Real talk - why the old guard of the UM BOT doesn't want Jurich

Jurich is a guy that gets stuff done. The problem is the methods to get stuff done.

I've been slowly warming to the likelihood that he won't be the guy:
1) There are red flags. The article highlighted it well.
2) He's been out of employment for several years, which suggests other programs won't touch him (and those in that field likely have way more intel and chatter than we have the benefit of).
3) According to D$, the search firm doesn't want him involved.
4) UM historically has cared about public perception and optics. The optics aren't good. See point 1.

He'd be my choice but as OP mentioned, there are real stumbling blocks here.

This is sort of where I sit on Jurich.

I'd be thrilled if we got him along with Alonzo in a football ops type role with the potential of grooming him to be the full-on AD in 5-10 years, and either Mario or Lane as HC. But the question remains, that is a lot of baggage with some truly concerning issues that are listed there. It's the kind of stuff that can fly under the radar at a place like Louisville, but could very likely end up getting our program cancelled if repeated here.

At the end of the day, I don't think he should be off the list altogether, he should absolutely be interviewed, even if only to get his vision and perspective on what we need to do next. That kind of insight that you can get from a sit down during the interview process is free, but priceless.

That being said, he can't be the only fish in the sea. If there are other candidates who come with real experience and gravitas, minus the ethical baggage, but including a truly revolutionary/evolutionary vision for the football program in specific and the Hecht in general; and potentially a younger candidate with more tread on the tires and a blazing desire to demonstrate the size of their ****, I say let's do it.

Are we allowed to say/think that in here?
 
Advertisement
This is sort of where I sit on Jurich.

I'd be thrilled if we got him along with Alonzo in a football ops type role with the potential of grooming him to be the full-on AD in 5-10 years, and either Mario or Lane as HC. But the question remains, that is a lot of baggage with some truly concerning issues that are listed there. It's the kind of stuff that can fly under the radar at a place like Louisville, but could very likely end up getting our program cancelled if repeated here.

At the end of the day, I don't think he should be off the list altogether, he should absolutely be interviewed, even if only to get his vision and perspective on what we need to do next. That kind of insight that you can get from a sit down during the interview process is free, but priceless.

That being said, he can't be the only fish in the sea. If there are other candidates who come with real experience and gravitas, minus the ethical baggage, but including a truly revolutionary/evolutionary vision for the football program in specific and the Hecht in general; and potentially a younger candidate with more tread on the tires and a blazing desire to demonstrate the size of their ****, I say let's do it.

Are we allowed to say/think that in here?
A sub board for dycks? @Andrew
 
I agree with your conclusion and assessment but sometimes you have to say ***** the optics.
It's more than just optics, though.

The NCAA lives under our bed, and that is not just imagination.

If this guy was the only AD left on the planet, I'd be with you and say **** it.

But in the real world and for where we sit right now, you've got to look at him against the pool of other interested candidates. If we make the ridiculous assumption that this school can actually get anything right when it comes to athletics, I've got to feel that we should and can do better than a re-tread who hasn't worked in years and has a past ridden with scandal.
 
Last edited:
As "compromise names" with "qualified resumes" emerge (Nunez), we need to stop debating the "merits of this guy vs. the drawbacks of that guy".

From a pure resume standpoint, Jurich is the best candidate and has accomplished the most.

But to the old guard of the BOT, he represents an Alpha who will become the most powerful person on the campus, and someone who will build an independent power base. The only prior comparable that UM has is Sam Jankovich, and we have Emeriti Trustees who were around for the Jankovich years, so let's not act like this is ancient history.

I am going to post a link to an ESPN article FROM FOUR YEARS AGO. If any of us can Google it in 5 seconds, then it is just as easy for an old guard Trustee to read this and get scared about letting Jurich take UM into the future.

I'll also cut-paste some relevant lines, for the "Cliff's Notes" crowd.

