When UCLA players said they were fine with Mick Cronin’s bluntness after he ejected Steven Jamerson II during a blowout loss to Michigan State, the statement was either genuine loyalty or performative pressure. Either way, it exposes a generational fault line: younger athletes may view tough coaching differently than the critics who compared Cronin to John Wooden—and the gap between what experts say and what players say is widening.
Players Saying They’re Fine With Cronin May Reflect Loyalty Pressure—Or a Genuine Shift
According to the Los Angeles Times, UCLA coach Mick Cronin’s courtside demeanor and postgame bluntness make him no stranger to controversy, but his players say they are fine with his approach. The context matters: in February 2026, during an 82-59 loss to Michigan State, Cronin grabbed backup center Steven Jamerson II by the jersey, yelled at him, and directed him to the locker room after a hard foul—before officials could even review the play. The play was eventually ruled a flagrant-1 foul. Cronin later apologized publicly, acknowledging he had misjudged the play in real time and that the foul may not have deserved such a severe reaction. ESPN and The Athletic reported that Cronin praised Jamerson’s character and that UCLA players rallied behind Jamerson, with teammates holding a players-only meeting to support him.
The incident drew national criticism. The New York Post noted that commentators compared Cronin’s behavior unfavorably to UCLA’s legendary coach John Wooden. Cronin also faced scrutiny for a testy exchange with a reporter postgame about Michigan State fans. He acknowledged needing to be more careful with his public statements and apologized to the UCLA community, stating: “I know I’m not bigger than the brand.”
The Expert Gap—What Commentators Say vs What Players Say
Sports Illustrated has documented a stark generational split in college basketball coaching. A recent Final Four featured veteran coaches Kelvin Sampson (69) and Bruce Pearl (65)—with 66 combined years of head coaching experience—facing younger coaches Jon Scheyer (37) and Todd Golden (39)—with only nine combined years. The older generation came up “coaching in bus leagues”; the younger coaches “have spent much of their careers flying private charters.” Younger coaches embrace analytics and NIL; some veterans maintain “old school” offensive styles. Tom Izzo has stated: “I don’t like where the game has gone in many ways…I just don’t appreciate the movement and the way it’s gone at all.” The transfer portal and NIL have created constant roster turnover, making coaching increasingly difficult.
When players publicly back a coach after a controversial incident, the question is whether that reflects genuine alignment or institutional pressure. Athletes who depend on their coach for playing time, NIL opportunities, and future prospects have strong incentives to express support. The alternative interpretation: younger athletes, raised in an era of constant feedback and social media scrutiny, may genuinely view blunt coaching as preferable to passive-aggressive or distant leadership. The experts—commentators, analysts, former players—often assume the former. The players sometimes insist the latter.
What This Actually Means
UCLA players backing Cronin exposes the generational divide in how coaching criticism is received. The commentators who compared Cronin to Wooden spoke from a framework where that comparison is damning. The players who said they’re fine with his approach may operate from a different framework—one where accountability, even when messy, is valued over decorum. Or they may simply be doing what loyalty demands. The gap between what experts are deliberately not saying—that player statements can be coerced—and what the players are saying is the story. Cronin apologized. The players moved on. The critics did not. That disconnect is the new normal in college basketball.
Background
Who is Mick Cronin? Mick Cronin has been the head coach of the UCLA Bruins men’s basketball team since 2019. He previously coached at Cincinnati for 13 seasons. He is known for a direct, intense sideline demeanor and has faced criticism for his treatment of players during games.
What happened with Steven Jamerson II? During a 27-point loss to Michigan State on February 17, 2026, Jamerson committed a hard foul while attempting to block a shot. Cronin grabbed his jersey, yelled at him, and sent him to the locker room before officials ruled on the play. Cronin later apologized, saying he had misjudged the play and that Jamerson’s character was “everything that’s good about college basketball.”
Sources
Los Angeles Times, ESPN, The Athletic, New York Post, Los Angeles Times (apology), Sports Illustrated