Andrew, I anticipated your question and thought about it.
Golden - the issue was, he didn’t really have so much success at a lower tier program. We didn’t do our homework there at all. Some posters were on this immediately. Miami nites IIRC was one. It’s critical to assess, and we blew that one - not just in the sense that it didn’t work in retrospect. Temple went up by changing conferences. And Golden traded a blip for a new gig. He was not well proven at a lower tier program(losing record, 3 of r losing seasons, and progress yes but against backdrop of dropping competitive level), and the things that you want to see a coach excel at, you couldn’t confirm he could do excellently. We reached too far, and projected onto him. He looked the part, Penn State, blah blah. And again, we projected CEO, which is a terrible theory to begin with, all because we believed UM’s situation makes it okay to hire a manager. False. We need a leader. A program builder.
Richt - Similar mistake. How much success did he really have? And due to what on his part? Major state program, great local talent, booster base. Overlap Clemson wasn’t yet rolling, FSU was declining, and Alabama only got rolling well into his tenure. Richt was in all likelihood a mirage. People projected onto him because they wanted to. He isn’t a schematic innovator. The UM connection and CEO theories are fails. He isn’t, IMO, a real leader. He’s a guy who was there, looked the part, and thought he was great when he wasn’t. And again, the ‘local talent’ theory is just bunk. It’s entirely the wrong way to look at this program’s needs, IMO.
Fuente kind of fits my theory. Coordinator, scheme guy. And good at that. But not a program builder or leader. Maybe he’ll turn it around, but I doubt it. Taggart, lol.
It’ll be interesting to see how Herman and Frost do at UT and NB. Heupel and Riley seem like really good coaches. The solid program, not extraordinary types (but good coaches, dependable and could do it with time) include Whittingham, Chryst, Ferentz, Cutcliffe, Mullen, Gundy, Dantonio, Fitzgerald, Malzahn.
There aren’t that many program build type coaches, and UM as a program at this point is a complete rebuild. We cannot expect to win just with a clever scheme guy. I’m not sure anyone should expect that, but clearly without the infrastructure here, we cannot.
The guys who could turn our program are unattainable unfortunately. Peterson and Patterson ain’t coming. Obviously Saban, Dabo, those types aren’t. Matt Campbell is an interesting guy to watch. Not yet sure how to classify him.