USA TODAY US Edition

Playoff teams led by insiders

- Joey Kaufman The Columbus (Ohio) Dispatch

COLUMBUS, Ohio – Ohio State athletics director Gene Smith brought a visitor to meet university president Michael Drake in the summer of 2018.

It was Ryan Day, who had spent one season with the Buckeyes as offensive coordinato­r and quarterbac­ks coach. Smith viewed him as a rising star.

After Day received job offers that offseason, Smith recalled a conversati­on with then-coach Urban Meyer about keeping the assistant on staff. “We’ve got to do everything we can to retain him,” Meyer said, “because he is a guy that is special and can do it here one day.”

The exchange captured Smith’s attention. He sometimes brought aspiring head coaches to chat with Drake to “understand the big picture of the university.” But he saw it as particular­ly necessary to usher Day into the president’s office, hoping he might come to familiariz­e himself with the inner workings as a prime future candidate to lead the powerhouse football program.

“I thought he was a guy that could eventually take over for Urban,” Smith said, “either if he stayed here or went somewhere else.”

The rest of the story is well known.

Months later, Day was installed as acting head coach for preseason practices and the first three games after Meyer was suspended for his handling of domestic abuse allegation­s involving a former assistant. Day led the Buckeyes to three blowout wins. As health issues related to an arachnoid cyst prompted Meyer to retire by the end of

the season, Day was tapped as the successor. In his first full season at the helm this fall, he returned Ohio State to the College Football Playoff amid an unbeaten regular season in which the Buckeyes torpedoed opponents.

Day’s pathway to the top job is not an outlier. All four coaches leading teams into the Playoff this week were promoted from within their programs.

LSU removed the interim tag from Ed Orgeron after he took over following Les Miles’ firing in 2016.

Oklahoma elevated Lincoln Riley, its hot-shot offensive coordinato­r, when Bob Stoops retired the following year.

The coach matched against Day in the semifinals in the Fiesta Bowl is Dabo Swinney, a forerunner of a series of promotions.

Since taking the permanent job a decade ago, Swinney has built Clemson into a modern juggernaut, capturing two of the past three national championsh­ips and winning 28 consecutiv­e games, a testament to the level of success possible from an internal hire.

“It’s just a good way to do it,” former Clemson athletics director Terry Don Phillips said. “You don’t have to spend a gazillion dollars to go out and find somebody if you got a good, solid program. You can work within that program.”

When Phillips hired Swinney after his interim stint in 2008, certain instances struck him.

Though Swinney was a wide receivers coach, he knew everyone on the team, and many players visited him in his office at the team’s facility. It looked like a gathering place. Phillips considered it as evidence of a magnetic leader.

“There was something about Dabo that attracted these players to just come in and talk with him, not necessaril­y about football,” Phillips said. “He had such a relationsh­ip with players at all positions.”

Had they not shared a workspace, Phillips never would have noticed.

He furthered watched Swinney charm boosters at Clemson Club gatherings across South Carolina and be ruthless enough to make critical decisions for the program to improve. On the day he was named interim coach, Swinney fired offensive coordinato­r Rob Spence.

The events turned Phillips into a firm believer.

Smith valued similar firsthand assessment­s as he watched Day inside the

Woody Hayes Athletic Center or at Ohio Stadium.

In his first game as the Buckeyes’ acting head coach in 2018, Day made his biggest impression. He looked calm each time TV cameras captured a glimpse of him, a sideline demeanor that Smith admired.

“Obviously, he’s the play-caller, so he’s got to be cerebral,” Smith said, “but he doesn’t yell at players.”

The Buckeyes also tallied 77 points against Oregon State in an onslaught, piling on three TDs in the fourth quarter.

It was an unrelentin­g approach that allowed Day to gain even more favor.

“Your players want to be aggressive,” Smith said. “I really think players love to connect with a culture and environmen­t where you’re going to get after it. And if you demonstrat­e that as a leader, players gravitate to that.”

In an era of skyrocketi­ng salaries in college football, with schools on the hook for paying coaches multimilli­ons of dollars each season, familiarit­y with candidates has become valued by administra­tors. A lot of money is on the line, including hefty buyout payments, if the hires don’t pan out.

The salaries for promoted assistants are also often lower, at least in the early goings.

In their first full seasons in 2017, Orgeron’s LSU salary was $3.5 million and Riley’s compensati­on was $3.1 million at Oklahoma. By comparison, Tom Herman, hired by Texas during the same offseason and widely seen as a top upand-coming coach after two successful seasons at Houston, made significan­tly more at $5.25 million.

Riley has since been given a sizable raise. After leading Oklahoma to Playoff berths the previous two seasons, his annual salary is nearly double, reaching more than $6 million.

Swinney is the nation’s highest-paid coach at $9.3 million, according to USA TODAY’s database of coaching salaries, following a series of raises.

As Day considered his own ascendance last week, he held an appreciati­on for Smith’s decision, noting the veteran athletics director had taken a chance on him.

“It was a little risky,” Day said. “Call it for what it is.”

Day knew he had been named a firsttime head coach five months before his 40th birthday, rare at a blue-blood program that had not hired anyone without prior head coaching experience for its top job since 1946. Paul Bixler, elevated as an assistant at Ohio State more than seven decades ago, lasted one season.

But Smith framed his decision in opposite terms.

While Meyer’s health worsened late last season, Smith conferred with Oklahoma athletics director Joe Castiglion­e, who had promoted Riley. He also considered other possible candidates from other schools. Though Smith declined to reveal those candidates or acknowledg­e if he spoke with any of them, he made pros and cons lists to contrast with Day.

He determined it wasn’t much of a gamble to tap the assistant who had been a part of recent success late in the Meyer era, someone he had watched for two seasons.

“The risk with Ryan was less than the risk of bringing in somebody else new,” Smith said. “I’d already assessed his talent and felt comfortabl­e with that. And the other piece was we have a culture, we have a system, we have a structure, that doesn’t need blowing it up.

“I’ve brought in a lot of different coaches in a lot of different sports. Ninety-nine point nine percent of the time, they want to change something. Ryan knows how we operate.”

 ?? MATTHEW EMMONS/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Oklahoma head coach Lincoln Riley’s annual salary has nearly doubled, reaching more than $6 million.
MATTHEW EMMONS/USA TODAY SPORTS Oklahoma head coach Lincoln Riley’s annual salary has nearly doubled, reaching more than $6 million.

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