Best head coaches to never win a national title

pimpcane1

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Best head coaches to never win a national title - Men's College Basketball Blog- ESPN

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Bill Snyder, Kansas State: There are remarkable turnarounds, and there is what Snyder has done at Kansas State. He took over the worst program in FBS history and guided it to two Big 12 titles, four division titles and six top-10 finishes, including four straight from 1997 and 2000. The four-time Big 12 Coach of the Year and two-time national coach of the year guided Kansas State to three Fiesta Bowls and one Cotton Bowl.

Gary Patterson, TCU: Patterson is the reason TCU returned to a major conference -- and why it has quickly become a championship contender. He led the Horned Frogs to championships in three leagues (Big 12, Mountain West and Conference USA) and twice claimed national coach of the year honors (2009, 2014). TCU went 13-0 in 2010 but didn’t qualify for the BCS title game because of its league affiliation. The 2014 Frogs looked national-title worthy but ended up two spots outside the inaugural playoff.

Mark Richt, Miami: Richt’s recent firing at Georgia underscored what he didn’t do in Athens, but let’s not forget what he did do. He went 145-51 with the Bulldogs, winning two league championships and six SEC East division titles. The two-time SEC Coach of the Year recorded seven top-10 finishes and two top-3 finishes (2002, 2007). Richt won seven of his first nine bowls, including two Sugar Bowls.

Chris Petersen, Washington: Petersen put himself on the national radar with brilliant play calls in Boise State’s win against Oklahoma in the 2007 Fiesta Bowl. He led Boise State to two top-five finishes and two BCS bowl wins in his first four seasons and recorded four top-10 finishes at the school. A two-time national coach of the year recipient, Petersen had Boise State positioned for a possible BCS title game appearance in 2010 before Nevada ended the Broncos’ 24-game win streak.

David Shaw, Stanford: Shaw has less experience than any coach on this list, but his immediate impact at Stanford is remarkable. He has guided the Cardinal to three Pac-12 titles, four Pac-12 North division titles and two Rose Bowl championships in his first five seasons. The three-time Pac-12 Coach of the Year has three top-seven finishes, including last season's No. 3, and has finished outside the top 11 just once (2014).
 
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I wondered why the list only addressed current coaches, then I saw this:

Criteria for eligibility: For college football coaches, it’s never reaching the College Football Playoff (2014-15 seasons) or the BCS title game (1998-2013 seasons).

So its just a list of the alleged best since 1998. Fairly small timeframe for the life of college football.
 
Interesting, to say the least. In some ways you can equate that to recruiting...they did more with less. You might also construe CMR as not being in this same "more with less" category but being in the Bama SEC and trying (I think, to run a clean program in an arguably "dirty" league probably had some effect on that. In fertile South Florida, an with a national reach - perhaps CMR can grab that gold ring... at worst I believe he returns the U to respectability and sets the table to return to national significance.
 
I have mad respect for coach Snyder. He brought that program back twice .
 
Interesting, to say the least. In some ways you can equate that to recruiting...they did more with less. You might also construe CMR as not being in this same "more with less" category but being in the Bama SEC and trying (I think, to run a clean program in an arguably "dirty" league probably had some effect on that. In fertile South Florida, an with a national reach - perhaps CMR can grab that gold ring... at worst I believe he returns the U to respectability and sets the table to return to national significance.

Richt also had to play Urban Meyer on an annual basis for five or six seasons. Did he ever beat Meyer?
 
How about Worst Coaches to Win a National Title?

Larry Coker (Miami)
Gene Chisik (Auburn)
 
Best head coaches to never win a national title - Men's College Basketball Blog- ESPN

COLLEGE FOOTBALL

Bill Snyder, Kansas State: There are remarkable turnarounds, and there is what Snyder has done at Kansas State. He took over the worst program in FBS history and guided it to two Big 12 titles, four division titles and six top-10 finishes, including four straight from 1997 and 2000. The four-time Big 12 Coach of the Year and two-time national coach of the year guided Kansas State to three Fiesta Bowls and one Cotton Bowl.

Gary Patterson, TCU: Patterson is the reason TCU returned to a major conference -- and why it has quickly become a championship contender. He led the Horned Frogs to championships in three leagues (Big 12, Mountain West and Conference USA) and twice claimed national coach of the year honors (2009, 2014). TCU went 13-0 in 2010 but didn’t qualify for the BCS title game because of its league affiliation. The 2014 Frogs looked national-title worthy but ended up two spots outside the inaugural playoff.

Mark Richt, Miami: Richt’s recent firing at Georgia underscored what he didn’t do in Athens, but let’s not forget what he did do. He went 145-51 with the Bulldogs, winning two league championships and six SEC East division titles. The two-time SEC Coach of the Year recorded seven top-10 finishes and two top-3 finishes (2002, 2007). Richt won seven of his first nine bowls, including two Sugar Bowls.

Chris Petersen, Washington: Petersen put himself on the national radar with brilliant play calls in Boise State’s win against Oklahoma in the 2007 Fiesta Bowl. He led Boise State to two top-five finishes and two BCS bowl wins in his first four seasons and recorded four top-10 finishes at the school. A two-time national coach of the year recipient, Petersen had Boise State positioned for a possible BCS title game appearance in 2010 before Nevada ended the Broncos’ 24-game win streak.

David Shaw, Stanford: Shaw has less experience than any coach on this list, but his immediate impact at Stanford is remarkable. He has guided the Cardinal to three Pac-12 titles, four Pac-12 North division titles and two Rose Bowl championships in his first five seasons. The three-time Pac-12 Coach of the Year has three top-seven finishes, including last season's No. 3, and has finished outside the top 11 just once (2014).

Shaw and Patterson were two of my pipedream replacements for Golden. There was no chance, so I had to put down the pipe.
 
Interesting, to say the least. In some ways you can equate that to recruiting...they did more with less. You might also construe CMR as not being in this same "more with less" category but being in the Bama SEC and trying (I think, to run a clean program in an arguably "dirty" league probably had some effect on that. In fertile South Florida, an with a national reach - perhaps CMR can grab that gold ring... at worst I believe he returns the U to respectability and sets the table to return to national significance.

Richt also had to play Urban Meyer on an annual basis for five or six seasons. Did he ever beat Meyer?

He went 1-5 against Meyer at Florida. Ouch.

Edit: Looking back, Georgia had a really rough stretch in the SEC for awhile. Surprisingly bad, actually.
 
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Interesting, to say the least. In some ways you can equate that to recruiting...they did more with less. You might also construe CMR as not being in this same "more with less" category but being in the Bama SEC and trying (I think, to run a clean program in an arguably "dirty" league probably had some effect on that. In fertile South Florida, an with a national reach - perhaps CMR can grab that gold ring... at worst I believe he returns the U to respectability and sets the table to return to national significance.

Richt also had to play Urban Meyer on an annual basis for five or six seasons. Did he ever beat Meyer?

He went 1-5 against Meyer at Florida. Ouch.

Edit: Looking back, Georgia had a really rough stretch in the SEC for awhile. Surprisingly bad, actually.

1-5? That's rough. Meyer had some really good teams with Tebow. Meyer carried a grudge against Richt after a 'predetermined excessive celebration penalty' on Georgia's first TD in the game Georgia won.
 
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