Short summary, this is NOT the UM BOT saying "we want a puppet". This is the old guard saying "we don't want an Alpha Jankovich that will eclipse our power".

Enjoy (or not)...



The morning after the FBI's announcement, Dr. Gregory Postel, the interim president, removed not only Hall of Fame basketball coach Rick Pitino but also athletic director Tom Jurich, one of the state's most powerful people. Over the past 20 years, Jurich had built a sports empire on top of a midlevel commuter school near the Ohio River, transforming the campus and infusing a genteel Southern city that lacked a professional team with the excitement of big-time sports. Jurich was so successful generating money that "I wished I could turn them upside down and shake out their pocket change for the academic side," says Thomas B. Byers, a professor emeritus in the English department.

Jurich is a man of average height, but even at 61, he carries himself with a pugnacious, intimidating intensity. Charming and warm one minute, he is sometimes defensive and suspicious. As athletic director, Jurich rarely texted or used email, fearful it could be used against him. "Why have more fodder for people?" he says. "You know how I communicated with people? I picked up the phone, and I went to their face." Since the university began digging into his records, he says, "That's the question I get most: 'How do you conduct business?' Well, I think we conducted it pretty **** good."

Louisville's athletics budget then was $16.5 million. Jurich embarked on an ambitious growth strategy that would solve Louisville's Title IX problems and build up nonrevenue sports such as swimming and soccer while ensuring that the basketball and football teams were successful enough to support the enterprise.

The strategy required prodigious cash; by this year, Louisville's athletics budget was up to $104.5 million. "He treated his donors like investors," says Jurich's friend Larry Benz, a member of the Louisville Athletic Association, which oversees the department. Jurich built $280 million in arenas, playing fields and athletic offices by convincing rich people of the facilities' vital importance. "I can give $5 million to stem cell research and it's gonna help stem cell research," says Dr. Mark Lynn, an optometry-chain owner whose name adorns the soccer complex. "I give $5 million to a soccer stadium and it's gonna help everything." Lynn says sports bring the school visibility.

Waldron, the sports marketing director, calls Jurich "probably the finest leader I ever worked for," pointing out that he promoted women inside and outside the department. "He's a feminist, really," she says.

MUCH OF THE athletic department's finances was shrouded in secrecy, hidden from the Louisville Athletic Association and the board of trustees. Two former trustees told Outside the Lines that they were unaware of large real estate transactions involving the athletic department and the Louisville Foundation, the school's endowment, which raises money for education and research.

Dawn Heinecken, a professor who sits on the athletic association board, says the board learned about the Adidas deal "after it was announced publicly. That was the first I heard about it."

James Ramsey, who was president of both the university and the foundation, resigned last year amid allegations that he mismanaged endowment funds. Ramsey and Jurich had a close working relationship: Ramsey, in secret, approved additional compensation that earned Jurich an average of $2.77 million annually over the past seven years and approved several real estate transactions that benefited the athletic department. The Louisville Courier-Journal reported that Jurich's perks included tax "gross-ups" -- meaning the university paid some of his taxes -- membership in three country clubs and premium seats at the Kentucky Derby.

Jurich pulled in far more than the $1.4 million base salary that ranked him among the highest-paid ADs in the nation. Including other compensation, he earned $5.3 million in 2016, which, as The Courier-Journal points out, was more than the budgets of the biology, English, history and math departments. Jurich and his wife have vacation homes in Clearwater Beach and in Steamboat Springs, Colorado. Their son Mark, a former pro baseball player, was paid an average of $133,545 to work as senior associate athletic director for development. To circumvent Louisville's nepotism policy, most of that salary was paid by the Louisville Foundation. Earlier this year, before the Adidas deal was announced, Jurich's daughter Haley, who has experience in sports marketing, was hired by the company to serve as a liaison between Adidas and Louisville. (She was initially placed on administrative leave after the FBI scandal and is planning to move to company headquarters in Portland, Oregon.) Pitino was to make $7.7 million this season in total pay. He is suing the Louisville Athletic Association for more than $35 million, as well as Adidas, which terminated a personal services contract that was believed to pay him well over $1 million annually.

