Sure.
I suppose we can nitpick these but I spent about 30 minutes looking at last year's 2010 NCAA Tournament field. Then looked at the mid-majors who made the tournament and recent coaching history.
I came up with at leave five schools who had fired a coach in their recent history and the new coach made an NCAA Tourney in his first four years at least.
Cleveland State, Gary Waters
Ohio U., John Groce
New Mexico State, Reggie Thues (isn't there now)
Old Dominion, Blaine Taylor
San Diego State, Steve Fisher
Not gonna spend all day on it. As mentioned, sometimes it works, sometimes it doesn't.
OK, I acknowledged there are examples, but very few.
But I am not going to accept these examples, since
none of them replaced a coach that was fired.
So are you saying you are OK with waiting until Jim Les resigns?
Also, it is hard to make a case that any of them have had as much success as Jim Les has had (minus this currect season's aberrancy).
Gary Waters may be the foremost such example of a good outcome after a previous coach was fired. He has done well at Cleveland State, and he made the NCAA tournament one time in his 5 seasons there. He did not make it to the Sweet 16, but I'll give you Waters as an example of a coaching change that turned out well so far. BTW, Waters was a failure at Rutgers before coming to CSU, but I give credit to the people at CSU for their choice. However,
Waters was hired as a replacement after Mike Garland resigned in 2006. Garland is, btw, just one of many, many examples of coahces that failed to live up to the expectations the school and fans had.
John Groce is also not an example I accept. He replaced Tim O'Shea, who
resigned and left voluntarily to take another head coaching job for personal reasons. He was not fired, and did not leave because the program was losing. In fact, he walked away after a winning season, was a bubble team that missed the NCAA, and made a postseason appearance in the CBI.
http://www.sportingnews.com/ncaa-basketball/story/2008-06-26/ohio-states-groce-hired-ohio-head-coach
Probably Groce would not have even considered Bradley, just like another Big Ten top assistant Brian Gregory, would not consider Bradley back in 2002.
He did make the NCAA in his 2nd year at Ohio, at least in part because he inherited a pretty good, winning team from Tim O'Shea. But they have struggled since then, and are only 15-13 this year and 5th in the Eastern Division of the MAC.
Reggie Theus ?- wow, now you are really stretching, and proving my point. Usually Theus is brought up as one of the few examples of a former college star being hired as a coach without head coaching experience. He did manage to stay at New Mexico State for 2 short seasons, and made the NCAA his 2nd season, but never won a game in the postseason.
He was hired after Lou Henson retired, so again, he does fit the same criteria we are talking about as replacing a coach fired for losing. And he took some shortcuts at NMSU, bringing in some kids with serious character issues to try for a quick turnaround. That would not be accepted by Bradley fans.
Blaine Taylor- Blaine Taylor became coach at ODU in 2001 replacing Jeff Capel II.
Capel was not fired, but resigned and took an NBA job, so this case is also not quite the same as what we are talking about, though I concede he had not been winning the last couple years he was there.
Taylor took over and did not make the NCAA tournament until his 4th year, and he had 3 losing seasons before he achieved that. He has done well, but never made it to the Sweet 16.
And
Steve Fisher- again, wow, you have to go all the way back to 1999 to dig up this case? And even this case is not the same criteria as my challenge. Fisher was hired in 1999 to replace the previous coach,
Fred Trenkle who resigned. He was not fired. Steve Fisher had been run out at Michigan after the "Ed Martin" recruiting scandal surfaced in 1998. He resurfaced at SDSU, and made it to one NCAA tournament in his first 6 seasons. This is now his 12th season in the Mountain West Conference, and he has only won the MWC once in that 12 year span, though he will win it again this year. And
he has never won an NCAA game.
I wonder what some Bradley fans might say if we hired a known cheater like Fisher to replace Jim Les?? Hmmm.
See how hard this challenge is. There are a couple more examples out there, but the number of failed examples far outnumber those that proved successful.