Coaching Candidates Part II: Other 5, Coordinators Comment Count

Brian

WELP! When you're 2-4 and a home dog to a Penn State team starting a discarded gyro and a red solo cup at guard it may be time to see what's out there in terms of possible replacements.

Previously: the Power 5 head coaches, which at this point is just DAN MULLEN DAN MULLEN DAN MULLEN.

Other 5 Head Coaches

4fe325323228f.preview-620[1]BRONCO MENDENHALL, BYU

BASICS: 86-34 in his tenth year at BYU, with a run of four straight ten win seasons from 2006 to 2009. Before that DC at New Mexico for five years and various small jobs besides. 48.

PROS: Wins many games. Lots of HC experience for age. Comfortable with running and passing QBs. Named "Bronco" so team would have to be tough I mean you'd think right. Would bring in a lot of Samoans.

CONS: Availability questionable. Mendenhall is a Mormon from Utah and is reputedly going nowhere. Has fallen off a bit after a hot start, coming off consecutive 8-5 seasons. (He is 4-1 this year.) Recruiting questions bountiful.

OVERALL: Might as well inquire but think he would be all but impossible to pry away.

512x[1]CRAIG BOHL, WYOMING

BASICS: In his first year with the Cowboys after crushing I-AA run with North Dakota State in which they won three consecutive national titles. Had been HC at NDSU since 2003 before that; during this period NDSU moved up from D-II; they had consecutive 10-1 seasons under Bohl that did not result in playoff appearances due to that. 104-32 overall at NDSU. 56.

PROS: Can beat Minnesota. Really really bald.

CONS: Age tenuous, no big time experience, just got to Wyoming.

OVERALL: Todd Graham-esque departure this would require probably puts him behind other flier candidates, as does his age.

ECarolina QBs FootballRUFFIN MCNEILL, ECU

BASICS: ECU's head coach since 2010. .500-ish his first two years, then won went 8-5 with a 7-1 nonconference record in 2012. Went 10-3 last year with a win over UNC and a narrow loss to VT; upset VT authoritatively this year. Prior to that was Texas Tech's DC for a few year, with a bunch of LB coaching jobs before that. 55.

PROS: Has ECU rolling with a modern offense. Had amazing afro back in the day.

CONS: Old-ish, doesn't have that much track record as a head coach. Highly successful OC Lincoln Riley likely to replace him so Michigan wouldn't get to import him.

OVERALL: Seems about as risky as a coordinator without as much upside.

20111213__CSU_COACH_3JL7494~p1[1]JIM MCELWAIN, COLORADO STATE

BASICS: In his third year at CSU. Took over a 3-9 team, had one bad year, and then went 8-6 a year ago. Currently 4-1 with wins over Power 5 outfits Colorado and Boston College. Alabama's OC for four years before that, Fresno's OC in 2007, one year as the Raiders' QB coach, and then various position jobs. 52.

PROS: Familiar with pro-style and spread concepts. Might have a smaller transition cost than other candidates depending on how similar his offense is to Nussmeier's. Promising start to HC career. FEI ranks of his Bama offenses: 16, 8, 3, 11. Spent three years at MSU so not entirely unfamiliar with the area.

CONS: Very short track record as a head coach. Success may be based on importing guys like Dee Hart from Bama more than any particular skill.

OVERALL: If CSU has a ten win season he's a guy who'd be logical to look at.

OTHERS

Nope. The next guy on the list was Georgia Southern's Willie Fritz.

[After THE JUMP: coordinators are waiting for your call]

Coordinators

20110304_spring_practice60_t300[1]CHAD MORRIS, OC, CLEMSON

BASICS: Texas high school legend went 169-38 as a head coach at various stops from 1994 to 2009. Hired as Tulsa's OC in 2010 for single season under Todd Graham, then snatched up by Clemson. Now makes more money as an assistant than anyone in the country; Clemson's offense has been highly productive since. 45.

PROS: A lot of head coaching experience, albeit in high school. Good at making offense go. You know it's his show for the most part since Dabo was never a coordinator. Age.

CONS: Pure HUNH proponent, which may clash (but everyone is HUNH these days). Not even the whisper of a Michigan connection, or even a Midwest connection.

