None, because only Nebraska (x2) and Georgia (Richt) have fired 9 win coaches for anything that wasn't scandal related.I did the numbers last year before the season, and of the coaches finishing in the top 25 in 2014, 75% of them finished with a better record than their predecessor in year one.
How many of their predecessors had 9 wins? That's a huge qualifier that puts us in pretty uncharted waters as far as comparison goes.
Wouldn't you say the "new coaches did better than their predecessor 75% of the time" is a bit of a specious argument then, if none of the other teams had fired a coach after a 9 win season? Of course most new coaches are going to do better than their predecessor if their predecessor was fired for going 0-1 or 1-10.
Let's stop calling it a rebuild and go back to calling it a transition. A rebuild takes 5 years, but a transition takes 1-2 at most. And that's what this should take, given our players and our division. I'm perfectly willing to give them the benefit of the doubt for the 2015 season, and put 100% of my faith behind Riley for 2016. But let's be honest, if we're in this same place next year, Riley's likely going to be gone after year 3.
But again let's call it a transition ( and not have the playground argument, "But EICHORST said REBUILD!?!?!" Eichorst calling it a rebuild was spin in response to a poor season. Any person in a position of power has to spin now and then, and if you disagree, I'd suggest you've never had any real power.) It's been a transition and many of the problems with last season can reasonably be attributed to the transition learning curve. Like any time a new boss shows up at your work, there is a learning curve -- both for the players and the coaches. At the very least, the players had to learn the new language and the coaches had to learn the players' tendencies so they could put them in the best position for victory, etc.
Now, if we're still talking about these same problems next year, then there's a legitimate beef with the coaches, as that would mean they're not learning from their mistakes. But in the mean time, let's just hope the problems from last season will fade away as we exit the transition period.
Because we were some fine-tuning (fewer interceptions, less bad late-game management) away from having a 10 win season, after all. Let's root for them to fix those problems this year, instead of rooting for them to spontaneously combust, which is what it seems like many of you are doing.