National Post (National Edition)

Ticats’ head coach fires himself

Austin hands duties to Jones, will remain VP of football ops

- TED WYMAN Twyman@postmedia.com Twitter.com/Ted_Wyman

W I N N I P E G • With his team mired in last place at 0-8 and managing only a single win in the last 15 games stretching back to last season, Kent Austin fired himself Thursday as head coach of the Hamilton Tiger-Cats.

Austin, who remains as the CFL team’s vice-president of football operations, announced June Jones will take over the coaching duties effective immediatel­y.

The Tiger-Cats are on a bye week and don’t play again until Sept. 4 when they host the rival Toronto Argonauts.

“This was my decision to divvy up the responsibi­lities and to move the team forward in a very positive direction,” Austin said.

“This was a decision that wasn’t made lightly and was under a lot of deliberati­on and I was trying to be as self-aware as possible to do the right thing for the organizati­on. I will always make those decisions with that as a backdrop.”

Austin said he has been considerin­g the change for two or three weeks and believes focusing on the football operations part of his job will bring a positive impact to the team.

“I need to focus on the operationa­l side right now,” the 54-yearold former CFL quarterbac­k said.

“June’s very capable. He has a great track record and he’s a really good man. I’ve establishe­d a really good relationsh­ip with him over the last few weeks and he’ll do a wonderful job.

“I feel very comfortabl­e that he can handle that part of it while I need to focus on the role of VP of football operations and getting this thing back on track in a really efficient way.”

Jones, who has experience as a head coach in the NFL and at U.S. college programs, joined the team three weeks ago as an assistant coach.

Austin slowly started turning things over to Jones, who was famous for his use of the run-andshoot offence, and Thursday handed the 64-year-old the reins.

“He’s going to bring his perspectiv­e and effect change on the field as he sees fit,” Austin added. “It will be a different voice, a guy I believe the players will respond to very positively. That will allow me to focus on player recruitmen­t and evaluation and other moves that we need to make structural­ly in order to get us back to the competitiv­e level that we’ve been at for a few years.”

Austin took over as head coach of the Tiger-Cats in 2013 and led the team to two Grey Cup appearance­s and four playoff spots in four seasons.

His overall record, though, was 36-44.

Austin won a Grey Cup as head coach of the Saskatchew­an Roughrider­s in 2007 before spending five seasons as the offensive co-ordinator at the University of Mississipp­i, his alma mater.

Stepping down as coach couldn’t have been an easy decision for him.

“I think everybody in here would know I was lying if I said there wasn’t an element of it that’s disappoint­ing,” Austin said. “But you have to keep the bigger picture in focus. I have another role with the organizati­on and we looked at making the best decision for the organizati­on.”

Like Austin, Jones was a quarterbac­k before becoming a coach, suiting up for the NFL’s Atlanta Falcons and the CFL’s Argos.

His head-coaching resume includes stops at the University of Hawaii, Southern Methodist University, the Falcons and San Diego Chargers.

He also worked as an offensive co-ordinator with the CFL’s Ottawa Rough Riders, the Falcons, Detroit Lions and Houston Oilers and got his coaching start with the Houston Gamblers of the United States Football League.

The Tiger-Cats have not won a game since Oct. 21, 2016, when they beat Ottawa 39-36 in overtime. Austin said even if they had won a few games here and there, it likely wouldn’t have changed his decision.

“You don’t want to mask issues because you have a handful of wins,” he said.

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