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Hires ranked from Malzahn to Bowden

- Paul Myerberg

Auburn University paid Gus Malzahn $21.45 million to pack up his stuff and never coach the Tigers again. Tennessee owes Central Florida $6 million in combined buyouts for new athletic director Danny White and coach Josh Heupel.

Availabili­ty and increased financial flexibilit­y on both sides allowed UCF and Malzahn to connect on a five-year deal worth $2.3 million annually. It’s a bargain-basement deal relative to Malzahn’s ample Southeaste­rn Conference experience and the program’s goals of reaching the College Football Playoff and aligning itself for the next round of conference expansion.

On paper, Malzahn and Central Florida are the dream marriage of the 2020-21 coaching cycle, which was expected to barely make a whisper amid the COVID-19 pandemic but still yielded 15 changes, down from 24 moves a year ago.

That says something about Malzahn and UCF – though you can find flaws in the new pairing if you look close enough – and about the uninspirin­g series of coaching hires, which featured a handful of big names but largely involved Group of Five conference­s and second-level Power Five programs.

The hires can’t be fully judged until three or four years down the road. For now, let’s rank the new names by best fit and the best chance for immediate and long-term success.

1. Gus Malzahn, UCF

Malzahn will inherit one of the top teams in the Group of Five, including one of the nation’s best quarterbac­ks in Dillon Gabriel, and for the first time in his coaching career have the luxury of holding a talent advantage against nearly every opponent. First off, he’ll have to show how his hurry-up offense can be tailored to fit Gabriel. But to reel in a coach who won 66% of his games at Auburn (2012-20), beat Alabama three times and played for a national championsh­ip is an enormous victory for UCF.

2. Bryan Harsin, Auburn

Harsin had options over the years but waited patiently for the right opportunit­y, following the trajectory of a career that has always taken a calculated approach to the next move. His program at Boise State (2014-20), where he won 78% of his games but

never fully escaped Chris Petersen’s shadow, developed the most important positions on the field: quarterbac­ks, offensive tackles and edge rushers. As long as the standard for success isn’t unseating Nick Saban and Alabama from atop the SEC, Harsin is a very good fit.

3. Steve Sarkisian, Texas

The latest coach to refurbish his reputation with the Crimson Tide, Sarkisian takes over a program fresh off three consecutiv­e top-ranked recruiting classes but in need of a new voice and an establishe­d identity on offense. Sarkisian will immediatel­y deliver the latter and make the Longhorns a popular destinatio­n for regional and national recruits.

4. Andy Avalos, Boise State

A former Boise State linebacker and defensive coordinato­r, Avalos is more than ready for a return to his alma mater after spending the last two seasons under Mario Cristobal at Oregon. While former Boise quarterbac­k Kellen Moore was the popular choice to replace Harsin before deciding to stay in the NFL, Avalos is a rising star in the profession and the next possible long-term fit for the Broncos.

5. Butch Jones, Arkansas State

Jones is back in more comfortabl­e surroundin­gs at Arkansas State, one of the most consistent­ly successful programs in the Group of Five. Before being hammered on his way out of the SEC at Tennessee and learning new tricks in his three years as an off-field assistant at Alabama, Jones won 50 games in six seasons at Central Michigan (2007-09) and Cincinnati (2010-12).

6. Clark Lea, Vanderbilt

Lea made his national reputation by putting together three top-15 defenses in a row as the coordinato­r at Notre Dame. The question of how serving as an assistant at Notre Dame prepares you for running the show with the Commodores – a genuinely important question to ask – is tempered by Lea’s time as a Vanderbilt linebacker (2002-04), giving him a taste of how the program has operated in the past and what can be done to bring the team back into SEC contention.

7. Charles Huff, Marshall

Huff brings an outstandin­g resume as an assistant – led by recent stints at Penn State, Mississipp­i State and Alabama – to a program with expectatio­ns of always being in the driver’s seat for the Conference USA championsh­ip. Learning under Saban and James Franklin (Penn State) gives Huff an edge over most first-time Group of Five head coaches.

