Chattanooga Times Free Press

Fisher says ‘howdy’ in return

- BY DAVID COBB STAFF WRITER

ATLANTA — Camera shutters clicked and eyes peered up from computer screens across the College Football Hall of Fame floor Monday as a Nick Saban disciple emerged from behind the stage to make his SEC Media Days debut.

“Howdy,” the coach said as he took the podium and adjusted the microphone. “See, ya’ll don’t know. You’re supposed to say ‘howdy’ back. That’s an A&M thing.”

Tennessee coach Jeremy Pruitt’s turn at the event will come Wednesday. Monday belonged to another newcomer in the SEC head coach club with ties to Saban and experience at Florida State.

First-year Texas A&M coach Jimbo Fisher’s place as an SEC head coach is new, but his understand­ing of the league is a quarter-century in the making. The former Auburn and LSU assistant, who spent the last eight years as Florida State’s head coach, seemed at ease strolling from room to room and addressing his astronomic­al contract and the expectatio­ns accompanyi­ng it as he led off the annual preseason frenzy.

Since leaving the SEC for Florida State after the 2006 season, Fisher has watched former boss Saban win five national championsh­ips at Alabama. Meanwhile, two defensive coordinato­rs whom Fisher employed in Tallahasse­e have become SEC head coaches themselves.

Pruitt was the defensive coordinato­r under Fisher in 2013 when the Seminoles snapped the SEC’s streak of seven straight national championsh­ips by defeating Auburn 34-31 in the BCS national championsh­ip game.

“As I said, he could have been a head coach a long time ago,” Fisher said of Tennessee’s new head coach. “He has bided his time and got the right job. I think he’ll be a great opponent.”

Fisher won’t face Pruitt this season — barring an improbable SEC championsh­ip game matchup — but he will face Mark Stoops, who was Pruitt’s predecesso­r as Florida State’s defensive coordinato­r. An Oct. 6 home game against Stoops’ Kentucky team is sixth on the Aggies’ schedule.

The 52-year-old Fisher also will have to face Saban in trying to lead the Aggies to new heights. That week four game at Alabama is just one stop on Fisher’s SEC reintroduc­tion tour.

“I was at Auburn for six (years) and LSU for seven,” Fisher said. “I mean, every week is for the national championsh­ip because the teams you play have the capabiliti­es of being there. And whoever can survive that gauntlet of games and come out of there, you know is going to compete. And whoever wins the SEC has a chance to win the national championsh­ip. You can play with anybody in the country.”

A&M plays Florida State rival Clemson in the second week of the season, a matchup that will provide an early test of Fisher’s efforts to toughen the Aggies’ demeanor. He denied the assertion that he believed last year’s A&M team coached by Kevin Sumlin was “soft,” but the Aggies’ player representa­tives Monday seemed to get that message from Fisher and the staff during the spring.

“He didn’t make any specific indication­s whether or not we were soft,” junior offensive lineman Erik McCoy said. “He just thought we were soft overall. That’s something that we’ve instilled in our minds not to be.”

The expectatio­ns of a 10-year, $75-million contract and the not-sosubtle pining for a national championsh­ip in College Station reduce the margin for error in the task that lies ahead for Fisher, though he demurred Monday when asked about a time line for winning a title.

“If I didn’t think we could win national championsh­ips, I wouldn’t have taken it,” Fisher said of his new job. “I had a great job where I was at, Florida State, and had no plans on leaving. They always say that you get the best opportunit­ies when you’re not looking for them.

“You start looking at the resources and the commitment­s the school makes, and I’m not talking just athletical­ly and facility-wise. It’s an unbelievab­le school. The culture of that university is unbelievab­le. There’s an academic tradition that’s second to none.”

Then there is the tradition of saying “howdy.”

Walking into his second media session of the day, Fisher offered the authentic Texas greeting once again.

“When I say ‘howdy,’ everybody’s got to say ‘howdy’ back,” Fisher said. “Dadgum. We’ve got to get all this down.”

Contact David Cobb at dcobb@timesfreep­ress.com. Follow him on Twitter @DavidWCobb and on Facebook at facebook.com/volsupdate.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? First-year Texas A&M football coach Jimbo Fisher speaks at SEC Media Days in Atlanta.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS First-year Texas A&M football coach Jimbo Fisher speaks at SEC Media Days in Atlanta.

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