The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Perfect fit: Playoff teams’ inhouse hires getting it done

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Former Clemson athletic director Terry Don Phillips made a deal with Dabo Swinney when he decided to make him the Tigers head football coach.

“There were people that were very skeptical of that hire,” Phillips recently recalled. “I said, ‘Dabo, if it don’t work out what’s going to happen, you come over here and you help me pack up my office. And I’ll go over there and I’ll pack up your office, and we’ll walk out together. Because if it doesn’t work out that’s exactly what’s going to happen.”

Phillips has been retired since 2013 and is hailed as a visionary for seeing the potential in Swinney. The Tigers are 12930 since Phillips promoted the then39year­old wide receivers coach.

This College Football Playoff shows that sometimes the best person for the job is someone already in the building.

On Saturday at the Fiesta Bowl in Glendale, Arizona, Swinney and No. 3 Clemson plays No. 2 Ohio State and firstyear Buckeyes coach Ryan Day, who was promoted from offensive coordinato­r after last season to replace Urban Meyer.

The other semifinal at the Peach Bowl in Atlanta matches No. 1 LSU and No. 4 Oklahoma, schools that also hired from within the last time they were looking for a head football coach.

LSU’s Ed Orgeron took a similar path as Swinney, being named interim coach after a midseason firing and then given a longterm contract amid skepticism about his abilities. The Tigers are 327 in three full seasons under the 58yearold Orgeron.

Ohio State’s promotion of the 40yearold Day mimicked what Oklahoma had done 18 months earlier when Bob Stoops surprising­ly stepped down in June 2017.

The Sooners smoothly transition­ed to Lincoln Riley and have gone 365 with three Big 12 championsh­ips and three playoff appearance­s in his three seasons.

Ohio State and Oklahoma took the same approach to replacing future Hall of Fame coaches.

“You know, that was our circumstan­ce,” Ohio State athletic director Gene Smith said. “We really built very good support systems for our football program and set up some good structure. And so when you have somebody inhouse that you have a chance to kind of audition, so to speak, it allows you to hire from within and not have somebody come in and, frankly, they want to try and change a lot of things. We didn’t need anything changed.”

Day arrived at Ohio State in 2017 after a stint in the NFL, hired by Meyer to be cooffensiv­e coordinato­r and quarterbac­k coach. It was the next step in Day’s goal of one day leading a program and Smith said he considers it his job to help assistants with head coaching aspiration­s to reach those goals.

“So Ryan, for example, he wanted to be a head coach. I’d hoped one day at Ohio State, but I didn’t know that for sure. So I had him meet with our president,“Smith said.

Day was thrust into the job under unusual circumstan­ces last season. He was named acting head coach for the first three games of the 2017 season after Meyer was suspended by the university for his handling of an assistant coach who had been accused of domestic violence.

The Buckeyes went 30 under Day, and when Meyer stepped down after the season Day was the obvious choice.

Riley also demonstrat­ed his leadership abilities at Oklahoma as an assistant.

OU athletic director Joe Castiglion­e said he identified Riley as a possible successor to Stoops in the spring of 2015 after being hired as the Sooners offensive coordinato­r.

 ?? Michael Conroy / Associated Press ?? Ohio State coach Ryan Day holds the trophy following the team’s 3421 win over Wisconsin in the Big Ten championsh­ip on Dec. 8.
Michael Conroy / Associated Press Ohio State coach Ryan Day holds the trophy following the team’s 3421 win over Wisconsin in the Big Ten championsh­ip on Dec. 8.

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