This is the bottom line with Dino.
He is not the sharpest knife in the drawer, and wasn't the best "people" person (to put it nicely). At WF and every other place he was given the chance to be a head coach, his teams underperformed. Dino got fired at Army after amassing 36-72 record. He got fired from Loyola after going 32-52 (Prosser left him an NCAA team at Loyola, and Loyola declined every year; by Dino's 3rd year at Loyola; they were 7-21 and finished 9th in a 10 team league). Dino was a great assistant for Skip, but that is his ceiling.
Dino would have never ever gotten the WF job if not for Skip's untimely death, and Skip left him a team with 4 NBA players, and each year the team got worse as the year went on. By the end of both seasons, his team's were barely functional. His teams went a collective 28-3 through January 15, and a collective 16-14 after that date with a 1-4 record in the ACC tourney and NCAA tourney; 3 of those 4 losses were to teams that had significantly worse seeds and significantly less talent than Dino's team. His only post-season win came in an OT game against a Texas team that had similarly collapsed at year's end.
Amazes me how people continue to conflate Wellman's epic miscalculation of hiring [] with the decision to dump Dino (believing both to be mistakes). Firing Dino made all of the sense in the world as the program was heading full speed into the abyss, and there was no chance that Dino had the ability to change course.
The decision to fire Dino was the correct move; however, Wellman hired what might of been the only major college basketball coach in the country who would've been worse than Dino.
If Dino had the gravitas to coach a major D-1 program, he would've gotten an offer. He hasn't received any such offer because ADs and search committees know that he is not up to the job. End of story.