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As we watch one jaw-dropping hire after another in the college football universe these last few days, it makes me more appreciative that we were able to hang on to Coach Calhoun and Geno as long as we did. Or was a lot of it luck that the right job and/or right amount never came about?
I read both of their books 10+ years ago so the details aren't totally vivid but I do recall in Calhoun's book that when UConn was on the rise he did receive his share of offers and one of them that I recall was Virginia. He basically said he turned them down because he's a "New England Guy" and these situations didn't feel right for him. So even though he infamously said "Not One Dime Back!" at least he didn't leave to take "one dime more" when he probably had plenty of chances to do so.
In Geno's case, I've seen at least a couple of interviews where they asked him why he stays at Uconn and he said with a smirk "because they pay me a lot of money". He also said in his book that there's only one job that he'd take....the Duke men's job (kidding? not kidding?) because he knows how good he has it where he is. I think it also helped that until recently schools weren't paying big money to women's coaches so UConn was essentially bidding against themselves to keep Geno around but felt it was worth it because they knew what he did for the UConn brand regardless of how much money the program was making/losing.
So we can thank these guys for their loyalty. Or we can just consider ourselves lucky that they never received the "right offer" (money, location, enticing enough challenge, etc.) to leave.
I read both of their books 10+ years ago so the details aren't totally vivid but I do recall in Calhoun's book that when UConn was on the rise he did receive his share of offers and one of them that I recall was Virginia. He basically said he turned them down because he's a "New England Guy" and these situations didn't feel right for him. So even though he infamously said "Not One Dime Back!" at least he didn't leave to take "one dime more" when he probably had plenty of chances to do so.
In Geno's case, I've seen at least a couple of interviews where they asked him why he stays at Uconn and he said with a smirk "because they pay me a lot of money". He also said in his book that there's only one job that he'd take....the Duke men's job (kidding? not kidding?) because he knows how good he has it where he is. I think it also helped that until recently schools weren't paying big money to women's coaches so UConn was essentially bidding against themselves to keep Geno around but felt it was worth it because they knew what he did for the UConn brand regardless of how much money the program was making/losing.
So we can thank these guys for their loyalty. Or we can just consider ourselves lucky that they never received the "right offer" (money, location, enticing enough challenge, etc.) to leave.