And let's not overlook THIS gem:

The athletic department's unfettered growth was undented by the scandals that occurred under Jurich's watch. Jurich refused to fire Pitino despite a string of public embarrassments, including Pitino's affair with a woman who was later sent to prison for trying to extort him, and "Strippergate," in which a Pitino assistant coach, over a period of four years, brought in dancers and prostitutes to entertain recruits at a university dorm. Louisville is appealing NCAA sanctions for Strippergate and if denied will be stripped of 123 wins, including its 2013 national title. In 2013, Jurich retained a former assistant football coach, even after the NCAA had sanctioned the coach for receiving and handing out thousands of dollars while at the University of Miami.

Jurich sought to neutralize the scandals and shape the athletic department's image by controlling the local media,
according to interviews with more than half a dozen journalists and media executives -- many of whom requested anonymity out of fear of reprisals from Louisville, even with Jurich gone. They described consistent and aggressive efforts to influence coverage, including abusive calls to radio talk-show hosts and executives by Jurich and his surrogates; threats to get advertising pulled from stations; and attempts to influence hiring and firing. Jurich denies he sought to influence advertisers or pressure the media. Nearly all of the media members identified Bob Gunnell, a public relations specialist, as Jurich's main surrogate and attack dog. The Louisville athletic department has a sports information group that employs 11 people, but contracts obtained by Outside the Lines show Jurich paid Gunnell's outside PR firm, Boxcar, up to $130,000 per year dating to 2014. Shortly after Jurich was fired, Gunnell cut ties with the university. He now represents Jurich personally.

The Adidas deal quadrupled the company's commitment to Louisville in cash and gear and was a huge bet on Jurich's vision. The average annual compensation of the 10-year contract was exceeded only by Under Armour's deal with UCLA ($18.7 million) and Nike's deals with Ohio State ($16.8 million) and Texas ($16.7 million) -- universities with at least twice Louisville's enrollment. Waldron says she was oblivious to the recruiting negotiations that allegedly were taking place simultaneously between representatives of Louisville and Adidas.

The next day, Jurich was summoned to the office of Postel, the interim president, who he says asked him to resign. Jurich refused.
Postel then handed him a letter informing him that he'd been placed on administrative leave, pending a decision by the board of trustees. The meeting lasted roughly 90 seconds, Jurich says.

On Oct. 18, Jurich was fired by a 10-3 vote of the trustees. His termination letter, delivered by Postel, was a two-page screed. Jurich had created "a culture of tolerance," Postel wrote, entered into secret transactions "for your own financial or other benefit" and engaged in "willful misconduct demonstrated through ineffective management, divisive leadership, unprofessional conduct, and a lack of collegiality best characterized as intimidation and bullying that extends from student government to the University's senior leadership. This has caused substantial damage to the University."



For the record, I am in favor of hiring Jurich. He won't be at UM for 20 years and he doesn't need to build us from ground zero. But THIS is what the old guard of the BOT fears, a guy who is powerful and will build his own power base, possibly raising more money than the University raises for academics.

You don't have to agree or like it, but if the BOT can find a four year old article that confirms their worst fears...you can at least understand why they are being so adamant in this BOT Civil War.
F the Old Guard....
 
Advertisement
As "compromise names" with "qualified resumes" emerge (Nunez), we need to stop debating the "merits of this guy vs. the drawbacks of that guy".

From a pure resume standpoint, Jurich is the best candidate and has accomplished the most.

But to the old guard of the BOT, he represents an Alpha who will become the most powerful person on the campus, and someone who will build an independent power base. The only prior comparable that UM has is Sam Jankovich, and we have Emeriti Trustees who were around for the Jankovich years, so let's not act like this is ancient history.

