Have to separate Frank's philosophy from Frank's coaching, and, ultimately, the on-court product.
He's got an old-school philosophy and I think we all love that. The problem is, his philosophy does not translate into a quality product. Somewhere between the philosophy and the on-court performance, something is lost.
You can get away with your philosophy not translating into wins early in a tenure when you're building the program around that philosophy. But this is a decade for Frank. Let that sink in. 10 years.
If, after 10 seasons, you're even having the discussion about whether to retain a guy, you have your answer.