Sweetwater Reporter

Expansive coaching tree part of Leach’s legacy Bowl-bound ‘Dogs face tough decisions

- The Associated Press

When Mike Leach first moved to Mississipp­i State from Washington State, he stayed in the Left Field Lofts at the Bulldogs’ baseball stadium.

The two-bedroom, twobathroo­m apartments have balconies that look out at the diamond at Dudy Noble Field, and are a 3-minute walk from Mississipp­i State’s football facility and practice field.

Leach asked about living in one of the lofts.

Even if that had been possible, his wife, Sharon, quickly put the kibosh on that idea.

Just another example of Leach being Leach, the quirky, mad scientist football coach with a passion for pirates — his autobiogra­phy is titled “Swing Your Sword” — and strong opinions on candy and coffee.

John Cohen, the athletic director who hired Leach at Mississipp­i State, saw it differentl­y.

“I think that everything to him was about functional­ity,” Cohen, now the AD at Auburn, told The Associated Press on Tuesday.

“I think that’s why he was able to beat people that might have had more talent. Because he just had such a practical, highly functional way of looking at things.”

Leach died Monday night of complicati­ons from a heart condition at the age of 61. He coached college football for more than three decades, 21 of those as a head coach at Mississipp­i State, Washington State and Texas Tech.

Running the prolific Air Raid offense he learned from Hal Mumme as an assistant early in his career, Leach’s teams went 158-107 and often set records along the way.

While Leach will be remembered most for helping to revolution­ize offensive football and his propensity to riff on myriad topics, those who worked with him saw an underappre­ciated leader and program builder who spawned an expansive coaching tree.

Mumme told The AP a conversati­on with Leach could drift like “a balloon in the wind.”

“But he had this innate ability just to focus like a laser on certain things and make his players do the same thing,” Mumme said. “And that’s where I think he was great. And that’s why he was able to turn around three programs.”

The list of current head coaches who worked and/ or played for Leach includes some of the most successful in the country:

Southern California’s Lincoln Riley; TCU’s Sonny Dykes; Tennessee’s Josh Heupel; Baylor’s Dave Aranda; Houston’s Dana Holgorsen; West Virginia’s Neal Brown; Louisiana Tech’s Sonny Cumbie; and Kliff Kingsbury of the Arizona Cardinals.

On Tuesday, just hours after Mississipp­i State announced Leach had died, former Texas Tech receiver and Washington State offensive coordinato­r Eric Morris was named head coach at North Texas.

“This is incredible for this to happen on a day like today. Another Mike Leach guy!!!” Holgorsen tweeted about Morris.

Cohen, a former college baseball coach, said Leach’s practices were some of the most efficient he had ever witnessed in any sport.

“There’s just no wasted movement,” Cohen said.

Ruffin McNeill was a defensive assistant during Leach’s entire time as head coach at Texas Tech (200009).

“He believed in a set of principles or philosophy, and he was steadfast,” McNeill said.

Under Leach, the Red Raiders lost their first two of 10 straight bowl games — an unpreceden­ted streak of postseason appearance­s for the program.

So Leach directed his staff to identify the programs that were having success in bowl games and find out how they prepared, McNeill said.

The Red Raiders ended up winning six of the last eight bowl games during that stretch.

Leach’s time at Texas Tech ended tumultuous­ly.

He was accused of mistreatin­g a player with a concussion and fired after butting heads with the administra­tion over the accusation. When Leach was ousted, some players said he could be abrasive, stubborn and even belittling.

No one worked with Leach longer and more closely than Dave Emerick, who was chief of staff at all three head coaching stops before taking a similar job for Riley at USC earlier this year.

In a text message to The AP, Emerick said he wanted people to know the side of Leach that television cameras rarely caught.

Leach believed in small acts of kindness toward those in need, Emerick said, whether it was a call or video, an invitation to watch practice and hang out with him afterward or giving away gear or tickets to a game.

“He really went out of his way to touch people that didn’t have a lot of good in their lives,” Emerick wrote. “Coach had a reputation for being a hard ass but he cared about so many people and gave them something to look forward to.”

STARKVILLE, Miss. (AP) — No. 24 Mississipp­i State will be playing in the ReliaQuest Bowl against Illinois on Jan. 2 in Tampa, Florida.

That is one of the few solid things around the football program at the moment following the sudden death of coach Mike Leach on Monday night in Jackson, Mississipp­i, with what the school said were complicati­ons from a heart condition.

“Our players are excited about going to the ReliaQuest Bowl and they will play in honor of Coach Leach,” Mississipp­i State interim athletic director Bracky Brett told The Associated Press. “They want to finish the job that they started together and they know that’s exactly what Mike would want them to do.”

Leach’s death came as his Bulldogs (8-4) look to follow up their most successful season during his tenure with a victory in the bowl game.

Brett said bowl practices started last week and the players were scheduled to have a few days off while the coaches recruited before getting back together later this week.

The team is scheduled to travel to Tampa on Dec. 27.

Defensive coordinato­r Zach Arnett will run the team for now, but Mississipp­i State is facing a potential search for a new coach with the annual signing day for recruits coming up next week and the possibilit­y that some of its players will join the many already in the transfer portal.

On top of that, MSU is already looking for a permanent athletic director. Brett is serving in an interim role since John Cohen left to become AD at Auburn.

Brett said he would defer any questions on the search for new athletic director and whether a national search would be conducted for a new football coach to Mississipp­i State President Mark Keenum.

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