I am going to post a link to an ESPN article FROM FOUR YEARS AGO. If any of us can Google it in 5 seconds, then it is just as easy for an old guard Trustee to read this and get scared about letting Jurich take UM into the future.

I'll also cut-paste some relevant lines, for the "Cliff's Notes" crowd.

Short summary, this is NOT the UM BOT saying "we want a puppet". This is the old guard saying "we don't want an Alpha Jankovich that will eclipse our power".

Enjoy (or not)...



The morning after the FBI's announcement, Dr. Gregory Postel, the interim president, removed not only Hall of Fame basketball coach Rick Pitino but also athletic director Tom Jurich, one of the state's most powerful people. Over the past 20 years, Jurich had built a sports empire on top of a midlevel commuter school near the Ohio River, transforming the campus and infusing a genteel Southern city that lacked a professional team with the excitement of big-time sports. Jurich was so successful generating money that "I wished I could turn them upside down and shake out their pocket change for the academic side," says Thomas B. Byers, a professor emeritus in the English department.

Jurich is a man of average height, but even at 61, he carries himself with a pugnacious, intimidating intensity. Charming and warm one minute, he is sometimes defensive and suspicious. As athletic director, Jurich rarely texted or used email, fearful it could be used against him. "Why have more fodder for people?" he says. "You know how I communicated with people? I picked up the phone, and I went to their face." Since the university began digging into his records, he says, "That's the question I get most: 'How do you conduct business?' Well, I think we conducted it pretty **** good."

Louisville's athletics budget then was $16.5 million. Jurich embarked on an ambitious growth strategy that would solve Louisville's Title IX problems and build up nonrevenue sports such as swimming and soccer while ensuring that the basketball and football teams were successful enough to support the enterprise.

The strategy required prodigious cash; by this year, Louisville's athletics budget was up to $104.5 million. "He treated his donors like investors," says Jurich's friend Larry Benz, a member of the Louisville Athletic Association, which oversees the department. Jurich built $280 million in arenas, playing fields and athletic offices by convincing rich people of the facilities' vital importance. "I can give $5 million to stem cell research and it's gonna help stem cell research," says Dr. Mark Lynn, an optometry-chain owner whose name adorns the soccer complex. "I give $5 million to a soccer stadium and it's gonna help everything." Lynn says sports bring the school visibility.

Waldron, the sports marketing director, calls Jurich "probably the finest leader I ever worked for," pointing out that he promoted women inside and outside the department. "He's a feminist, really," she says.

MUCH OF THE athletic department's finances was shrouded in secrecy, hidden from the Louisville Athletic Association and the board of trustees. Two former trustees told Outside the Lines that they were unaware of large real estate transactions involving the athletic department and the Louisville Foundation, the school's endowment, which raises money for education and research.

Dawn Heinecken, a professor who sits on the athletic association board, says the board learned about the Adidas deal "after it was announced publicly. That was the first I heard about it."

James Ramsey, who was president of both the university and the foundation, resigned last year amid allegations that he mismanaged endowment funds. Ramsey and Jurich had a close working relationship: Ramsey, in secret, approved additional compensation that earned Jurich an average of $2.77 million annually over the past seven years and approved several real estate transactions that benefited the athletic department. The Louisville Courier-Journal reported that Jurich's perks included tax "gross-ups" -- meaning the university paid some of his taxes -- membership in three country clubs and premium seats at the Kentucky Derby.

