Wednesday, December 14, 2011

Reviewing Coaching Hires, in Hindsight

(Originally posted at SB Nation)

The regular season is over. The bowl season hasn't started yet. It's the perfect time to clean house.

That's what a bunch of programs are doing - 24, to be exact. Some teams need new coaches because their old ones have moved on to a bigger and (presumably) better place. But most are making a change because for one reason or another, their previous regime wasn't getting the job done.

While 10 of the 24 teams have yet to make a hire, the ones that have were greeted with a range of emotion from euphoric (Mike Leach to Washington State) and upbeat (Rich Rodriguez to Arizona) to perplexed (Charlie Weis to Kansas) and downright apocalyptic (Jim Mora to UCLA).

But here's the thing: Don't make too much out of the initial reaction, because most of the time we don't have a clue on how the hire would pan out.

Case in point, after the 2007 season, I wrote a piece on the 18 coaching changes that were made in the offseason. I foolishly decided to grade those hires before they even fully furnished their offices. And looking back, it's easy to see that first impressions are not only often wrong, but sometimes dangerous:

SOUTHERN METHODIST -- June Jones > Phil Bennett: For a moribund program that's not recovered from being the only recipient of the NCAA death penalty, this was quite a coup. Jones might not re-enact the glory days of Pony Express, but the Mustangs have the potential to be a non-BCS powerhouse. A+

(This wasn't that far off the mark. After going 1-11 in his first season, Jones has taken SMU to three straight bowl appearances - something the Mustangs haven't done since the days of ... Pony Express. Revised Grade: A)

MISSISSIPPI -- Houston Nutt > Ed Orgeron: Firing Coach O wasn't that hard of a decision ... getting Nutt, though, makes it all the better for Ole Miss. A

(Couldn't be more wrong. Nutt was 24-26, with an Ole Miss record of 12 consecutive losses in SEC play, before being forced out near the end of this season. F)

NEBRASKA -- Bo Pelini > Bill Callahan: If there was ever a case of addition by subtraction, this was it. Nebraska earns a good grade by simply getting rid of Callahan. A

(While Nebraska has seen improvement under Pelini, he hasn't restored the program to greatness. Then again, it could be a lot worse than 38-15, with at least nine wins each season. A-)

MICHIGAN -- Rich Rodriguez > Lloyd Carr: Michigan fumbled the chance to get LSU's Les Miles, yet at the end it ended up with the best young coach in the country. A-

(This is a case of what looks great on paper can't always mask the turmoil under the cover. RichRod was a bad fit at Michigan and was fired after just three seasons. D)

UCLA -- Rick Neuheisel > Karl Dorrell: Make no mistake, this was a great hire. This is the only coach UCLA could've hired that might put a little scare in the crosstown Trojan Empire. A-

(The gap with the Empire has shrunken all right, to the tune of 50-0. Neuheisel was 21-29 in his four seasons before getting canned. F)

GEORGIA TECH -- Paul Johnson > Chan Gailey: There was really nothing left for Johnson to accomplish at Navy, really. Now he'll find out whether a variation of his option attack can work in a BCS conference. B+

(Johnson has proved that his offense can work in a BCS conference, having taken the Jackets to four straight bowls, including the Orange Bowl after winning the ACC in 2009. A)

NORTHERN ILLINOIS -- Jerry Kill > Joe Novak: Northern Illinois raided its in-state neighbor for this hire. Kill moves up literally (from Southern Illinois) and figuratively (from I-AA) to a program that's a powerhouse in MAC. B+

(And he's moved on to Minnesota after three seasons at NIU, going 23-16 and taking the Huskies to the MAC title game in his final season. A-)

ARKANSAS -- Bobby Petrino > Houston Nutt: If you can somehow separate Petrino the coach from Petrino the man, this would've been a grade A hire. Unfortunately, Petrino came with so much baggage that it must be considered. B

(Fayetteville seems to have cured Petrino's wanderlust and he has built a powerhouse program. He's won 10 games in each of the last two seasons in what must be considered the toughest division in college football A).

