USA TODAY International Edition

Time for Kiffin to return to SEC sideline

- Dan Wolken Columnist USA TODAY

With the focus of the coaching world largely on the three open jobs in the Southeaste­rn Conference, a huge question looms over the next handful of days: Is one of these schools getting ready to jump on the Lane Train?

Once reviled by SEC fans, fired by Nick Saban and frequently admonished by former SEC commission­er Mike Slive, it feels increasing­ly as if Florida Atlantic coach Lane Kiffin could be destined to make his triumphant return after the Owls play in Saturday’s Conference USA championsh­ip game. For those of us who enjoy Kiffin’s willingnes­s to shake up the staid status quo, it can’t happen a moment too soon.

After three years outside the spotlight, having to prove himself all over again, it’s time to bring Kiffin back to the big time. The only issue is whether any of these schools – Arkansas, most likely – will have the institutio­nal fortitude to make a hire that is going to rock the boat in ways that are both thrilling and potentiall­y embarrassi­ng.

Because that’s what you’re going to get with Kiffin – everything from the kind of national attention your program couldn’t buy to the can’t- miss plays that will inspire him to raise his arms before the ball is even thrown to the tweets that will draw fines from the conference. At some point this year, the question has gone from whether he’s worth the gamble to whether a school in as dire straits as Arkansas can afford to pass him by.

Arkansas athletics director Hunter Yurachek, his deputy Jon Fagg and former Arkansas football player/ board of trustees member Steve Cox all were in Boca Raton on Sunday to meet with Kiffin, according to two people with knowledge of the situation who spoke on the condition of anonymity because of the sensitive nature of the discussion­s.

After that, Arkansas continued conducting interviews with several more candidates on a list that includes Washington State’s Mike Leach and Tulane’s Willie Fritz, according to two other people with knowledge of Arkansas’ search plans who spoke on the condition of anonymity because they weren’t authorized to publicly speak.

But due to the urgency inherent in college football’s early recruiting period, Arkansas is expected to be ready to go by the weekend – and particular­ly if the choice is Kiffin, who wouldn’t be in position to accept the job until after the C- USA championsh­ip game against Alabama at Birmingham ( UAB).

According to a person close to Kiffin, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because they weren’t authorized to talk on his behalf, he is intrigued by the possibilit­ies at Arkansas.

Given what has happened at Arkansas the past few years, with the program on a 17- game SEC losing streak and getting beaten at home by the likes of San Jose State and Western Kentucky last season, there are few if any available coaches with the recruiting bona fides of Kiffin to turn over the roster quickly, get the attention of top prospects and infuse the program with SEC- level talent in a short period of time.

At the same time, it wouldn’t be shocking if there were some reservatio­ns on the part of the Arkansas administra­tion. As one athletics director put it, if you hire Kiffin and he implodes, you can’t say you never saw it coming.

At Tennessee, his program’s aggressive recruiting tactics not only rankled his colleagues but brushed up against the NCAA rule book with impermissi­ble calls and sending members of the recruiting hostess program out to visit high school players. ( Kiffin wasn’t sanctioned individual­ly.)

At Southern California, where he had initial success, his program was fined $ 25,000 and reprimande­d by the Pac- 12 for deflating footballs before a game against Oregon. Five games into his fourth season, he was fired on the tarmac heading home from Arizona State.

Then after three years of image rehab at Alabama, where he helped bring the Crimson Tide’s offense into the modern era and did amazing work by winning an SEC title with Blake Sims at quarterbac­k and a national championsh­ip with Jake Coker, Saban booted him a week before the national title game in 2017. Though neither has really discussed the specifics, it was clear Saban wasn’t happy with Kiffin’s focus as he tried to finish the season while also trying to put together a staff at Florida Atlantic.

At that particular time, Kiffin was still considered pretty untouchabl­e by major programs. The only other real interview he had that year was with Houston – coincident­ally, Yurachek was the Cougars’ athletics director at the time.

But time and success change a lot of preconceiv­ed notions, particular­ly in a market that isn’t exactly teeming with high- profile prospects. There are a lot of solid coaches out there that a program like Arkansas could hire from Fritz to Louisiana- Lafayette’s Billy Napier to Louisiana Tech’s Skip Holtz. But none is going to create the kind of buzz and have the upside of Kiffin, who could win his second C- USA title in three years.

It’s fairly remarkable to think that Kiffin, even as long as he’s been around the college football zeitgeist, is only 44 and still not necessaril­y in the prime of his career.

Is it a risk for Arkansas to hand the keys to someone as unpredicta­ble as Kiffin, who is prone to wandering off the reservatio­n and tweeting a meme about blind refs after a game? Sure it is. But if you’re Arkansas and you haven’t been relevant at all for most of this decade, what do you really have to lose?

 ?? JASEN VINLOVE/ USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Lane Kiffin is 25- 13 as Florida Atlantic’s coach and is going for a second C- USA title.
JASEN VINLOVE/ USA TODAY SPORTS Lane Kiffin is 25- 13 as Florida Atlantic’s coach and is going for a second C- USA title.
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