Who's our next coach?

The team had some bad luck and bad games over the final stretch of the season. The extension made sense at the time.

I'm not sure what the answer is for Nebraska Football but I think playing the revolving door game with coaches is chasing fools gold. We have a head coach willing to adjust, adapt, and try different things. He is improving albeit at a much slower rate than any of us would like.
Regular season-
2023 5-7
2024 6-6
2025 7-5

This is after taking over this....
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Unless he drops to a losing season next year, I think Nebraska should retain his services and give him more time. If he is 5 wins or less next year, I think we should start shopping.
 
The team had some bad luck and bad games over the final stretch of the season. The extension made sense at the time.

I'm not sure what the answer is for Nebraska Football but I think playing the revolving door game with coaches is chasing fools gold. We have a head coach willing to adjust, adapt, and try different things. He is improving albeit at a much slower rate than any of us would like.
Regular season-
2023 5-7
2024 6-6
2025 7-5

This is after taking over this....
View attachment 23363

Unless he drops to a losing season next year, I think Nebraska should retain his services and give him more time. If he is 5 wins or less next year, I think we should start shopping.
you know that our identity is that we fire coaches. it's what our fan base always wants
 
you know that our identity is that we fire coaches. it's what our fan base always wants
Nebraska fans aren’t an anomaly in wanting a coach fired for poor performance look at Oklahoma in the 90’s and Florida State currently it’s pretty much the same situation Florida has had 11 coaches since 2002
 
Nebraska fans aren’t an anomaly in wanting a coach fired for poor performance look at Oklahoma in the 90’s and Florida State currently it’s pretty much the same situation
we have a rich tradition going back to solich of firing coaches. a tradition like no other school has. i was hoping that penn state might have taken that crown from us this year.
 
we have a rich tradition going back to solich of firing coaches. a tradition like no other school has. i was hoping that penn state might have taken that crown from us this year.
I like how you cut out the part of handsomehusker's post about Florida having 11 coaches since 2002 when we have had 7 (8 if you count Barney Cotton for one game).
 
The team had some bad luck and bad games over the final stretch of the season. The extension made sense at the time.

I'm not sure what the answer is for Nebraska Football but I think playing the revolving door game with coaches is chasing fools gold. We have a head coach willing to adjust, adapt, and try different things. He is improving albeit at a much slower rate than any of us would like.

Unless he drops to a losing season next year, I think Nebraska should retain his services and give him more time. If he is 5 wins or less next year, I think we should start shopping.
Matt didn’t earn an extension, but I don’t hate he was retained for continuity sake and because lord knows we weren’t getting anyone better. You could argue we would be the least desirable opening in this hiring cycle.

We don’t have the balls to look at the lower levels like IU did with Cig, but at this point, why not take a swing.
 
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Matt didn’t earn an extension, but I done hate he was retained for continuity sake and because lord knows we weren’t getting anyone better and you could argue we would be the least desirable opening in this hiring cycle.

We don’t have the balls to look at the lower levels like IU did with Cig, but at this point, why not take a swing.

Not that they wouldn't be improvements, but there are a lot more Lance Leipold/Chris Klieman/Craig Bohl types than there are Curt Cignettis when looking at successful lower level coaches. Solid coaches, not game changers.

If there were a magic "type" of coach (successful lower level head coach, coordinator at an elite school, experienced FBS coach) teams would all do that. Just looking at P4 playoff teams, you have elite coordinators in first time HC roles (Smart, Lanning, Day, Venables), lower division guys (Cignetti and I'll count McGuire), and guys who followed a mostly linear path of HC promotions (Cristobal, DeBoer, Elko). And then whatever you want to call Kiffin's path.
 
Number of coaches in the 2000’s
Washington 10
Kansas 8
Miami 9
nice.....a few teams have fired more coaches than we have. we are still known as the school that fires coaches...especially when they have had a little success. frank and bo got 9 win seasons.....and now Rhule has got us back into the bowl picture after years of wondering around in the wilderness and fans want him gone too.
 
Number of coaches in the 2000’s
Washington 10
Kansas 8
Miami 9

And that doesn't include schools like Auburn, who fired a coach two years removed from a National Championship. Or LSU who fired 9/10 win Brian Kelly midway through a totally unacceptable 7-6 season. Which came after firing Ed Orgeron who was two years removed from a National Championship. Texas gave Charlie Strong only three years, and Tom Herman four, and each of those was more successful than Rhule. Sarkasian was available because USC had fired him in the middle of his second season and gave the job to Clay Helton who delivered a Rose Bowl win and #3 ranking before being fired for repeated blowouts and lack of national championship contention in one fewer season than Bo Pelini had at Nebraska. Florida has fired the last four coaches in the middle of their fourth season.

A large contingent of Michigan alums wanted Jim Harbaugh out when he lost five in a row to Ohio State.

Nebraska has shown as much or more patience than every program we aspire to be. Plenty of schools have fired coaches with better resumes than Frank Solich and Bo Pelini. See "Jimbo FIsher"

Can we please stop blaming this on unreasonable fan expectations?
 
And that doesn't include schools like Auburn, who fired a coach two years removed from a National Championship. Or LSU who fired 9/10 win Brian Kelly midway through a totally unacceptable 7-6 season. Which came after firing Ed Orgeron who was two years removed from a National Championship. Texas gave Charlie Strong only three years, and Tom Herman four, and each of those was more successful than Rhule. Sarkasian was available because USC had fired him in the middle of his second season and gave the job to Clay Helton who delivered a Rose Bowl win and #3 ranking before being fired for repeated blowouts and lack of national championship contention in one fewer season than Bo Pelini had at Nebraska. Florida has fired the last four coaches in the middle of their fourth season.

A large contingent of Michigan alums wanted Jim Harbaugh out when he lost five in a row to Ohio State.

Nebraska has shown as much or more patience than every program we aspire to be. Plenty of schools have fired coaches with better resumes than Frank Solich and Bo Pelini. See "Jimbo FIsher"

Can we please stop blaming this on unreasonable fan expectations?
I think each situation is unique. I agreed with letting Bo and Frank go at the time. I was torn on Riley but it was the right move. Frost was a no brainer- he just wasn't capable of the job. Rhule, to me, deserves a little more time and patience. He is still technically on an upswing and is making what appear to be good and necessary changes.

Fans, in general, are very unrealistic. They do drive coaching decisions because they ultimately are what drive the huge money machine. However, it isn't a few fans but rather the overall fan base as a whole. We have quite a few opposing fans creating accounts here. They like to show up to throw mud during bad times. Those guys don't matter in the grand scheme of things but they do sway fragile minded opinions...
 
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