Jurich pulled in far more than the $1.4 million base salary that ranked him among the highest-paid ADs in the nation. Including other compensation, he earned $5.3 million in 2016, which, as The Courier-Journal points out, was more than the budgets of the biology, English, history and math departments. Jurich and his wife have vacation homes in Clearwater Beach and in Steamboat Springs, Colorado. Their son Mark, a former pro baseball player, was paid an average of $133,545 to work as senior associate athletic director for development. To circumvent Louisville's nepotism policy, most of that salary was paid by the Louisville Foundation. Earlier this year, before the Adidas deal was announced, Jurich's daughter Haley, who has experience in sports marketing, was hired by the company to serve as a liaison between Adidas and Louisville. (She was initially placed on administrative leave after the FBI scandal and is planning to move to company headquarters in Portland, Oregon.) Pitino was to make $7.7 million this season in total pay. He is suing the Louisville Athletic Association for more than $35 million, as well as Adidas, which terminated a personal services contract that was believed to pay him well over $1 million annually.

And let's not overlook THIS gem:

The athletic department's unfettered growth was undented by the scandals that occurred under Jurich's watch. Jurich refused to fire Pitino despite a string of public embarrassments, including Pitino's affair with a woman who was later sent to prison for trying to extort him, and "Strippergate," in which a Pitino assistant coach, over a period of four years, brought in dancers and prostitutes to entertain recruits at a university dorm. Louisville is appealing NCAA sanctions for Strippergate and if denied will be stripped of 123 wins, including its 2013 national title. In 2013, Jurich retained a former assistant football coach, even after the NCAA had sanctioned the coach for receiving and handing out thousands of dollars while at the University of Miami.

Jurich sought to neutralize the scandals and shape the athletic department's image by controlling the local media,
according to interviews with more than half a dozen journalists and media executives -- many of whom requested anonymity out of fear of reprisals from Louisville, even with Jurich gone. They described consistent and aggressive efforts to influence coverage, including abusive calls to radio talk-show hosts and executives by Jurich and his surrogates; threats to get advertising pulled from stations; and attempts to influence hiring and firing. Jurich denies he sought to influence advertisers or pressure the media. Nearly all of the media members identified Bob Gunnell, a public relations specialist, as Jurich's main surrogate and attack dog. The Louisville athletic department has a sports information group that employs 11 people, but contracts obtained by Outside the Lines show Jurich paid Gunnell's outside PR firm, Boxcar, up to $130,000 per year dating to 2014. Shortly after Jurich was fired, Gunnell cut ties with the university. He now represents Jurich personally.

The Adidas deal quadrupled the company's commitment to Louisville in cash and gear and was a huge bet on Jurich's vision. The average annual compensation of the 10-year contract was exceeded only by Under Armour's deal with UCLA ($18.7 million) and Nike's deals with Ohio State ($16.8 million) and Texas ($16.7 million) -- universities with at least twice Louisville's enrollment. Waldron says she was oblivious to the recruiting negotiations that allegedly were taking place simultaneously between representatives of Louisville and Adidas.

The next day, Jurich was summoned to the office of Postel, the interim president, who he says asked him to resign. Jurich refused.
Postel then handed him a letter informing him that he'd been placed on administrative leave, pending a decision by the board of trustees. The meeting lasted roughly 90 seconds, Jurich says.

On Oct. 18, Jurich was fired by a 10-3 vote of the trustees. His termination letter, delivered by Postel, was a two-page screed. Jurich had created "a culture of tolerance," Postel wrote, entered into secret transactions "for your own financial or other benefit" and engaged in "willful misconduct demonstrated through ineffective management, divisive leadership, unprofessional conduct, and a lack of collegiality best characterized as intimidation and bullying that extends from student government to the University's senior leadership. This has caused substantial damage to the University."



For the record, I am in favor of hiring Jurich. He won't be at UM for 20 years and he doesn't need to build us from ground zero. But THIS is what the old guard of the BOT fears, a guy who is powerful and will build his own power base, possibly raising more money than the University raises for academics.

You don't have to agree or like it, but if the BOT can find a four year old article that confirms their worst fears...you can at least understand why they are being so adamant in this BOT Civil War.
Get this guy here YESTERDAY
 
Like I’ve said since this all started. You don’t want to hire Jurich? Fine. But, whoever you do hire should be ‘Jurich-like.’ Bold, independent, and visionary. The problem we face requires these and other traits.

