Jurich

This was very interesting and obviously gives all the credibility you need to @DMoney and his info on this.

BTW, for a search firm not only to do this BUT for it to leak and essentially embarrass its customer mid-process should spell the end of that search firm's existence in the world of college athletics and a real school would try to make that happen.
 
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Epstein snitched to the firm that was being used for optics for who they really want. Epstein won’t move his fat *** out of the way because of his giant ego.

I told you guys for weeks that he’s a ******* weasel and he’s doing what weasels do. He knows he’ll lose his power if the new blood gets their way and starts writing the checks. He’s an egotistical mongoloid who’s been behind the James and Diaz hires. He snuck around them once with hiring Diaz in the first place and now he’s trying to do it again.
Great use of mongoloid.

Epstein needs to be put in his place. Either…

A. It’ll happen if he doesn’t get his way; would be a strong indication that his opinion didn’t matter if we went ahead and hired a strong AD, but more importantly, fired Manny.

B. He gets his way with the hirings, but he’ll be put in place by this fanbase, who will know exactly which individuals are responsible for keeping up this incompetence.
 
WOOOOOAHH. Hold up there big boy. You sure about that? Where did you see this? Did you specifically see Miami listed as a client on that same site just yesterday or recently?

SPEAK TO US.

There is no evidence of this at all. People are reading way too much into the fact that the search firm's ****** website doesn't have an open req listed for UM AD. There are two much simpler explanations:

1). We haven't been their client long enough for them to have gotten a req posted yet, and/or
2). UM didn't want their req posted. This makes sense if you know that most of the best/most bigtime jobs are never posted on Indeed or Linkedin for you to simply submit a resume. Plus I doubt UM would want our AD position just sitting there among the likes of FIU and Colorado's associate AD search.

This is the time of panic, so people are finding literally everything to panic about. I don't blame people for doing this because of what the last 18 years have shown us. But lets panic about things that deserve it, not made up stuff or stuff for which there are a multitude of other more likely explanations.
 
I don’t have any inside info but take this with a grain of salt:

1. The search firms doesn’t tell Miami what to do. They are simply a means to discretely outsource the searching and interview process thru
2. The statement from 247 is vague and be spun in 20 different ways. I do firmly believe that Jurich and Miami had conversations. I also believe those conversations were done outside the search firm

Is he currently a candidate? Who knows. Along with who the other possible candidates are.

I feel like there is a lot of false or partial truths being leaked on purpose right now
Jurich as a legit option always seemed off to me. This is probably our biggest hire ever and they were going to hire a guy like Jurich whose been unemployed since 2017 and got caught up in all that Rick Pattino stuff? Just always seemed off to me.
 
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D$ been lurking here all day
 
Lane messing with all of us.
Hopefully he’s fcking with the BOT letting them know he’s not waiting forever….I’d be very surprised if LSU hired Lane simply because O got fired for doing a lot of what Lane had been accused of as much and even more so than losing.

Supposedly the final straw on O was he tried hitting on the wife of one of the big boosters and she went to her husband about it and the hammer dropped because of an accumulation of stuff like this.i mean he had one of his women's kids getting in the middle of practices running routes and sHT without saying anything and ****ed off not only the coaches but players as well…
 
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I really don’t think there is a buyout.


After Al Golden took the Hurricanes to court in October 2018 seeking more than $3 million in additional money -- three years after his dismissal -- the Miami Hurricanes did a smart thing:

They made sure they protected themselves when they hired Manny Diaz to replace the retired Mark Richt just 2 ½ months later.

According to a UM athletic department administrator, the Hurricanes won’t owe Diaz his entire remaining salary if they fire him during or after this season or at any time before the conclusion of his contract.


Diaz’s five-year contract runs through 2023. He is due to make between $6.5 million and $8 million combined over the 2022 and 2023 seasons if he is retained for the duration of the contract, according to the source.

He could make close to $8 million over 2022 and 2023 if all incentives are met; incentives involving wins and academic benchmarks -- among other things -- are sometimes included in coaching contracts and Diaz’s deal is no different.

But if Diaz is fired and lands another job, the amount owed to him would be significantly offset by salary from his new job. It wouldn’t matter whether the new job is as a head coach or defensive coordinator or a position coach; the offset would still lower the amount of what UM owes him.


