposes, the next Wolfpack coach and Fowler will be joined at the hip — actually the wallet — for the duration of their tenures on campus.

When he was forced to look elsewhere (defined as not the obvious of Barnes and Calipari), Fowler’s situation became much more precarious.

The nature of coaching hires is that Plan B is always more complex and infinitely less predictable than Plan A.

Other than for the nation’s most successful coaches, there is a litany of pluses and minuses to be carefully weighed for each potential candidate: Academic emphasis, affordability, age, recruiting skill, big-game experience, geographic background, playing style and personality. And those are a only sampling of the factors that could make the hire a boom or a bust.

In other words, the situation gets very dicey, very risky. There are as many ways to go wrong as right.

With no apparent foolproof target left to pursue, Fowler has to carefully research each point and counterpoint of those in the Plan B-group pool.

The one thing Fowler absolutely cannot afford to do is make a mistake that could put the basketball program miles behind Duke and North Carolina for the next several years

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AD & Department General NC State Administration NCS Basketball Sidney Lowe

32 Responses to Fowler’s Fate May Rest in Lowe’s Hands (Updated 11/7)

  1. class of 74 11/07/2006 at 9:18 AM #

    ^ should have been “support those inept individuals that lead”

  2. Packaholic1 11/07/2006 at 10:07 AM #

    On the media-driven Amato status:

    “It’s not an issue at this point,” Fowler said. “Some fans talk, and there’s the Internet squawk; but it’s not an issue with me.”

    Just win and all will be well.

  3. class of 74 11/07/2006 at 10:49 AM #

    ^Nothing is an issue with our bonehead AD other than $. That’s why so many of us have a problem with mister happy face. He should just shut up and say nothing beyond ” I review each program with the respective coach at the end of each season.” No letters to the fans, no interviews about last weeks game or any of that tripe.

    Darn it, LF, shut up and lead. Willis Casey didn’t constantly try to curry favor with the media and the coaches that worked for him. Love him or hate him, Willis Casey was the best AD in this school’s history and I’m sure he must be laughing at the comedy that the present admin provides.

  4. Woof Wolf 11/07/2006 at 12:40 PM #

    Whet I saw the name Willis Casey it srirred up some memories. I went on a search and found this:

    http://www.archebooks.com/Authors/Casey/barbara_casey.htm

    Scroll down and read “Foreword from The Coach’s Wife.”

  5. redfred2 11/07/2006 at 3:46 PM #

    “It was through his eyes I learned that collegiate sports was not “just a game,â€? and that a winning athletics program was much more far-reaching than I had ever imagined. It influenced things like student enrollment, scholarships, donations, accreditations, standing within the community, and even the personal development of young men and women.”

    Try to tell that to any NCSU administration after 1990.

  6. GAWolf 11/08/2006 at 9:49 AM #

    ^ Wow. Everyone knows it’s true, but few people will admit it so open and publicly. Where have all the true Wolfpackers gone?

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  1. The ACC Basketblog - 11/07/2006

    ueopm2 Thanks so much for the blog.Much thanks again. Really Great.

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