Anything beneath those traits and evidence of them (clearly, not to Jurich’s level) in prior stops - even if another guy transformed some lesser aspect of a program - and we should be skeptical that we’re on a ‘new path.’

It’s infrastructure and leadership at the top. Then everything else.
It’s amazing how little of a feel the BOT has for the temperature in the room. Kinda like when trump ran, and everyone thought it was only a matter of time until political correctness kicked in and he would get knocked out of the primary. Nope.

All you have to do is turn on the tv or go on Twitter. The NIL, the coaching carousel, the money being thrown around… No one gives a **** about your “reputation” these days. Cutthroat and aggressive wins the day.

Seems like the more things change, the more they stay the same at Miami.
 
That would probably be the best we could hope for at UM. And even that's an uphill climb.
Once people have been given power, it's difficult to reign that power back in. Especially difficult when the overwhelming majority of those people are affluent to wealthy and have paid into the system.


Absolute truth.
 
Good thread OP.

Reports are saying we should have an announcement of a hired AD in a couple of days.

Just looking at the odds of a good or bad choice, UM is due to make the right decision inspite of it self, right?


That is my hope. Even anti-football Tad Foote signed off on hiring Sam Jankovich.

We need to hire a strong AD. Full stop.
 
Advertisement
Which wouldn't be a problem if there was any indication at all that they were targeting other candidates with the stature and agency of Jurich.


This is my primary concern. Wasn't it Chris Rock who had a routine about "you're only as faithful as your options"?

Sadly, the "Alpha AD" crowd doesn't have an option with the same experience/results as Jurich, though I think Alonzo would succeed. And the "Beta AD" crowd is ALL ABOUT options, each one worse than the last.
 
Advertisement
Agreed.

No one on this board - unless you're sitting in on the meetings - can give a realistic opinion on which candidate we should hire. But, generally, we can at least identify the problem in front of us and likelihood that the candidate has the traits/experience to solve them. What people seem to fail understanding is that we have a particular problem right now in 2021. We need an overhaul and transformation of an entire athletics department, inclusive of its biggest and most important sport (football). You're unlikely to achieve solving that problem with incremental steps. If the money is there (the previous excuse), then there should be evidence of more than incremental attempts by the types of candidates we seek.
Again, I am in total agreement.

They should have redacted Jurich’s name from that article and put it in front of the hiring committee as what UM should be looking for. You’ve been saying it for months (as have others) - you need VISION, first and foremost, and, to a lesser extent, balls and connections. But vision in the current climate, with realignment/NIL/playoff expansion etc, is the No. 1 trait, IMO.

As you said, it doesn’t have to be Jurich. But it needs to be a guy that can maneuver. And OP says the BOT doesn’t want that. Seems like the systematic issues will continue.

**how about the real estate stuff in the article?! This is the guy we need driving the bus. Maybe a new stadium never happens, but if anyone can do it, this looks like the guy.
 
Look, I'm a very sarcastic and very confrontational debater. I realize that I am not everyone's cup of tea. Or coffee. Or bleach.

But I don't have an agenda. I don't have a podcast. I don't care if people give me a thumbs up or a thumbs down.

I prefer honest discussion, honest debate, honest arguments. Anyone who doubts that simply doesn't know me.

The BOT are people too. Some good, some bad. Some informed, some uninformed. It does us no good to generalize or conclude that they act as a hive mind. There are differences of opinion. There are fights, some with merit, some that are petty. There are BOT politics (with a small p, not a capital P).

I like Jurich for what he has accomplished and could accomplish at UM. I am clear-eyed and open-minded, I know he has had issues in the past. Miami would need to set up some "internal controls" to insure that the relationship does not go off the tracks.

