I think he has a ton of reasons to stay. I honestly feel he's probably passed on a lot of bigger opportunities. Don't know him personally, but DSU's pretty community-based, and I just think he feels pretty connected there and is loyal. He played there for Boo Ferriss, who still comes to all of the games. His family lives nearby, his kids grew up there, DSU's big on tradition with their baseball, he enjoys teaching, etc. Just my feelings.<div>Goat Still Grindin said:Although they have had a pretty heralded program out there for a number of years. <div>
</div><div>If he was so great, you'd have thought he'd have gotten an opportunity on a bigger stage, but you never know, he may just like the Delta. Is he from out there?</div>
I can't answer that because I'm not sure. <div>Goat Still Grindin said:
Didn't realize he was there. I don't keep up with other schools that much, honestly.<div>ScaldedDawg said:He was pretty good at USM, back a few years ago, too.
.... I don't know the history, but I did a semester at DSU after I graduated staying on my parent's insurance while I worked and applied for school. I took a coaching class from Bill Marchant, who was the coach before Kinnison (he had a bad car wreck and is paralyzed from waist down and had to quit). I was coaching at the time and was interested in it anyway. We talked a lot, and he mentioned a few times DSU could hang with all of the D1's back in the day. Not so sure that would happen now, but still pretty impressive. <div>ScaldedDawg said:and lost a few.
I also remember watching Hill Denson dumping/throwing a giant bucket of baseballs at the Umpires at DNF when he got tossed. I didn't know he ended up at Millsaps.
I always heard it was a game for Denson and Polk. Denson would do something ridiculous in Starkville. Polk would do the same in Hattiesburg.ScaldedDawg said:and lost a few.
I also remember watching Hill Denson dumping/throwing a giant bucket of baseballs at the Umpires at DNF when he got tossed. I didn't know he ended up at Millsaps.
Well, yeah, but they don't all have the success Kinnison does. Compared to D1 and JUCO, which is my point, Kinnison has a lot more disadvantages, so it's hard to just line them up and compare them without taking those things into consideration, which was my point.<div>QB1MattSaracen said:Isn't every D2 program dealing with the exact same problems as Kinnison,
though? If you want to look at the lower level college coaches in the
state, I guarantee no one is at more of a disadvantage than Jim Page at
Millsaps, but he has built a great program there for decades.
I agree with you completely that the small school coaches aren't necessarily worse coaches. The point I was making is that it is comparing apples and oranges. Competing in D1, D2, D3 are completely different from one another--with D2 and NAIA being the closest.CEO2044 said:Well, yeah, but they don't all have the success Kinnison does. Compared to D1 and JUCO, which is my point, Kinnison has a lot more disadvantages, so it's hard to just line them up and compare them without taking those things into consideration, which was my point.<div>QB1MattSaracen said:Isn't every D2 program dealing with the exact same problems as Kinnison,
though? If you want to look at the lower level college coaches in the
state, I guarantee no one is at more of a disadvantage than Jim Page at
Millsaps, but he has built a great program there for decades.
</div><div>EDIT: Just read the rest of what you said. Sorry, brain's not on just yet. I don't think D2 is the easiest really. They have to miss out on a LOT of recruits- we have a lot of colleges in MS alone that he competes with for players. I think the GSC is pretty tough. I think they all have it tough in some form or another, but it's hard to entice a kid to play D2 when you have D1's and JUCO's to go against. I do get your point on the NAIA's and ASC and all of that.</div><div>
</div><div>My main point- just because someone is at a D1 school does not make them the "best" necessarily. I picked 4 guys I knew, but I could have easily included guys like Jim Page and Hill Denson, I just didn't know them and don't feel I can judge them accurately.
<div>
</div><div>I agree, though: the Belhaven's, Millsaps's, and MC's have it even tougher.
</div> </div>
Well, I think your JUCO and D1 programs battle it out for the top talent. And JUCO has an advantage because I think they have more scholarships to offer (I forget their limit), it's cheap anyway, and the big thing is the draft.<div>QB1MattSaracen said:I agree with you completely that the small school coaches aren't necessarily worse coaches. The point I was making is that it is comparing apples and oranges. Competing in D1, D2, D3 are completely different from one another--with D2 and NAIA being the closest.CEO2044 said:Well, yeah, but they don't all have the success Kinnison does. Compared to D1 and JUCO, which is my point, Kinnison has a lot more disadvantages, so it's hard to just line them up and compare them without taking those things into consideration, which was my point.<div>QB1MattSaracen said:Isn't every D2 program dealing with the exact same problems as Kinnison,
though? If you want to look at the lower level college coaches in the
state, I guarantee no one is at more of a disadvantage than Jim Page at
Millsaps, but he has built a great program there for decades.
</div><div>EDIT: Just read the rest of what you said. Sorry, brain's not on just yet. I don't think D2 is the easiest really. They have to miss out on a LOT of recruits- we have a lot of colleges in MS alone that he competes with for players. I think the GSC is pretty tough. I think they all have it tough in some form or another, but it's hard to entice a kid to play D2 when you have D1's and JUCO's to go against. I do get your point on the NAIA's and ASC and all of that.</div><div>
</div><div>My main point- just because someone is at a D1 school does not make them the "best" necessarily. I picked 4 guys I knew, but I could have easily included guys like Jim Page and Hill Denson, I just didn't know them and don't feel I can judge them accurately.
<div>
</div><div>I agree, though: the Belhaven's, Millsaps's, and MC's have it even tougher.
</div> </div>
Regarding D2 being the easiest to compete in: May be talking out of my *** on this but it seems to me like money is not a very big factor. It seems like there is a base amount that schools need to be competitive in D2. As long as you have enough to be competitive, you're on equal ground with everyone else. It isn't like D1 where Ole Miss/State have a ton of money but Alabama has more, so they are better. There isn't that arms race.
Also,
-D2 is the smallest division
-Regionally, the Southeast is nowhere near as crowded as in D1
-Delta State being a state school helps out, as well, since there are a lot of D2 private schools
For the smaller schools, while yes, the D1 schools get all the top talent, I think there are a ton of quality high school players that can easily become good D2 or D3 players with good coaching
D3 is, far and away, the toughest for schools down here--as evidenced by the fact that D3 schools in the Southeast never win titles in the major sports, and rarely come close. It is Midwest dominated because so many of the D3 schools up there are state schools or much larger private schools. Plus, it is much harder to find athletes in this area that can attend Millsaps, Rhodes, etc than it is in the North.
Yeah, anyway, so long story short: Comparing success at the D1 level to success at the D2/D3/NAIA level is apples and oranges.
I like some Doug Shanks too. He's got a TOUGH road, and I really think he's done a pretty freaking good job considering. He is a pretty bright baseball guy in his own right.<div>QB1MattSaracen said:There are three fantastic coaches at the small schools in Mississippi that don't get enough credit. Especially guys like Kinnison, Page, and Denson, who stayed in the state. The first two of which are coaching their alma's and Denson still felt like he had something to say. They should be recognized more.
Good topic. There's some fantastic college baseball in this state and you're missing out if you have never checked out a DSU, Millsaps, or Belhaven game. DSU could compete with most D1 teams. Millsaps destroyed Jacksonville State several years ago when JSU threw a guy who was drafted in the first few rounds. Belhaven has several former D1 players and went to the NAIA World Series last year.
Even aside from those, you look at a guy like Doug Shanks and what he's trying to do at Valley.