OVERALL: He's going to be a head coach somewhere soon, but probably not M. Feel that Clemson's offense has been a mite overhyped of late despite having Sammy Watkins and Tajh Boyd. Pass.

osufb-notes-11-28-art-g0sprajs-1osufb-8-27-ac-05[1]TOM HERMAN, OC, OSU

BASICS: OSU's OC and QB coach since 2012. Before that held the same position at Iowa State for three years, Rice for two years, and Texas State before that. (Not that Texas State.) A small-school position coach previous. 39.

PROS: Ohio State offense seems like a slightly good idea at the moment. Ohio State's QB coach seems like a slightly good idea at the moment. Had Rice tenth in total yardage when Iowa State scooped him up; likely to be very much running the show there with Meyer trying to find that ol' work-life balance. Previous Meyer OC hired away has worked out pretty well. SMRT: he's in Mensa! 2013 Rivals Big Ten recruiter of the year, too.

CONS: Still has peach fuzz on his cheeks. Can't decide whether he wears  glasses or not. Combination of OSU and spread means high chance of transplant rejection from crotchety program alumni.

OVERALL: I wouldn't mind. Herman's rapid rise up the ranks is going to result in a head job pretty soon, and I think a smart guy would be nice.

1386811257000-AP-Broyles-Award-Narduzzi[1]PAT NARDUZZI, DC, MSU

BASICS: Dantonio's DC since 2004, Broyles winner last year after Michigan State's defense… sigh… propelled them to a Rose Bowl win. Before that was an assistant at various MAC schools and Rhode Island. 48.

PROS: Hooray witheringly effective aggressive defense. Hooray not having him at Michigan State anymore.

CONS: Uncertain how much of MSU's defensive success is him and how much is Dantonio. May be distasteful to fans, increasing chance he's bounced early. Might be hiring a double agent sent to destroy the program.

OVERALL: How do you know we don't already have one of those at AD?

TIM BECK, OC, NEBRASKA

BASICS: Has been Nebraska's OC since 2011, before that coached everywhere in the Nebraska/Missouri/Kansas area from high school on up. 48. Youngstown, OH, native.

PROS: Has a modern version of the Bo offense, an option-based system that uses the QB as a runner and has all kinds of folds and tricks up his sleeve. Once caused Hoke and Mattison to shrug resignedly when he pulled out a double pitch option.

CONS: Experience, possibility he won't be able to properly utilize a QB who can throw. Offense has never been amazing. Just got head stomped in by gentleman directly above.

OVERALL: I like his offense but doubt he'll be seriously considered.

673573[1]SCOTT FROST, OC, OREGON

BASICS: Former Nebraska QB and NFL DB took up Helfrich's spot as the OC after Chip Kelly departed. Before that was the WR coach at Oregon for four years; was co-DC at UNI for a year before getting snapped up by the Ducks. 39.

PROS: Suffused in experience with all manner of option QB-running schemes from his college days and Oregon experience. If he works out would be a very long term solution. Smart guy who transferred from Stanford way back when. Would recruit Nebraska like a mofo.

CONS: Total flier pick. Mom doesn't like us. Might lose him to Nebraska if and when Pelini is done.

OVERALL: This would be a Rob Deer swing for the fences, and I'm okay with that. Once you get down here it's all risky anyway.

5272724b9b54a.image[1]JOSH HUEPEL, OC, OKLAHOMA

BASICS: Oklahoma's OC for the past five years; before that their QB coach for five years. Heisman finalist as a Sooner QB in 2000, with brief NFL career afterwards. A mere pup at 36.

PROS: Head coach is a defensive guy, his show. Supporting evidence: most recent OU OC to get a head job, Kevin Wilson, has been reasonably successful and very successful in his area of expertise. Might be Batman.

CONS: Inexperience, again not even the whisper of a Michigan connection. Would be obvious candidate for OU job when Stoops retires—at 54 that's probably far enough off that it's not a disqualifying factor. Might not be Batman.

OVERALL: Identical candidate to Frost, except with a picture that will haunt him until he dies.

9171396-large[1]KIRBY SMART, DC, ALABAMA

BASICS: Saban's DC since his arrival in Tuscaloosa, with all that that implies both good and bad. Before that a position coach various places. DB at Georgia as a player. 38.

PROS: Scott Frost, the DC. Except he's been absorbing the tao of the master since 2008. Saban got rid of Nussmeier pretty abruptly so Smart must be doing something right.

CONS: Who has any idea whether he's at all responsible for Saban's Ds. Talent overwhelming, coaching same. Has never ventured north of Georgia as a coach, possibly in his life.