UItimately, I don't care if I'm "right" or "wrong", I just want the right outcome for UM. We need to hire a strong AD who will LEAD the program forward, not merely responding to "the most recent crisis" or "whether we need to improve our locker room or hire a couple of extra analysts".

There are multiple "strong AD" candidates, and multiple "same-old-same-old" candidates who seem oh-so-qualified on paper, but would be Beta-Blake-clones.

Be bold. Hire an alpha. Bring back the culture that made UM great and every coach and team will benefit.
Doesnt the article kind of highlight the intangibles that come with the AD position that Zo might not have?

I’m not saying Zo does or doesn’t. Or that if he doesnt, that he can’t learn. But this is clearly a political job, and you need to know how to work the room. Not only to raise funds, but to make things happen.

Idk. Until I read that article, I wanted Jurich but wanted Mario/Lane/etc more. Now… idk. Maybe the AD hire IS more important.
 
Advertisement
This is sort of where I sit on Jurich.

I'd be thrilled if we got him along with Alonzo in a football ops type role with the potential of grooming him to be the full-on AD in 5-10 years, and either Mario or Lane as HC. But the question remains, that is a lot of baggage with some truly concerning issues that are listed there. It's the kind of stuff that can fly under the radar at a place like Louisville, but could very likely end up getting our program cancelled if repeated here.

At the end of the day, I don't think he should be off the list altogether, he should absolutely be interviewed, even if only to get his vision and perspective on what we need to do next. That kind of insight that you can get from a sit down during the interview process is free, but priceless.

That being said, he can't be the only fish in the sea. If there are other candidates who come with real experience and gravitas, minus the ethical baggage, but including a truly revolutionary/evolutionary vision for the football program in specific and the Hecht in general; and potentially a younger candidate with more tread on the tires and a blazing desire to demonstrate the size of their ****, I say let's do it.

Are we allowed to say/think that in here?
How is he going to get the program cancelled?

The NCAA is hanging on by a string. They have no teeth right now. If you are ever going to do it, now is the time.

Selective enforcement worked before NIL. Now? You’re gonna enforce at Miami but not SEC schools? I think Miami would have the ACC behind them, which would trickle down to the other non-SEC P5 conferences.

This is the kind of unfounded worry that I feel is plaguing the thought process of the BOT. Everyone else is gambling. If UM doesn’t do the same, it will get left behind. And soon enough those 5 rings are going to be so far in the past that we are gonna be Nebraska.
 
This is my primary concern. Wasn't it Chris Rock who had a routine about "you're only as faithful as your options"?

Sadly, the "Alpha AD" crowd doesn't have an option with the same experience/results as Jurich, though I think Alonzo would succeed. And the "Beta AD" crowd is ALL ABOUT options, each one worse than the last.
There are a few prospects that have that potential, but a slam dunk like Jurich should not be available.

Mark Coyle and Dan Radakovich would be credible in that area, even if I'm not sure theyre really it either.

Ed Nunez and Brian White both might actually be it, but don't have the credibility.

The only way we end up with an Alpha here is if we end up with a candidate completely out of left field, someone from outside of sports management or at least college athletics. An accomplished attorney that has the right experience and a strong enough career that it provides them the independence to forge their own path. I think its similar to the model that found Echevarria for UHealth, but not sure a traditional search firm gets you there.
 
For the life of me I dont understand why someone getting fired in the middle of a scandal doesn't even cause a head turn from you guys... and the weird thing is this is Miami. Jurich had all this control and... then this thing happened.

There is a reason (whether good or not) he was fired. There were also questions about both his son and daughter in the scandal. No one has proven he did anything illegal but that's means nothing. That fact that there was smoke has to be one of the issues they have with Jurich and no they will not admit it.

Personally I would like him to be hired but I honestly dont care as much about who is hired as much as I care about the timing of the hire and the agreement this hire has with overhauling the ADs role in football, but I aint blind either. Miami is staying away from people associated with athletic scandals period.
 
Advertisement
Back
Top