The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Fox solid, honest coach who didn't win enough

- Jeff Schultz

Like most new coaches, Mark Fox inherited a bad situation. Georgia’s basketball program had been buried by losing and scandal, recruiting was a struggle, academics were an issue and things were such a mess that two players forgot their shoes on the Bulldogs’ first trip with him as coach.

Fox, similar to Mark Richt in football, made everything better in basketball. In the end, he didn’t make it good enough.

Georgia fired Fox on Saturday, as first reported by Seth Emerson of DawgNation. The decision came the day after Georgia was eliminated from the SEC Tournament with a loss to Kentucky that effectivel­y ended its long-shot NCAA Tournament hopes.

The decision was expected and could be well-supported by anybody in the, “Fire Fox,” camp, but, to be honest, I’m a little torn by it.

This isn’t about Fox being a good guy. It isn’t about him truly caring about his kids and doing it right way. It isn’t about him understand­ing the mission of college athletics. Any administra­tion hiring Fox or Richt could be comforted knowing that neither would wind up central to NCAA or FBI investigat­ions and they would be excellent leaders of young men.

The inherent risk in fir-

ing Fox is that while the administra­tion is trying to send the message, “We can do better,” it runs the risk of hiring a young and up-and-coming coach who is more than willing to play in that AAU/shoe company underworld Fox admirably avoided for the mere sake of elevating the win total. And, sorry, I just can’t get on board with that.

But there’s no question Fox needed to win more games. The Dogs underachie­ved last season when they failed to make the tournament with J.J. Frazier and Yante Maten. They underachie­ved this season when they blew several leads, came unraveled in several games and finished 7-11 in the SEC.

Fox coached nine seasons. He failed to win an NCAA Tournament game. He made it to the tournament only twice. The irony of his hiring is he went from a coach who was perceived as an excellent side-

line leader who struggled in the early years in Athens in recruiting to one who has recruited really well in the past few years but underachie­ved with the players he had.

This year’s team didn’t get better as the season went on. That’s a bad sign.

The Bulldogs had been trending upward with three consecutiv­e 20-plus win seasons, but Fox’s last two teams failed to make the tournament and finished only 37-30 and 16-20 in the conference.

That just is not good enough.

This will be the first men’s basketball coach hired by Athletic Director Greg McGarity.

ESPN analyst Jay Bilas, a Fox supporter, said after hearing of the firing: “If somebody is looking for a coach, Mark Fox would be a great choice.”

He’s right. But Georgia can’t be faulted for believing it was time to move on.

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