Is Corey's direct report the OC not the HC?
Corey can't report directly to anybody that is under Randy's supervision. That is why he reports directly to Goetz in AD's office. All need to accept that this was a justified nepotism hire that occurs frequently in the college sports world. Corey had appropriate experience away from Randy to earn the coaching role at a lower than market salary. I do think it was a mistake to put Corey's hiring into Randy's contract. This muddied the water in terms of prior knowledge regardless of Randy's actual start date.
There obviously should be different hiring and reporting requirements for sports teams as "relationships", be they family or based on other experiences, do not correlate directly to traditional hiring requirements (i.e. experience, salary requirements, interviews, recommendations, ect...), but are an incredibly significant in developing a cohesive coaching staff. If traditional blind resume hiring practices were used coaching staffs would be full of DeLeone's and Vertucci's that have years of experience. In the coach hiring realm, is there truly a difference between nepotism and cronyism.
The OC was hired based on a relationship with the AD. Kevin Ollie's staff is based on UConn basketball connections or recruiting connections, not coaching work experience. None of these "job requirements" show up in the posted job descriptions. We all know of the convoluted hiring process for the sports teams as the interviews and handshake hiring are completed and then the job posting is created to match the hired person's work experience. This is accepted as "ethical" just as the sexism of male hires for male sports is accepted albeit against general hiring standards. These "handshake rules" apply for every hire except if that person is a blood relative. That is not a logical approach and it creates a tremendous amount of useless hoops for many to jump through. The difficulty is drafting enforceable hiring practices that will be protective enough of truly negative nepotistic hiring that would undoubtedly occur. Possibly incorporating limitations on raises, promotions to senior staff level positions, or hiring at senior levels would be appropriate as some of the negatives of nepotism is the fast tracking to higher level positions. Corey gets the experience of working with his father, but if he wants to advance in the coaching field he would have to accept a position with another team. That is the best approach I can come up with.
Interesting article on nepotism hires and issues faced by other schools :
Athletic Departments Navigate Nepotism Policy - Athletic Business