Author Topic: Our Boy Tim  (Read 527 times)

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kyyote

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Our Boy Tim
« on: November 28, 2017, 06:54:02 PM »
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  • Boom! Tim Floyd, our Tim told the world that he had had enough. He had wanted to coach his last game at UTEP and he just had. His legacy at UTEP will be debated from now on until he fades into the fog of time.

    I was at the press conference when he came home to the family and home he left behind so many years before. Mary Haskins sat in the front row and he knelt at her knee and held her hands as a long time gone son might. He said he would do his best to return UTEP to the powerful program it had once been. He was Haskin’s boy and he had already coached his way to the NBA.  He said he would do his best to return UTEP to a basketball power on the national stage.

    If anyone could do it, it was our boy, Tim.  But, he couldn’t.  In his announcement of his retirement, it was clear that he had strong feelings about it.  It certainly wasn’t the way he wanted to go out.  This was not some carpet-bagger coach leaving for the next town, just ahead of the trouble he was leaving behind.  It was the adopted son of the father of basketball at UTEP.  He had come to revive his dad’s failing business and it had instead failed even more and took much out of him in the process.  And then, when family wants him gone, and are saying so after years of putting his heart and soul into a labor of love, it seemed to crush the man who had stood up to the world over the years to beat the odds.

    So, this one saddens me to the bone.  He wanted what I want and for the same reason.  For a love of the school and to honor The Bear.  The thing is, his mentor and more, Don Haskins would be proud of him and know that Tim tried as hard as he could.  They both know that things have changed and they have seen it and know that it is part of the way things work.  That understanding was reflected in Tim’s good-bye;
    “I’ve coached for 42 years and I love this school,” Floyd said. “My father played here. Nobody wants to win here more than I do. I’ve coached at this university for 16 years and I think it’s time for somebody else to have the opportunity to have the joy that I’ve had, the agony that I’ve had, the acclaim that I’ve had, and the heartbreak that I’ve had in my career.”

    No retirement party, and fond farewell.  “I’m done”, said Tim.  That folks is just plain wrong!  Throwing a family member for coming up short of incredible expectations is just low rent and classless.  I have absolutely no idea of what the Hell is going on behind the scenes, but this looks horrible and to tell you the truth, nobody is looking good here.  Fans are all about results and it is a business and all, but Tim is family and some of the impatience shown perhaps was the kind of stuff usually reserved for mercenaries.  Each fan will have to decide for themselves if they were fair.  But, I will say it again, I am saddened at the way this all fell out.

    Time to get ready for the damned Aggies!  Go Miners!  Win this one for our boy, Tim!

    SisyphusMiner

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    Re: Our Boy Tim
    « Reply #1 on: November 28, 2017, 08:11:29 PM »
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  • I'm not sure what you're saying here.  Do you think Senter told him to retire?  I really can't imagine him telling Floyd to do that mid-season.  What would be the point in that?  The only way I can see it happening is Floyd tells him about the medical condition and he tells Floyd that he has to do what's best for Floyd's health and family and the team just has to come second to that.  Frankly, if Floyd has been battling something and Stull has been trying to talk him into staying when he should take a hiatus, that's the problem.  Something hasn't been right all season, and I guess this is what it was.

    I too really wanted Floyd to be the one to bring us back to glory.  I feel like he was so close year after year and just couldn't get the right personnel.  I do also feel that he could have done a better job of adjusting his gameplans to fit the personnel he had instead of the personnel he wanted.  I also feel like his inability to bring us a single deadly shooting guard was a real failure.

    But he's not leaving us with a flaming, radioactive ruin of a program like Kugler did.  The program is in decent shape.

    kyyote

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    Re: Our Boy Tim
    « Reply #2 on: November 28, 2017, 08:33:34 PM »
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  • Not saying anything more than the way things shook out is wrong.  My opinion.  I consider him more than just another employee at UTEP and I just wish it had gone down better than it did.  Why it happened the way it did we probably will find out more in time.  Definitely didn't mean to imply Senter forced anything.  Floyd chose to do this as he did.

    stanman505

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    Re: Our Boy Tim
    « Reply #3 on: November 29, 2017, 06:35:19 AM »
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  • I am both happy and sad.  I don't think anyone wanted Floyd to fail.  I had a few reservations about Tim from the beginning.  That all came about from how Tim turned down the UTEP job when UTEP hired Barbee.  Floyd was quoted as saying at that time "who would want to coach at that dumpster fire?"  So when Barbee left a loaded team Floyd seemed ok to come in and take over, but he wanted no part of the mess that Doc left.  It also puzzled me as to why Floyd seemed so hard headed with running an offense the way he did.  The game of basketball has changed and players want to play in a system that is similar to the NBA.  It is very similar to what Kuglar insisted on doing with football.  The early start to last year was what made me think it was time for Tim to go and then the turn around gave me hope that he was willing to do some things differently.  Then we had the same problems that have been a black cloud over the program for the past five years with players leaving.  The commonality is Tim.  That is why I am glad the nightmare of being excited about basketball and then disappointed is finally over.