how you cherry-pick stats to suit your purpose.
What is your definition of "major college"? Who are these teams? When I look at his career record, I see only a handful of games that would probably qualify, like maybe 20 out of his 323 games (coming into the year) he's coached. What is the record you keep talking about and how did you arrive at it? If it's 20 games, how in the hell do you judge a coach's success or failure on 6% of his games? What are some other coaches records against the same teams for comparison sake? I mean, if you are going to use it as an argument, how about some facts? You also ignore the fact that all coaches in the SEC litter their schedules with **** teams, so why are you using that as a way to mock Stansbury's overall record? Then again, you've never really been concerned with facts, have you?
Added: Since he is an SEC coach, maybe we should judge his SEC record, which is 87-73 coming into this year. Ron Greene, who coached one year in '78 and Babe McCarthy are the only coaches with a higher SEC win % in school history. Richard Williams was way below .500 (89-113, .441), although he should probably be given a pass for his first couple of years based on what he inherited. And Stans, Greene, and McCarthy are the only coaches in school history with an above .500 record in SEC play. Williams won 89 SEC games in 13 years. Stans has won 87 in 10, and will pass Williams as the all-time school leader in that category as well this year.