OWHBut first, just how unusual is it to find a coaching transition like Nebraska’s in 2015.
I was curious this week. I wanted to know what happened to teams that fired a coach after a “successful” season — eight regular-season wins or more.
Do they get better or worse in year one? And what happens after that? What I found (no surprise) is that programs don’t fire coaches with good records very often. And when they do, they certainly don’t back up in year one as the Huskers have.
Since 2000, I found five cases similar to this year’s Huskers.
Didn't figure I should quote the whole thing so you can go read it for yourself.
Cliffs Notes: All five got significantly worse in the first year. A couple got marginally better somewhere in years 2-4 but all were fired (or resigned) in 3-6 years except Charlie Strong who isn't looking really great in year two.
Kind of backs up what I've said since long before the season started. At first glance these may be cited as evidence of transition year issues. But it's more likely that having such a bad year in your first year simply means you're not going to get it done.
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