I, too, want Mark Pope to succeed, but my concerns go beyond just player evaluation and talent acquisition.
If he had inherited a mismatched roster, implemented the wrong system initially, and then made meaningful adjustments that positioned the team to compete despite those limitations, the current struggles would at least demonstrate coaching acumen and provide hope for future success with better personnel. Unfortunately, we haven't seen that. His substitution patterns lack clear logic, the offensive and defensive schemes (if they truly exist) appear rudimentary or nonexistent, ball movement is stagnant, player effort and grit are inconsistent, and post-game explanations rarely offer convincing evidence of progress or a coherent plan. Overall, he looks overwhelmed at this level.
These on-court issues are now compounding off-court risks: continued embarrassing losses to any team with a pulse threaten to erode booster confidence and dry up NIL funding, which will make building a competitive roster for next season even harder.
That said, regardless of fan frustration (including my own), I believe Mitch and the administration will give Pope a third year to prove himself. To quiet criticism in the short term, I expect a near-complete roster overhaul—bringing in a new wave of transfer-portal mercenaries to replace much of the current group—will be presented as a reset. In my opinion, only a major scandal or Pope voluntarily resigning would prevent him from getting a third season.