Dayton Daily News

Interim coaches go 4-0; Alabama survives scare

- By Ralph D. Russo

Maybe making a coaching change less than halfway through the season isn’t such a terrible idea.

After an unpreceden­ted spate of early season firings, teams with interim head coaches went 4-0 this weekend in major college football.

“We went from trying not to lose and now we’re learning how to win,” Georgia Tech interim coach Brent Key said. “That’s a valuable lesson that these guys can take to the next game.”

The Yellow Jackets (3-3) beat Duke to make it two straight victories since Geoff Collins was fired. At 2-1 in the Atlantic Coast Conference, Georgia Tech not only can dream about bowl eligibilit­y, but there is still a path to serious contention for a Coastal Division title.

On Friday night in New Jersey, Nebraska won its second straight game for interim coach Mickey Joseph, beating Rutgers to head into the second half of the season tied for first in the Big Ten West.

The Cornhusker­s actually won a close game (14-13), something

that never seemed to go their way under Scott Frost.

“A lot of adversity to push through tonight,” Nebraska quarterbac­k Casey Thompson said.

Now also lurking in the Big Ten West is Wisconsin. The Badgers dumping Paul Chryst after five games last week was the one truly shocking move among the early firings.

Wisconsin elevated defensive

coordinato­r Jim Leonhard, essentiall­y giving the de facto coach-inwaiting a seven-game audition.

Good start. The Badgers rolled over Northweste­rn, with maybe their best offensive game in a few seasons.

Graham Merz was 20 for 29 for 299 yards and five touchdowns

and Braelon Allen ran for 135

yards. Add the obligatory it was only against Northweste­rn, but the Badgers looked like a different team. At 1-2 in the Big Ten West, they’re not out of it.

“This is the reward,” Leonhard said. “You put in the work, you put in the time and you should have confidence when you step off that bus that you have the right plan, you have the right guys, you put them in position to have success.”

Arizona State made it 4 for 4 for the interim coaches this week. Shaun Aguano earned his first victory since taking over for Herm Edwards with 45-38 victory over No. 21 Washington, which now looks like a team that was highly overrated after beating what looks like a bad Michigan State team. Who’s next to go?

Well, Bryan Harsin left Georgia still the Auburn coach after the No. 2 Bulldogs pounded the Tigers 42-10.

It seems inevitable that change is coming on The Plains. The Tigers have a road trip to No. 9 Mississipp­i next week and then an open date.

It’s hard to see a coaching change making a difference for Auburn the rest of the way — even though it seems to be working elsewhere.

Boomer bust

The long and glorious history of Oklahoma football hit a nadir in the late 1990s, after a string of failed replacemen­ts for Barry Switzer.

In 1997, during a run of three straight losing seasons for the Sooners, they were beaten 69-7 by Nebraska.

That was the last time Oklahoma was on the short end of a loss more lopsided than Saturday’s Red River game against Texas.

Brent Venables is only six games into his tenure in Norman, but anytime you’re bringing back memories of the late 1990s in Oklahoma it’s not good at all. And really, it has been even worst than that.

Add in last week’s pummeling against TCU, and this is the first time the Sooners have ever lost two straight by 30-plus points, according to ESPN Stats and Info.

“We’re good enough on both sides of the ball to be a lot more competitiv­e,” Venables said. “You can’t lose a game 49-0, with accountabi­lity beginning with me.”

Meanwhile, Texas fans can probably convince themselves the Longhorns would have beaten Alabama if Quinn Ewers wasn’t injured early against the Tide last month.

Ewers threw for 289 yards and four touchdowns against Oklahoma.

In a Big 12 that seems set to be all kinds of fun and competitiv­e up top -— No. 17 TCU beat No. 19 Kansas in what might have been the game of the day —- Texas figures to be a factor.

As for Oklahoma, even in the dark days for the late 1990s, the Sooners never finished last in the Big 12. That is definitely on the table in 2022.

Tide survives

Turns out Bryce Young is a very important player for No 1. Alabama.

The Heisman Trophy winner sat out Saturday night with a shore shoulder and ‘Bama did everything it could to give Texas A&M a chance for two straight victories against the Tide.

After four Alabama turnovers, three by backup quarterbac­k Jalen Milroe, and two missed field goals by usually excellent kicker Will Reichard, the Aggies had one play from the Tide’s 2 to win it at the end.

The incomplete pass kept the Tide unbeaten and the play call left former A&M Heisman winner Johnny Manziel dismayed.

It will go down as one of the stranger games of the Saban dynasty.

The Aggies deserve credit for hanging in and taking advantage of some of the Tide’s mistakes.

It is also obvious that when Alabama goes to undefeated and No. 8 Tennessee next week, it really needs Young.

 ?? Overtime DANIEL VARNADO / AP ?? Georgia Tech interim head coach Brent Key celebrates with defensive back Clayton Powell-Lee (right) after defeating Duke 2320 in on Saturday in Atlanta.
Overtime DANIEL VARNADO / AP Georgia Tech interim head coach Brent Key celebrates with defensive back Clayton Powell-Lee (right) after defeating Duke 2320 in on Saturday in Atlanta.

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