8. Bret Bielema, Illinois

Bielema has a history of success in the Big Ten that bodes well for Illinois. But with a substantia­l project ahead as the Illini aim for the top half of the West Division, Bielema must show he has the energy to recruit and develop talent after the collapse of his tenure at Arkansas (2013-17).

9. Blake Anderson, Utah State

Anderson gets a fresh start after seven strong seasons at Arkansas State (2014-20), where his teams won or shared three Sun Belt championsh­ips. Much like Harsin, his predecesso­r with the Red Wolves, Anderson develops skill talent and has an establishe­d blueprint for success in the Group of Five ranks.

10. Josh Heupel, Tennessee

Heupel accepts the toughest job of any new hire: taking the mess that is Tennessee and slowly bringing the Volunteers back into the mix for the division championsh­ip and New Year’s Six bowls. That’s a multiple-year process, if it happens at all. If not the name most UT fans were expecting, Heupel will update an underwhelm­ing offense and make Knoxville an appealing destinatio­n for skill talent.

11. Shane Beamer, South Carolina

Beamer has worked for Steve Spurrier at South Carolina (2007-10); for his father, Frank, at Virginia Tech (2011-15); for Kirby Smart at Georgia (2016); and most recently for Lincoln Riley at Oklahoma (2017-20), helping the Sooners to three playoff berths. The resume speaks for itself. But there are unanswered questions about how Beamer and his staff will fare in a crowded recruiting scene and what the offense will look like in 2021 and beyond.

12. Will Hall, Southern Mississipp­i

Speaking of offenses: Hall’s up-tempo philosophy has been a success on almost every level of competitio­n, from his time as a Division II head coach at West Alabama (2011-13) and West Georgia (2014-16) through his stints as an assistant at Louisiana-Lafayette (2017), Memphis (2018) and Tulane (2019-20).

13. Kane Wommack, South Alabama

Wommack’s age – at just 33, he’s the youngest coach in the Football Bowl Subdivisio­n – is not the concern it would’ve been made out to be a decade ago, when few schools had the nerve to hand over the keys to a coach little more than a decade removed from his own college experience. He has also coached at South Alabama (2016-17) and was recently the defensive coordinato­r for Indiana’s breakthrou­gh 2020 season. In all, Wommack represents a slight gamble for a program in need of a rebuild and an example of a Group of Five team buying low on a young coach viewed as one of the up-and-coming defensive minds in the sport.

14. Jedd Fisch, Arizona

Arizona is banking on a coaching vagabond with one year of Pac-12 experience (UCLA in 2017) having the chops needed to bring the Wildcats out of the conference basement and into the mix for bowl bids, let alone a division title. Fisch has hired well, including the addition of former Michigan assistant Don Brown as his defensive coordinato­r, but does not seem to match the qualities Arizona initially laid out as prerequisi­tes for its next coach.

15. Terry Bowden, Louisiana-Monroe

Bowden’s time at Akron (2012-18) should give him a taste of what’s to come at Louisiana-Monroe, which never led in a game for a single second during the 2020 season. Is the 64-year-old former Auburn coach the right fit for a program that needs a complete reboot? In good news, you have to like Bowden’s addition of former West Virginia coach Rich Rodriguez as offensive coordinato­r.

 ?? CHRISTOPHE­R HANEWINCKE­L/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Gus Malzahn led Auburn to a 68-35 record in eight seasons before getting fired in December.
CHRISTOPHE­R HANEWINCKE­L/USA TODAY SPORTS Gus Malzahn led Auburn to a 68-35 record in eight seasons before getting fired in December.
 ?? CHARLES KRUPA/AP ?? New Arizona coach Jedd Fisch’s last stop was as quarterbac­ks coach with the New England Patriots.
CHARLES KRUPA/AP New Arizona coach Jedd Fisch’s last stop was as quarterbac­ks coach with the New England Patriots.

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