BAYLOR -- Art Briles > Guy Morriss: Briles will have to work near-miracles to turn around the fortunes of Baylor, which has had 12 straight losing seasons. B

(While Briles is only 24-25 at Baylor, he has put the program on the map, culminating with quarterback Robert Griffin III winning the Heisman Trophy on Saturday. A-)

HOUSTON -- Kevin Sumlin > Art Briles: Sumlin earned valuable experience under the tutelage of Bob Stoops at Oklahoma. Houston, given its location in a recruit-rich area, has the potential to become a non-BCS powerhouse, much like SMU. B

(Sumlin indeed came within a win of taking the Cougars to their first-ever BCS game, and he parlayed that success into his new gig at Texas A&M. A)

NAVY -- Ken Niumatalolo > Paul Johnson: Niumatalolo is very familiar with the system and is well regarded by his players, and he's aware Johnson set the bar very high. B

(Niumatalolo started well enough, winning 27 games his first three seasons. But cracks are showing as Navy has failed to win the Commander-in-Chief's Trophy the past two seasons and just had its first losing season since 2002. A-)

TEXAS A&M -- Mike Sherman > Dennis Franchione: A former pro coach returning to the college ranks, hmmm, we've heard this before. But Sherman has had a long association with A&M, including a two-part, seven-year stint as an assistant for R.C. Slocum. B

(The Aggies improved in each of their first three seasons under Sherman, but a 6-6 record this year inexplicably got him the pink slip. His 1-3 record against Texas hasn't helped as A&M gets ready to transition to the SEC. B)

WASHINGTON STATE -- Paul Wulff > Bill Doba: WSU toyed around with the idea of luring back former coach Mike Price, but decided on a youth movement, hiring alum Wulff away from Eastern Washington. B-

(Wulff was mostly overmatched in the Pac-10/12, going 9-40 before being fired. AD Bill Moos quickly upgraded the position by hiring Mike Leach. F)

DUKE -- David Cutcliff > Ted Roof: Cutcliff did well as the head coach at Ole Miss and did not get a fair shake there. But the Duke job has proved a career killer for everyone not named Steve Spurrier. C+

(In most BCS conference schools, a 15-33 record would be enough to get fired. But this is Duke, and he's genuinely making progress. For good measure, he turned down Tennessee a year ago. B)

WEST VIRGINIA -- Bill Stewart > Rich Rodriguez: Hiring an interim coach based on a knee-jerk reaction is never a good idea, and this fits the bill to a T. C+

(Stewart won nine games in each of his three seasons but was ultimately pushed out when a bizarre coach-in-waiting arrangement with Dana Holgorsen blew up in WVU's face. C+)

COLORADO STATE -- Steve Fairchild > Sunny Lubick: After being away from the college game for seven years, the former CSU quarterback returns to coach his alma mater. Fairchild inherits an unstable situation with not a lot to work with. C

(And he made that worse by going 16-33, winning just three games each in the past three seasons before getting fired. F)

SOUTHERN MISSISSIPPI -- Larry Fedora > Jeff Bower: Of all the post-season firings/involuntary resignations, this one takes the cake. Just what exactly did Bower do wrong? And this takes nothing away from Fedora, who may prove himself to be a fine coach. C-

(Fedora was 33-19 in his four seasons at USM, taking the Golden Eagles to an upset of undefeated Houston in the Conference USA title game this season before moving on to North Carolina. A-)

HAWAI'I -- Greg McMackin > June Jones: No offense to McMackin, because someone has to be named coach, but just how did Hawai'i let Jones get away? In the meantime, almost nothing has changed with UH's broken down facilities. F

(The Warriors returned to mediocrity after McMackin took over, going 29-25 before he resigned last week. C)

See, for the most part, the end result didn't meet the expectations, for better or for worse. Of those 18 new coaches who got hired after the 2007 season, fewer than half (seven) are still with their schools. Eight were fired or pushed out, including two after just three seasons, while three moved on to better jobs.

So what of the new hires of 2012? It's best not to jump to conclusions. Don't grade them now. Wait 'till 2015.

Monday, December 5, 2011

The Guru's BlogPoll (Final Regular Season)

The Guru's BlogPoll ballot (final regular season), with notes below:
* The vote is to rank teams based on performance, not to arrange a national championship game, so LSU-Alabama at 1-2 is really indisputable.

* The rest of the ballot more or less followed the form of last week, with the four teams losing conference championship games taking a plunge of varying degrees. The most disappointing among them was Houston, which really proved that it didn't belong on the top of the ballot with that pathetic effort against Southern Miss.

