They've been good a few times in the past 75 years. They've been weak to terrible for most of that span. They aren't a basketball school. People wanting to be one does not change that reality. There's no reason to settle but shooting for the moon does not require misrepresenting what OSU has been. The fans also treat it as a football school when it comes to fan support. The heartless building doesn't help in that regard though.
They have been way above average under Thad. They've been on the fringe of being a top program for the better part of a decade. That's been a stellar accomplishment given what this program usually is and probably will be again after he leaves.
"Weak to terrible", really? That seems too harsh an assessment IMO. Looking back through our coaching records, I see a program that has always been
above average, with only occasional sub-.500 periods (Floyd Stahl, late Ayers), winning the Big Ten over 20 times (that's at the top of the conference) and making the NCAA's over 30 (that is top-15 not counting vacated appearances), and tied for 6th all-time in Final Four appearances...
Harold Olsen 259–197 (.568) 154–135 (.533) 4 B1G titles, 4 "Final Fours"
Tippy Dye 53–34 (.609) 27–21 (.563) 1 B1G title
Floyd Stahl 84–92 (.477) 51–65 (.440)
Fred Taylor 297–158 (.653) 158–102 (.608) 7 B1G titles, 1960 NC, 4 "Final Fours"
Eldon Miller 174-120 (.592) 96-84 (.533)
Gary Williams 59–41 (.590) 24–30 (.444)
Randy Ayers 124-108 (.534) (64-80) 2 B1G titles
Jim O'Brien 133-88* (.602) 61-51 (.545) 1 B1G title, 1 Final Four*
Thad Matta 320–108 (.748) 140–66 (.680) 5 B1G titles, 2 Final Fours
There's little question that Matta is our best overall coach, and he's had the highest plateau in our history, but he built that on top of a foundation that was always
pretty good - with "weak to terrible" an exception not a rule.