Welcome Coach Tony Skinn!

DRK331

All-Conference
Brand new Tony Skinn interview with Field of 68:


Tony's part starts at 18:42 mark
 

Ben Chwarmer

Hall of Famer
GIVING DAY 2023
I honestly think Tony Skinn might be the best coach in the country when it comes to identifying and developing big man talent. He was apparently instrumental in recruiting Derek Queen, which already tells you he has an elite eye for post talent early.

Then there’s Amari Kelly. Kelly transfers up from UNCW averaging like six points a game, and under Skinn he turns into a legit stud for Mason at around 13 a night. I remember genuinely wondering at the time if he was actually better than Josh Oduro, which sounded crazy until you watched him play.

Then you’ve got Jalen Haynes, maybe the clearest example of Skinn trusting his evaluation over everything else. He knew the talent was worth the academic concerns, and more importantly, he made sure Haynes had the resources to be successful on and off the court. That kind of support matters, and it ended with Haynes earning first team honors.

And now Riley. A backup at Samford, barely on anyone’s radar. Skinn saw he was being underutilized, brought him in, and turned him into the focal point of his most successful offense yet. When you stack all of this together, it’s hard to argue anyone is better right now at spotting bigs early, developing them, and maximizing what they can become than Skinn.
 
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Pikapppatri8

Pikapppatri8

Hall of Famer
⭐️ Donor ⭐️
GOLD SPONSOR
I honestly think Tony Skinn might be the best coach in the country when it comes to identifying and developing big man talent. He was apparently instrumental in recruiting Derek Queen, which already tells you he has an elite eye for post talent early.

Then there’s Amari Kelly. Kelly transfers up from UNCW averaging like six points a game, and under Skinn he turns into a legit stud for Mason at around 13 a night. I remember genuinely wondering at the time if he was actually better than Josh Oduro, which sounded crazy until you watched him play.

Then you’ve got Jalen Haynes, maybe the clearest example of Skinn trusting his evaluation over everything else. He knew the talent was worth the academic concerns, and more importantly, he made sure Haynes had the resources to be successful on and off the court. That kind of support matters, and it ended with Haynes earning first team honors.

And now Riley. A backup at Samford, barely on anyone’s radar. Skinn saw he was being underutilized, brought him in, and turned him into the focal point of his most successful offense yet. When you stack all of this together, it’s hard to argue anyone is better right now at spotting bigs early, developing them, and maximizing what they can become than Skinn.
I would have to concur... I also love having a coach that does half-time adjustments that work again.
 

JPgmuswim

Starter
Gotta enjoy it while we have him, the way this season has gone so far it’s going to be damn near impossible to keep him.
 

Jack Strop

All-Conference
⭐️ Donor ⭐️
Gotta enjoy it while we have him, the way this season has gone so far it’s going to be damn near impossible to keep him.

I don't know. Coach Skinn likes it here and he knows that starting over in a P4 may make him more money for a years, but the odds of replicating success in a higher conference are not that good. Just ask Jeff Capel, Shaka Smart (at Texas), and Archie Miiler. Sometimes, one has to appreciate what one has... and I think Tony does.

Optimistically yours,
J. Strop
 

GMU79

Hall of Famer
⭐️ Donor ⭐️
GIVING DAY 2023
I don't know. Coach Skinn likes it here and he knows that starting over in a P4 may make him more money for a years, but the odds of replicating success in a higher conference are not that good. Just ask Jeff Capel, Shaka Smart (at Texas), and Archie Miiler. Sometimes, one has to appreciate what one has... and I think Tony does.

Optimistically yours,
J. Strop
Agreed. Tony may indeed leave soon. Then again, there are always the exceptions.
 

jruby

Starter
I do think Tony Skinn eventually leaves Mason, but not yet. He doesn’t want a top-30 job. He wants a top-10 job, and there’s no realistic path to that right now. Leaving for a top-25 to top-40 program at this point carries a ton of risk, and the upside isn’t that great. The money and long-term investment would have to be enormous to justify it.

If he keeps winning the way he is, makes the tournament consistently, and does that for the next decade, he’ll still be young enough to land a true top-10 job. Jump too early, say to a place like Syracuse, have a rough stretch, and he’s probably done at that level. And honestly, what does that even gain him? Syracuse isn’t a final destination anymore. It would just be another stepping stone and a program he has zero ties to.

If there’s one place that would really make sense, it’s Maryland for a lot of reasons, but that job isn’t open. This isn’t just another coach. His ties to this program are very deep. It’s going to take something truly special to get him to leave, and almost $2 million annually isn’t chump change. Things are different than the past.
 
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