* Oklahoma stays on the ballot, but barely. This team has just completely fallen apart after being bit by the injury bug. For the record, I ranked the Sooners No. 1 in the preseason.

* The Pac-12 proved to be the most top-heavy conference, more so than even the SEC. Three teams are in the top 7, and then nobody else would even warrant consideration.

* No team came into the ballot this week and no team left.

* Conference-by-conference tally: SEC (5), Big Ten (5), Big 12 (4), Pac-12 (3), C-USA (2), MWC (2), ACC (2), Big East (1), Sun Belt (1).

Sunday, December 4, 2011

Dewey Beats Truman!

By now of course everybody knows there will be indeed a rematch in the BCS title game. And for the first time in six years, my final projections were not correct for the No. 2 spot.

Well, that happens. While I'm not particularly happy about that, I know I put forth an honest effort. It was close, and ultimately the human voters did what they did.

The rest of the projections were on target, especially with respect to Michigan and TCU. But that's of a small consolation.

I'm not closing down the comments section. If you want to come in and gloat and do whatever, be my guest. As for my long-time readers, I appreciate your continued support.

My BCS post-mortem will be at SB Nation on Monday morning. We'll look at the BCS matchups, as well as all the systemic problems that continue to plague the BCS.

Thanks as always. Here are the complete Final 2011 BCS Standings.

Saturday, December 3, 2011

No Rematch!

In a stunning turn of events, Oklahoma State will face LSU in the BCS Championship Game on Jan. 9, not Alabama, as had been widely believed until the wee hours Saturday night.

The final BCS Standings will be close between OSU and Alabama, with the computers locking in the Cowboys at No. 2 and Alabama at No. 3. And then it would be up to the voters to render their final verdict.

More of them will still have Alabama at No. 2, in both the coaches and Harris polls, but OSU's edge in the computers will be enough to overcome the Crimson Tide's advantage in the two human polls.

A few things that happened tonight turned the tide:

* Oklahoma State's impressive victory over Oklahoma was a resounding statement. The Cowboys proved that not only they could score, but they could play sound defense and cause game-changing turnovers.

* Virginia Tech's blowout loss against Clemson removed a direct competitor for the precious No. 2 votes, not to mention the all-important No. 3 votes. Remember, OSU was No. 5 in both polls coming into Saturday night's game.

* CBS's shameless and disingenuous cheerleading for Alabama ultimately will prove to have done more harm to the Tide than help. If CBS had done nothing, it's likely it wouldn't have caused enough voters to have such a revulsion to decline an LSU-Alabama rematch. Whereas Verne Lundquist and Gary Danielson definitely made the difference in Florida's favor in 2006, the opposite must be said in this case.

* Finally, the fact that the only other worthy 1-loss teams: Alabama, Stanford and Boise State all failed to win their respective conferences bolstered OSU's case. Even though the BCS never made that a requirement to reach the title game, many voters would like to consider that a prerequisite.

So that's the shocking conclusion to this strange regular season that really proved that LSU is unquestionably the best team in the land. But because of the system that we have, the Tigers will have to play one more game to make it official. They're probably glad that it won't be the Crimson Tide.

There will be more drama beyond the unveiling of the participants in the BCS title game. For my complete analysis see here at SB Nation.

Here's the projected final BCS Standings:

1. LSU, 2. Oklahoma State, 3. Alabama, 4. Stanford, 5. Oregon, 6. Boise State, 7. Arkansas, 8. Kansas State, 9. South Carolina, 10. Wisconsin, 11. Baylor, 12. Virginia Tech, 13. Michigan, 14. Houston, 15. Oklahoma, 16. Michigan State, 17. Clemson, 18. TCU, 19. Georgia, 20. Nebraska.

And the projected BCS bowl matchups:

BCS Championship: LSU (SEC champion, No. 1) vs. Oklahoma State (Big 12 champion, No. 2)

Rose Bowl: Oregon (Pac-12 champion) vs. Wisconsin (Big Ten champion)

Sugar Bowl: Alabama (at-large) vs. Stanford (at-large)

Fiesta Bowl: Kansas State (at-large) vs. Michigan (at-large)

Orange Bowl: Clemson (ACC champion) vs. West Virginia (Big East champion)
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