Houston Chronicle

RICE: COACH DAVID BAILIFF OUT AFTER 11 YEARS.

AD Karlgaard wants innovative, creative coach for program

- glynn.hill@chron.com twitter.com/glynn_hill By Glynn A. Hill

Rice has parted ways with football coach David Bailiff after 11 seasons.

Bailiff was informed of the decision during a Monday meeting with director of athletics Joe Karlgaard.

“In many ways, it’s a very sad and somber day for the Rice athletic department,” Karlgaard said. “David Bailiff has represente­d Rice terrifical­ly in his 11 years at the helm of our football program.

“But that being said, we have high aspiration­s for our program competitiv­ely, and after three consecutiv­e losing seasons, it was time to try something different.”

Bailiff was 57-80 and led the Owls to four bowls, including three straight from 2012 through 2014. Bailiff was named Conference USA’s coach of the year twice (2008 and 2013), and his 57 wins are second in school history behind Jess Neely (144-124-10).

“My vision is that we’re in bowl games every year and that we’re competing for a conference championsh­ip,” Karlgaard said. “If you can make Rice a consistent winner, I think that’ s a feather in anyone’ s cap.

“It’s not an impossible job. I think our success from the recent past shows that we can do that here. We’re just looking for that consistent­ly.”

Firm to assist in search

Rice lost two of its highest-profile recruits after Bailiff ’s dismissal. Blake and Brant Kuithe, threestar athletes from Cinco Ranch, announced their decommitme­nts on Twitter just hours after Bailiff was fired.

The school enlisted Turnkey Search to assist with the search for their next coach, but Karlgaard said, “I’m identifyin­g candidates and I’m doing the interviewi­ng and we’re really using Turnkey to assist us in the process with reaching out to candidates and setting up interviews and background checks.”

Karlgaard emphasized what he’s looking for in the Owls next coach.

“I think creativity, curiosity and innovation,” he said. “I want somebody who can really look at the way things have been done here and question all of it.

“Everybody’s got a different opinion. I’ve had people reach out to me with ideas on style of play; I’ve had people reach out to me to say we need to fish in this particular recruiting pond; I’ve had people say to me that we need somebody who comes from an institutio­n like Rice.”

He sees the academic culture and standards at Rice as a boon more than a restrictio­n in the search. Even still, time isn’t a luxury.

“It’s a competitiv­e environmen­t and it’s only going to get more competitiv­e as some of these openings are filled, which in turn creates new openings, so you just want to make sure we’re on top of things and that we act swiftly but make sure we’re talking to the right people,” Karlgaard said. “We’re in uncharted waters in that we have an early signing period on Dec. 20 and this is the first year that football’s had an early signing period. I think what you’ve seen in the college football landscape this year is more midseason firings as a result.”

Karlgaard said he considered parting ways with Bailiff, 59, during the season but opted against it as the team fought then fell in close losses late in the season.

“We want someone who’s a great fit for the institutio­n who embraces the values of Rice and in many ways conducts himself exactly how coach Bailiff did with campus engagement and understand­ing of our alumni base and student-athletes,” he said of prospectiv­e candidates. “I’m truly open to all types of background­s and experience­s, but head coaching experience would absolutely be a plus.”

No comment on candidates

Defensive coordinato­r Brian Stewart is serving as Owls interim coach. Karlgaard, who came to Rice from Stanford in 2013, declined to comment on Stewart or any other prospectiv­e candidates.

Potential candidates include Stanford coordinato­rs Mike Bloomgren and Lance Anderson.

University of Central Florida offensive coordinato­r Troy Walters and South Carolina offensive coordinato­r Kurt Roper have also been mentioned.

Bailiff took Rice to heights it hadn’t reached in more than half a century, leading the Owls to two of the school’s three 10-win seasons — 2008 and 2013 — the other was in 1949.

During Bailiff ’s tenure (tied for the third longest in school history), Rice players regularly excelled off the field; eight players were taken in the NFL draft.

And the school opened the $31.5 million, 60,000-square-foot Brian Patterson Center for coaches’ offices and a locker and weight room in 2015.

After going 3-9 in Bailiff ’s first season in 2007, Rice rebounded with a 10-3 year and won the Texas Bowl in 2008.

But since winning the Owls’ first outright conference championsh­ip in 56 years in 2013, Bailiff ’s teams have done progressiv­ely worse.

Rice went 8-5 in 2014 and won the Hawaii Bowl. The Owls ended 2015 with a 5-7 record and finished 3-9 in 2016.

This season, Rice went 1-11, losing to all but winless UTEP. The Owls fielded C-USA’s third-worst offense and the second-worst turnover margin in the nation.

In 2014, Rice extended Bailiff ’s contract through the 2018 season. He is due to make $772,883 this season — just above the conference median — according to a USA Today database.

“We will fulfill the contractua­l obligation­s that we have to coach Bailiff,” Karlgaard said.

 ??  ??
 ?? Karen Warren / Houston Chronicle ?? Rice football coach David Bailiff participat­es in a ritual during the playing of the school song as a fan drapes a Rice flag over his shoulders after the 30-14 loss to North Texas on Saturday at Rice Stadium. It was Bailiff ’s last game as Rice coach.
Karen Warren / Houston Chronicle Rice football coach David Bailiff participat­es in a ritual during the playing of the school song as a fan drapes a Rice flag over his shoulders after the 30-14 loss to North Texas on Saturday at Rice Stadium. It was Bailiff ’s last game as Rice coach.

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