Chattanooga Times Free Press

Coaches face heat in 2023 at WVU, Indiana, Mizzou

- BY RALPH D. RUSSO

The silly season in college football, that time when coaches get fired and hired, seems to never stop.

The dismissal of Pat Fitzgerald by Northweste­rn after an investigat­ion into hazing in the program kicked off this year’s carousel.

College administra­tors are also embracing the quick hook more than ever before. Last year, there were five coaching changes between the first games and Oct. 3.

Who is in danger of being this season’s Scott Frost or Geoff Collins? There are hot spots to varying degrees at West Virginia, Indiana, Syracuse, Missouri and Boston College.

Results on the field matter, but the other major factors are how much it will cost to buyout a contract and whether the athletic director currently in charge hired that coach. Six situations worth monitoring:

NEAL BROWN West Virginia (22-25 record, four seasons)

The pandemic year, the loosening of transfer rules, the NCAA lifting a ban on players being paid for endorsemen­ts and conference realignmen­t have changed the landscape of college football.

Not all programs have been impacted the same way.

Not to make excuses for Brown, but the Mountainee­rs’ failure to launch under him is in part because the job changed and not for the better. When new AD Wren Baker arrived last last season, giving Brown another season to prove it was an acknowledg­ment of that reality, at least in part. Also, Brown would have been owed $17 million, a buyout number that drops by about $4 million after this season.

The problem for Brown is similar to what Collins faced in a makeor-break season at Georgia Tech last year.

West Virginia has a brutal early schedule with nonconfere­nce games against Penn State and Pitt and conference games against Texas Tech and TCU — all before October.

Baker’s patience and desire to save money amid fan discontent could be tested.

TOM ALLEN Indiana (30-40, seven seasons)

The feel-good seasons of 2019 and 2020 under Allen, who has a fiery Ted Lasso vibe, has not been sustainabl­e for the Hoosiers. Allen’s buyout is around $20 million even if he’s fired after the season.

On one hand, that could push Indiana to have a some patience if the Hoosiers can cobble together a respectabl­e season.

On the other, Indiana opens at Ohio State, plays Louisville two weeks later and is at Maryland on Sept. 30 and Michigan on Oct. 14. If it’s going to cost a fortune either way to fire Allen, a bad first half could seal the deal.

ELI DRINKWITZ Missouri (17-19, three seasons)

Drinkwitz got a twoyear extension and a raise in the offseason from AD Desiree Reed-Francois, who did not hire him. Notably the new deal didn’t increase the cost for Missouri to fire Drinkwitz after this season.

Mizzou would still by on the hook for about $20 million after this season if it cuts loose Drinkwitz, whose teams have been neither terrible nor particular­ly good.

Expectatio­ns are not unreasonab­ly high. A 6-6 regular-season against a tough schedule that includes Georgia, LSU and Tennessee in the SEC and nonconfere­nce

games against Kansas State and Memphis could be enough to justify patience.

DINO BABERS Syracuse (36-49, seven seasons)

Babers has had two winning seasons in upstate New York.

Syracuse has become a tough place to win, but it is reasonable for Orange fans to wonder if this is as good as its gets under Babers, whose contract is believed to run through 2024. The schools is also not obligated to release contracts.

Also working against Babers: Few if any toptier jobs are expected to come open this year. Could be a buyers’ market for Syracuse.

NOTES: Rice, one of those CUSA schools moving into the AAC, will also need to see more from coach Mike Bloomgren. … Former Tennessee coach Butch Jones can’t afford another terrible season at Arkansas State with a new AD in place.

 ?? AP PHOTO/DOUG MCSCHOOLER ?? In 2022, Indiana coach Tom Allen talks with quarterbac­k Dexter Williams II (5) during the team's NCAA college football game against Penn State in Bloomingto­n, Ind. Indiana opens their season at home against Ohio State on Sept. 2.
AP PHOTO/DOUG MCSCHOOLER In 2022, Indiana coach Tom Allen talks with quarterbac­k Dexter Williams II (5) during the team's NCAA college football game against Penn State in Bloomingto­n, Ind. Indiana opens their season at home against Ohio State on Sept. 2.

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