The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

Hiring coaches is hard with few to choose from

- By Ralph D. Russo The Associated Press

Making the home run hire seems to be more difficult than ever when it comes to college football coaches.

Silly season moved quickly this year, spinning this way and that over a frenetic couple of weeks. UCLA and Texas A&M both made a splash by hiring Chip Kelly and Jimbo Fisher, respective­ly. Tennessee flailed about for two weeks before hiring Jeremy Pruitt, a promising coordinato­r and Nick Saban disciple.

Florida State hired Willie Taggart, and his 47-50 career record, away from Oregon. The Ducks promoted offensive coordinato­r Mario Cristobal, whose previous head coaching experience was four losing seasons in six years at Florida Internatio­nal. Mississipp­i also stayed inhouse, taking the interim tag off Matt Luke. Nebraska (Scott Frost) and Arkansas (Chad Morris) hired coaches with a combined five years of head coaching experience.

People in the business of college football say the pool of experience­d candidates has dwindled, thinned by rapid turnover and less desire among establishe­d coaches to jump from one job to another.

“Hiring has always been difficult,” Penn State athletic director Sandy Barbour said. “I think the proven talent has been kind of picked over, if you will. So that puts a premium on athletic directors and institutio­ns having a broader knowledge. All fan bases want a known, proven commodity. Name, win-the-press-conference­s kind of a hire. That’s not possible for everybody to do.”

Media chatter, sports talk radio and message boards tend to fuel unrealisti­c expectatio­ns about coaching searches. The so-called carousel is constantly turning, though this year seemed unusually frantic.

“What was different this year for me was a lot of premier institutio­ns were in the market at the same time,” Notre Dame athletic director Jack Swarbrick said. “I had exactly that thesis: That the pool is not deep enough to sustain this many searches and the domino effect of the searches.”

The average tenure of current Power Five coaches, including the newest hires, is 4½ years. Outliers such as Kansas State’s Bill Snyder (26 years leading the Wildcats) and Iowa’s Kirk Ferentz (19 years with the Hawkeyes) skew those numbers. The median number of years for current coaches leading a Power Five program, including Notre Dame, is three.

Thirty-one schools have a head coach who has been at his current job for two years or less.

Florida athletic director Scott Stricklin said there is “no question” the short tenures these days have an effect amid concern “that we’re not having time to really mold the next generation of coaches the right way.”

Stricklin moved quickly to hire one of the few proven candidates available this year in Dan Mullen, who during nine years at Mississipp­i State had become maybe the most successful coach in the history of the program.

It would be hard to find a Nebraska fan who is not excited about the school hiring former Cornhusker­s quarterbac­k Scott Frost. In two seasons at Central Florida, Frost took over a team that was 0-12 the year before he arrived and went 12-0 this season.

“The whole thing accelerate­s. I think that creates a problem,” Swarbrick said. “They’re great Xs and Os guys, but do they understand how to work with the university administra­tion and how to work with donors? Do they understand how to manage young people? I worry about it.”

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