Realist wrote:paradox wrote:Also, does LU have a clear and distinct coaching advantage over the other Big South schools. We have two head coaches from the Mountain West along with a top assistant from that conference. Having the former head coaches from New Mexico (McKay) and Colorado State (Layer) should be a coaching advantage comparable to or even beyond what Winthrop had during the Marshall years.
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How so? They weren't successful coaches.....and they are moving to a different recruiting ground where they don't have any pre-established contacts. Maybe they will be ok, but I'd say they are a huge question mark, rather than an advantage.
McKay's first season was all about rebuilding - rare for a program with just three losing seasons in the previous 40 years. Due to circumstances before he arrived and injuries after he took over, McKay was in command of a squad that featured just eight scholarship players for most of the year. While the 10-18 record was tough to swallow, McKay enjoyed coaching a hard-working group that featured the nation's leading scorer in Ruben Douglas and a cast of underclassmen who showed up to play every game and improved as the season progressed.
New Mexico continued to show progress in McKay's second season, posting a 14-14 record and having very competitive showings against top competition.
The Lobos led late in the game against Texas Tech before falling in the final minute. UNM also put a scare into No. 6 Wake Forest on the road before falling by nine. New Mexico did scratch out a pair of big home wins over BYU and Utah, both teams that qualified for the NCAA Tournament.
It was a breakout season for the University of New Mexico in 2004-05 as it won the Mountain West Conference Tournament to culminate a sparkling nine-game winning streak and return to the NCAA Tournament for the first time in six years. It was the first Big Dance for McKay, either as a player or coach.
New Mexico finished 26-7, the second-highest win total in school history and a 12-win improvement from the 2003-04 season. Only eventual national champion North Carolina and Texas A&M progressed by a greater margin that UNM did in 2004-05. It was also two more victories than the previous two seasons combined.
The No. 2 seed in the MWC Tournament in Denver, UNM ran past BYU, San Diego State and 15th-ranked Utah to claim the school's first conference tournament title since 1996.
Picked to finish fourth in the MWC preseason poll, UNM started the conference season at 1-3. However, the Lobos finished 10-4, placing second behind Utah. The 10 wins came on the heels of four straight losing records in conference play and were the most by a New Mexico team since 11 victories in the Western Athletic Conference in 1998.