What CJL Means To The Coaches

Picture courtesy Ethan Hyman/N&O. Click the photo for more pictures.

There’s an old Chinese curse: “May you live in interesting times.”  For NC State’s coaches, these times are indeed interesting, and those coaches are not just the ones who lead the basketball program.

Yesterday’s word of heralded recruit C.J. Leslie’s re-commitment to play hoops for NC State and head coach Sidney Lowe will have an effect further than the long-sleeping Wolfpack program. It also will have an affect on football and head coach Tom O’Brien as well. Finally, Leslie’s commitment for NC State might mean something different for Coach Lowe than one might believe. Consider:

While Tom O’Brien and his football program currently enjoy widespread support, there are also the first murmurings of discontent starting to echo where Wolfpack fans gather. O’Brien has yet to have a winning season on the Wolfpack sideline, and for some that’s not good enough. O’Brien has been rebuilding a depleted team with depth and skill in many key areas, this season could well be a turning point for him one way or the other in terms of fan opinions.

The game-changer, however, is that with Leslie and the rest of the heralded incoming class of freshman coming into the basketball program.  It will be understandable if all eyes turn towards the RBC Center and hoops more quickly than it has in almost any season in recent memory. That in turn will ease the pressure on O’Brien, especially if the program has a mediocre record — something that may well come to pass given the difficult 2010 schedule.

For Sidney Lowe, Leslie’s commitment actually will not lessen the pressure on him to bring a winner to the court. In fact, it will only increase it, because now, Lowe will have the players he needs to compete and to win.  No excuses, no what-ifs, no blaming his players when times get hard.  That will not work this year, and for Lowe, the time has come: now or never.  If the Wolfpack has a bad year on the court next season, the hue and cry from the fanbase will resemble something like a banshee scream and Lowe’s seat won’t simply be hot, it will be in flames.  That said, State has to win in 2010-11 if Lowe wants to stay in Raleigh.

On the other hand, if Lowe and company leads the Wolfpack to something meaningful — meaningful being an ACC Title or Final Four or better, that will cement him as the long-term coach of Wolfpack hoops, and satisfy the long-hungry Wolfpack fanbase.  If that happens, it will also set a standard of expectations that Lowe will need to meet on a somewhat regular basis.  While reasonable NC State fans don’t expect a national title every season, and while they also understand full-well the competition the program faces from not only the Royal Blues but also from the rest of the traditional ACC members, it collectively also believes that it can and should compete regularly in the upper third of the conference — and also be regular entrant into the NCAA Tournament field.  If Lowe can accomplish that — and he will have the tools starting this fall — he will become one of the beloved legends of the university and will enjoy the collective support of  ardent fans for as long as he wants to lead the program.

One other person that may feel the benefit of Leslie’s commitment is Lee Fowler.  State fans suddenly have hope again, and when there’s hope, there’s generally a lack of finger-pointing for past failures.  Fowler has been the focal point for the overall failings of Wolfpack athletics of the past decade, and even though CJ Leslie has yet to play a single game in a Wolfpack uniform, Fowler can (and almost certainly will) point to him and to the other signees as a ratification of his leadership, wisdom and patience as the CEO of Wolfpack athletics.  While many knowledgeable Wolfpackers may not buy that and think that it smells worse than a two-cent cigar, others –especially those who never read a Wolfpack-oriented message board or blog — may well believe it and in turn they just might drop the pitchforks they have pointed in Fowler’s direction…for a while anyway.  Given that Lee Fowler is biding his time and happily collecting his paychecks at his Lake Gaston hideaway, that’s just fine.  For him, time is money, and it’s plain that money is what Fowler loves above all else.

At the end of the day today, it’s indeed fair to say that we are living in interesting times.  What it means for some may not be readily apparent, but what is obvious to everyone is that CJ Leslie’s coming to NC State will make a splash not seen in quite some time.   The ripples of that splash will extend far beyond the confines of the basketball program, and it will mean different things to different people.  How it all plays out this fall and winter will be nothing short of intriguing.  Stay tuned.

'10 Football 10-11 Basketball Sidney Lowe Tom O'Brien

53 Responses to What CJL Means To The Coaches

  1. swfncsu 04/30/2010 at 1:32 PM #

    “That’s all well and good. And I hope it is the turning point for Sid in a long, successful Wolfpack career. But I can’t help noticing that the 2010-2011 Pack BB team will have only two PGs – one senior and one freshman. According to PP, no PGs in the 2011 or 2012 classes have been offered. With Sid’s history of poor PG play under his reign, that cannot bode well for maintaining a top program as the 2010 class moves on. Hopefully that will change as recruiting moves forward.”

    Wrong. http://www.newsobserver.com/2010/04/28/456779/fcds-lewis-attracts-attention.html

    Do some fact-checking. Sid is an active recruiter with a long, and relatively successful, NBA career. The man’s W/L record in the NBA is abysmal, but who would really want to coach the pre-KG twolves or the grizzlies (at any point in their history)? He has a championship ring with the Pistons (in very recent memory for most recruits), and managed a long career in the NBA. To finally make a point, he’s the kind of guy top-tier players are going to want to play for. He has a strong NBA background, and I hate to break it to you, but…

    Yes, he can coach. I think the best example of how good a job he did this year (excluding w/l) with the talent he had. We finished with an identical ACC record, and one more overall win, than a UNC team that had 7 scholarship former 5-star recruits on the roster. We may have lost to UNC twice, but we SHOULD have…they had talent enough to be a top-tier team…we were depending on senior leadership from Mr. Flaming Basketball himself, a 3-star prospect listed as a “project” by his recruiter Sidney Lowe. Oh shit, I meant Herb Sendek. Sid’s talent is coming along, and one thing we’ve gotten a solid look at these last 4 hard years is something promising…

    Sid and his staff’s ability to develop talent. Tracy Smith should be their poster child. For D. Horner and Javi probably should have never even bothered coming to NC State, they’ve proved themselves overmatched on several occasions…but the fact that we could and can rely on these 3- and 4-star guys to produce is because Sid has done a marvelous job developing.

    Anyway, no one should be worried about this. Other ACC coaches the last half of the season commending the job Sid had done with “the personnel he had to work with.” Now that personnel is looking pretty sick, and Sid’s job security will no longer be a thing of question by late-March 2011.

  2. TOB4PREZ 05/03/2010 at 10:37 AM #

    “He proved nothing. Until he has some actual success he is still a coach with 10,11,10 and 9 place finishes.

    But this seems to be a difference I have with most Wolfpack fans, I look at results.”
    ————————————————————
    And, I too prefer to look at RESULTS…. like the FACT that Sid has won 20 games or more in 2 of his first 4 seasons at the helm. Those are not bad results given what he’s had to work with/against. We both prefer to view results, it’s just that you ALWAYS choose to view it from the negative perspective, whilst I prefer to dwell on the POSITIVES.
    Hence, why I thoroughly enjoy life!

  3. Conrad 05/05/2010 at 9:25 AM #

    NCState pride, If they would have fired Lowe not 1 of those recruits would have came here. So was that risk worth another 4 or 5 yrs in rebuilding with a new coach ? I say no its not. And for some strange reason or another you guys thought that Lowe had a talented enough team to make the NCAA tournment. Well with a few plays, bounds & rebounds, freethrows they might have made it. But it wasnt totally because of the talent more than Lowe coaching skills to prevent from finishing dead last in the ACC. So you cant win games nor conference championships without talented & skillful players. So pls tell me what other player did you know had game beside Smith ?

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