OVERALL: Cultural issues and even more total uncertainty about how he'd do on his own make him a nah.

kiffin1[1]LANE KIFFIN, OC, ALABAMA

BASICS: you would take this compared to right now I guarantee it

PROS: just think about that

laaaane kiffin

you'd do it

think about it

CONS: but not too hard

OVERALL: stay safe out there, kids

OTHERS

There are a butt-ton of coordinators out there but not many stand out as consistent overachievers other than the guys above. Bud Foster is a VT DC lifer. Stanford OC Mike Bloomgren, mentioned only for manball demanders, has only been in the job two years but before that was their run game coordinator and then an assistant OC for the Jets for three years. Stanford's offense sucks this year, BTW.

Other than Foster it's hard to find any prominent DCs who have their teams at the top of the rankings year-in year-out, period; those who do often come with overwhelming talent or guru HC issues.

Comments

Perkis-Size Me

October 7th, 2014 at 1:48 PM ^

Part of me wants us to stay away from coordinators. Ideally I'd want someone with a lot of HC experience. Again, with guys like Smart and Narduzzi, you have no idea how much of their unit's success is due to them, or the head man.

Assuming the Harbaughs don't pan out (I really, at this point, don't want Miles other than for the idea of "well, at least our press conferences would be fun to watch"), I'd be okay with pursuing Craig Bohl, depending on how things pan out with him at Wyoming this year. If he can get them to 8-9 wins at least, I'd go for it.

His lack of big-time football experience is the one drawback, but we've got to try something new. This guy knows how to coach some football, that's for damn sure. I don't care what level you're at, but 3 straight national titles under your watch, including a likely 4th straight with the team you built is pretty damn impressive. That tells me his teams have an identity, he knows who he's recruiting, and he can develop talent. And, obviously, he's a winner. All you need to do is look at his all-time record and title rings to prove it.

Tressel was a nobody when OSU picked him up from Youngstown, but he had an amazing track record there, and they were willing to try anything as long as someone could beat Michigan. Now we find ourselves in somewhat of the same boat. I don't know if a home-run hire is really what we need. It'd be great, but we can find success elsewhere. I think Bohl will be itching to prove himself at the highest level. If he wasn't, he never would've left North Dakota, where he could win national championships year after year.

Unsalted

October 7th, 2014 at 2:11 PM ^

I like what McElwain has done at CSU. Their facilities are bottom tier, even for Mountain West, and the funding drive to build a new stadium on campus fell way short of its mark. Their current stadium is several miles from campus and out of date. This is a tough place to recruit, without the prospect of a new stadium McElwain may be easy to pick.

A candidate that is more under the radar is Air Force coach Troy Calhoun, 2007- present. His HC record does not pop out at you at 53-42. He was 41-24 his first five seasons but 6-7 and 2-10 the last two. He is currently  4-1 this year.

Obviously success at a military academy is tougher to accomplish than at a power 5 school. When the Broncos were searching for a HC after they fired Josh McDaniels, Calhoun's name was mentioned a lot. He is an Air Force Academy grad, so it may be a tough pull to get him to leave. He played QB at AFA 1985 - '88, is 48 years old.

Career highlights:

  • Air Force, HC 2007 - present
  • Houston Texans, OC 2006
  • Denver Broncos, 2003 - 2005 assistant on D, O, and ST
  • Wake Forest, OC/QB 2001 - 2003
  • Ohio, OC/QB 1995 - 2000
  • Air Force, 1989 - 1994, Grad Asst, recruiting coord., JV OC

michgoblue

October 7th, 2014 at 2:16 PM ^

Really sucks. Between this post and the last, there is a total of one decent name - Dan Mullen. Hopefully, part 3 (which I assume will be nfl and others) will have some decent names on it. Otherwise, if we can't get Harbaugh (either) or miles, I am not sure that firing Hoke is a given.

991GT3

October 7th, 2014 at 2:25 PM ^

directly related to his OC Greg Roman. His offense scheme is exactly what most Michigan fans want. BIg lineman with a devastating run game. He recruits well and developed Luck. 

If Harbaugh shows no interest then we should go after Roman.

twizzle12

October 7th, 2014 at 2:37 PM ^

I would take a flyer on ruffin only if lincoln riley came...heck why not go after lincoln riley as young as he is you can groom him to be a "Michigan Man"!!

twizzle12

October 7th, 2014 at 2:37 PM ^

I would take a flyer on ruffin only if lincoln riley came...heck why not go after lincoln riley as young as he is you can groom him to be a "Michigan Man"!!

