np_husker
Starter
Struggling powers need time to bounce back
October 24, 2007
Matt Hayes
The good doctor strode to the podium last week, and an entire state exhaled.
The healing had begun.
Hundreds of miles -- and another world -- away, Miami (Fla.) and Florida State prepared for the be-all, end-all that has dissolved into a free fall. There was some strange symmetry to the whole thing: three elite, standard-bearing programs drowning in mediocrity.
"There is no magic cure," says Tom Osborne, Nebraska's iconic former coach who was lured back to Lincoln as interim athletic director/savior.
There's no quick fix, either -- especially for three college football programs that have fallen so far so fast. How far? In the '90s, Nebraska, Miami and Florida State won six national titles. Since the start of the 2004 season, they've lost 51 games.
Of the three, Miami is in the best shape to bounce back. The 'Canes promoted recruiting whiz Randy Shannon to coach last offseason, and Miami already has locked up key high school recruits in South Florida -- something that had been a challenge for the 'Canes the past three years.
But what about Nebraska and Florida State? Osborne's return means 'Huskers coach Bill Callahan is out -- possibly as soon as this week. Nebraska must find a charismatic coach (see: Wake Forest's Jim Grobe) who can heal a fractured fan base and quickly wean the team off Callahan's finesse philosophy on both sides of the ball.
Florida State's road back, meanwhile, is uncertain and may not come into focus until legendary coach Bobby Bowden decides to retire -- which isn't going to happen any time soon. Athletic director Dave Hart is the only dissenting voice among the school's administration; president T.K. Wetherell played for Bowden when Bowden was a receivers coach in the 1960s and says the coach will stay as long as he wants. There's a reason Wetherell announced in May that Hart's contract wouldn't be extended past January 2009. Read between the lines and understand that Bowden will be at FSU until at least the end of the 2008 season, when a new athletic director can lead a search for a new coach.
In other words, unlike at Nebraska and Miami, the healing at Florida State is years away.
HELP WANTED
The pink slips aren't out yet, but these five prime college football head coaching jobs will be open at the end of this season:
1. Michigan. It's LSU coach Les Miles' job if he wants it.
2. Nebraska. The program is a desperate for a leader, and Wake Forest's Jim Grobe would be the perfect fit.
3. Texas A&M. The oil barons in Houston will pay whatever it takes to bring in the right guy.
4. Clemson. Tommy Bowden's erratic era is coming to an end.
5. Arkansas. Butch Davis wouldn't leave North Carolina after one season ... would he?
Matt Hayes is a staff writer for Sporting News.
October 24, 2007
Matt Hayes
The good doctor strode to the podium last week, and an entire state exhaled.
The healing had begun.
Hundreds of miles -- and another world -- away, Miami (Fla.) and Florida State prepared for the be-all, end-all that has dissolved into a free fall. There was some strange symmetry to the whole thing: three elite, standard-bearing programs drowning in mediocrity.
"There is no magic cure," says Tom Osborne, Nebraska's iconic former coach who was lured back to Lincoln as interim athletic director/savior.
There's no quick fix, either -- especially for three college football programs that have fallen so far so fast. How far? In the '90s, Nebraska, Miami and Florida State won six national titles. Since the start of the 2004 season, they've lost 51 games.
Of the three, Miami is in the best shape to bounce back. The 'Canes promoted recruiting whiz Randy Shannon to coach last offseason, and Miami already has locked up key high school recruits in South Florida -- something that had been a challenge for the 'Canes the past three years.
But what about Nebraska and Florida State? Osborne's return means 'Huskers coach Bill Callahan is out -- possibly as soon as this week. Nebraska must find a charismatic coach (see: Wake Forest's Jim Grobe) who can heal a fractured fan base and quickly wean the team off Callahan's finesse philosophy on both sides of the ball.
Florida State's road back, meanwhile, is uncertain and may not come into focus until legendary coach Bobby Bowden decides to retire -- which isn't going to happen any time soon. Athletic director Dave Hart is the only dissenting voice among the school's administration; president T.K. Wetherell played for Bowden when Bowden was a receivers coach in the 1960s and says the coach will stay as long as he wants. There's a reason Wetherell announced in May that Hart's contract wouldn't be extended past January 2009. Read between the lines and understand that Bowden will be at FSU until at least the end of the 2008 season, when a new athletic director can lead a search for a new coach.
In other words, unlike at Nebraska and Miami, the healing at Florida State is years away.
HELP WANTED
The pink slips aren't out yet, but these five prime college football head coaching jobs will be open at the end of this season:
1. Michigan. It's LSU coach Les Miles' job if he wants it.
2. Nebraska. The program is a desperate for a leader, and Wake Forest's Jim Grobe would be the perfect fit.
3. Texas A&M. The oil barons in Houston will pay whatever it takes to bring in the right guy.
4. Clemson. Tommy Bowden's erratic era is coming to an end.
5. Arkansas. Butch Davis wouldn't leave North Carolina after one season ... would he?
Matt Hayes is a staff writer for Sporting News.