Just for poops and giggles let’s play out this conversation and break the options into two pools:Dont get me wrong. I am not pitching delusion. The question was criteria. I can get my head around someone who has run a mid-tier program solidly, provided the other criteria are met.
Youre mixing issues and wrong on the assumptions here. Very, very few head coaches make 6 mm. We pay enough for a HC and staff.Just for poops and giggles let’s play out this conversation and break the options into two pools:
1. Head coach from a lower tier school or conference
2. Coordinator from a major program
To be successful and knowing UM, I don’t think shelling out $6mm for a head coach would leave enough for the rest of the staff. I think it’s garbage that we are in this situation, but let’s just assume it as fact and remove paying for a competent successful HC from another school.
I disagree. We are well past the point where we can take a flier on someone without proven HC ability, imo. This is not a place to learn on the job at.
NFL coaches today arent good analogies because their organizations do most of what cfb coaches have to do, run by other people (GM, President, player personnel, etc.).
just because some of these types work out doesnt mean this is a risk we should take today.
Dont get me wrong. I am not pitching delusion. The question was criteria. I can get my head around someone who has run a mid-tier program solidly, provided the other criteria are met.
Youre mixing issues and wrong on the assumptions here. Very, very few head coaches make 6 mm. We pay enough for a HC and staff.
I agree, especially since it’s been so long that Miami fielded a well coached team that didn’t beat itself.Tbh the more and more I’ve thought about it over the years the less I care about “recruiting ties” and recruiting prowess from a HC. Give me a guy who has proven that he can do more with less over the course of several seasons and is sound on the X’s and O’s of football. Preferably an offensive mind.
The blue chips we need to win big will inevitably come if you prove your worth as a HC.
I really like Bill Clark, man.
He took over a 6-5 Jacksonville State team, won 11 games 1st yr and took them to the FCS playoffs
Next took over a folded UAB football program, got them 6 wins first yr, 8 wins second yr, 11 wins 3rd yr and the Conference championship, and they are on their way to another 10+ wins.
He’s from the South, and he knows how to rebuild programs, obviously. His offense is pretty balanced between pass/run. I like him as an up & comer .
Imagine you were hiring a HC for UM, for 2020. This situation. Now.
-What is the definition of success? What are the goals we expect a coach to achieve?
-What does it take to accomplish them?
-What resources do we have to work with? What do we need in place that we don’t have, and how will we get them?
Given all that, what are the hiring criteria? What really matters? What are the must haves Vs. ‘nice to haves.’ What are the real priorities? Experience, capbilities, personal traits, cultural fit...
Richt was tied for 15th, and the 8th highest paid coach was only 1 mm higher. We’re in the mix on comp for Hc. Staff and support, however, are lacking.The top 12 are all at or above $6mm. The top 20 are at or above $5mm. Assuming that we were willing to pay up to $5mm per year for a HC and have enough for an equally competent staff, who would you want?
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