FatGuyTouchdown

October 7th, 2014 at 2:40 PM ^

1. He's a family friend. Good guy. This may be a bit selfish.

2. He's 1-0 against MSU. I believe he beat them when Leach was fired and he interimed for the bowl

3. His name is Ruffin. Sign me up

Silentcheese818

October 7th, 2014 at 3:31 PM ^

I have always rooted for Mike Tomlin to start doing poorly for the steelers. if he ever gets fired i think he should look into coaching college. he would be the perfect guy to turn michigan around. not saying it's realistic at all but think about it.

Michigan Difference

October 7th, 2014 at 3:34 PM ^

The head coaching candidates here don't seem any more qualified than Brady Hoke was when he came.  One year at Wyoming doesn't seem much different than two years at San Diego State.

I understand that the Harbaugh, Sumlin, etc. may not be an option and that this list is intended to be the non-power five conferences anyway.  But will we really have to go that route?  Even during a downswing, it's still Michigan.  Surely we'll be able to do a little better than this...

Some of the coordinators do sound interesting.  Narduzzi and Herman are likely to be head coaches somewhere soon and know what it's like to coach in the Big Ten.

EGD

October 7th, 2014 at 3:45 PM ^

Add me to the list of people hoping there is a Part III and that it covers possible candidates from the NFL.  Here are some suggestions for guys that seem worth looking into:

  • Teryl Austin (Lions' DC, previously coached at M)
  • Greg Schiano (former Rutgers coach who flamed-out at Tampa)
  • Jack Del Rio (Broncos DC, 8+ years as HC of Jacksonville Jaguars)
  • Dan Quinn (Seahawks DC, hot commodity as possible NFL HC)
  • Adam Gase (Broncos OC, MSU grad -- DID NOT PLAY COLLEGE FOOTBALL)
  • Darrell Bevell (Seahawks OC, played 11 seasons at Wisconsin)
  • Josh McDaniels (Patriots OC, is he the next BOB or the next Weis?)
  • Any HCs fired this season (possible: Rex Ryan, Gus Bradley)

bronxblue

October 7th, 2014 at 6:31 PM ^

Schiano is sadly pretty toxic right now; Michigan doesn't need a guy who was chased out of the NFL.  Same with McDaniels, who seems to piss people off without being good enough to overlook those failings.

The problem with hot coordinators in the NFL is that they want HC jobs, and going back to college might not appeal to them much.  Guys like Kelly, Harbaugh, and Carroll have been good with the transition from college to pros, but most of the guys struggle and it seems like coordinators are better bets because they are used to the pro set.  So unless the college job is a place you kinda want to stick around at, it's at best a lateral move and I'm not sure most would take it for a crappy situation at UM.

EGD

October 7th, 2014 at 11:09 PM ^

I guess part of my thinking is that I really don't view the M situation as being all that crappy, apart from DB's presence. With all the raw talent Hoke has been able to bring in, I feel like the right coach could win immediately. I don't see it as a long-term rebuilding job like in 2010.

CoachBP6

October 7th, 2014 at 3:58 PM ^

Funny how all these people on the internet that have never coached football are able to criticize the candidates ability to coach. Was Lloyd Carr a home run hire at the time? Did he have an amazing track record? How about Bo? The bottom line is that a large percentage of Michigan fans think this program is screwed unless we land a harbaugh, miles, or Mullen. Michigan needs a young, energetic coach with the ability to develop talent, a solid ability to recruit, and a hatred for losing.

bronxblue

October 7th, 2014 at 6:27 PM ^

I guess I look at at bunch of these coordinators and am underwhelmed.  They are all guys who are a bit older or work under coaches so iconic with their style (Saban, Meyer, Dantonio) that it is hard to separate the two.  I'd be fine with basically anyone competent, but I do think people are underrating Nussmeier a bit.  He's not been at the school for long so he shouldn't be lumped in wit Hoke, he has a decent pedigree, and it's not like the Alabama offense has been on fire since he was replaced.  We all look at that situation and figure Saban knew what he was doing when he picked Kiffin, but the fact any coach thought it was a good idea to hire Lane Kiffin for an important role is pretty damning.

As much as I think change is needed, Um doesn't need to pick another goober just because he's different.  I'm not in love with Nussmeier, but if they are all equal I'd rather get the guy who is already used to the situation and on the recruiting trail than hoping Kirby Smart or Scott Frost can start it up?