If Diaz is fired and remains unemployed through the end of the 2023 season (unlikely), he would be owed more than half of what’s left on his contract, but not the full amount or very close to it.


So if Diaz is fired -- whether he gets another job before the end of 2023 or not - UM would not need to compensate him dollar for dollar with what’s left on his contract.

Diaz’s job is likely safe for the remainder of 2021, unless there are several more embarrassing or lopsided losses, which could conceivably prompt an in-season dismissal.

If UM wins the Coastal Division, it’s certainly conceivable - if not likely - that he could even receive a contract extension at the end of this, his third year in the job.
So basically we have our thumb up our keyster for no reason…
 
I really don’t think there is a buyout.


After Al Golden took the Hurricanes to court in October 2018 seeking more than $3 million in additional money -- three years after his dismissal -- the Miami Hurricanes did a smart thing:

They made sure they protected themselves when they hired Manny Diaz to replace the retired Mark Richt just 2 ½ months later.

According to a UM athletic department administrator, the Hurricanes won’t owe Diaz his entire remaining salary if they fire him during or after this season or at any time before the conclusion of his contract.


Diaz’s five-year contract runs through 2023. He is due to make between $6.5 million and $8 million combined over the 2022 and 2023 seasons if he is retained for the duration of the contract, according to the source.

He could make close to $8 million over 2022 and 2023 if all incentives are met; incentives involving wins and academic benchmarks -- among other things -- are sometimes included in coaching contracts and Diaz’s deal is no different.

But if Diaz is fired and lands another job, the amount owed to him would be significantly offset by salary from his new job. It wouldn’t matter whether the new job is as a head coach or defensive coordinator or a position coach; the offset would still lower the amount of what UM owes him.


If Diaz is fired and remains unemployed through the end of the 2023 season (unlikely), he would be owed more than half of what’s left on his contract, but not the full amount or very close to it.


So if Diaz is fired -- whether he gets another job before the end of 2023 or not - UM would not need to compensate him dollar for dollar with what’s left on his contract.

Diaz’s job is likely safe for the remainder of 2021, unless there are several more embarrassing or lopsided losses, which could conceivably prompt an in-season dismissal.

If UM wins the Coastal Division, it’s certainly conceivable - if not likely - that he could even receive a contract extension at the end of this, his third year in the job.

Huh? This just says they won't owe the whole contract. As in two years of full salary. ~$8M or so. The reported $2M is greatly reduced, and is a good deal for the U. It's also worth waiting a few days for, especially since they've been in contact with potential coaches and AD's for a while now. Parallel conversations.
 
Epstein snitched to the firm that was being used for optics for who they really want. Epstein won’t move his fat *** out of the way because of his giant ego.

I told you guys for weeks that he’s a ******* weasel and he’s doing what weasels do. He knows he’ll lose his power if the new blood gets their way and starts writing the checks. He’s an egotistical mongoloid who’s been behind the James and Diaz hires. He snuck around them once with hiring Diaz in the first place and now he’s trying to do it again.
Just our luck. The wrong Epstein was murdered in prison.
 
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Huh? This just says they won't owe the whole contract. As in two years of full salary. ~$8M or so. The reported $2M is greatly reduced, and is a good deal for the U. It's also worth waiting a few days for, especially since they've been in contact with potential coaches and AD's for a while now. Parallel conversations.
It’s been under the radar, but a couple different sources, most recently the Orange Bowl Boys, stated there is no drop down date for Manny’s salary. So this Dec 1 date being referenced “might” not be accurate.

I do t know who to trust anymore. Without reading the contract it’s a total guess at this point
 
It’s been under the radar, but a couple different sources, most recently the Orange Bowl Boys, stated there is no drop down date for Manny’s salary. So this Dec 1 date being referenced “might” not be accurate.

I do t know who to trust anymore. Without reading the contract it’s a total guess at this point

100
 
This was very interesting and obviously gives all the credibility you need to @DMoney and his info on this.

BTW, for a search firm not only to do this BUT for it to leak and essentially embarrass its customer mid-process should spell the end of that search firm's existence in the world of college athletics and a real school would try to make that happen.
They've apparently had a hand in the placement of the Pac-12 and ACC commissioners. This is more political than it is football. And, that may very well be the root problem for us. Lots of interesting layers to this one.
 
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