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11 years ago. That is a lifetime in football. We need new ideas.Golden turned around a terrible Temple.
11 years ago. That is a lifetime in football. We need new ideas.Golden turned around a terrible Temple.
excellent pointGolden turned around a terrible Temple. I'd be ok with him coming here. It would be a 3-4 stop for him which I think the school needs to relegate itself to. We are going to be a stepping stone job and should hire accordingly. Cincinnati has knocked it out of the park on every hire except Tuberville. Look to their model and we will see the same success.
Al Golden and Skip Holtz mentioned in this article.
Not so sure about being a stepping stone.. He'll be 53..The salary will afford him a nice life in Connecticut, just be decent and their will be no pressure..excellent point
yeah, 11 years ago, but the guy's coaching LBer's in the NFL... been coaching in the NFL since he left college football.. He's still learning... that's what that tells me...11 years ago. That is a lifetime in football. We need new ideas.
I know a guy that was a linebackers coach in the NFL and an analyst at Alabama that I don't want as HC.yeah, 11 years ago, but the guy's coaching LBer's in the NFL... been coaching in the NFL since he left college football.. He's still learning... that's what that tells me...
One tweet and the fuse is lit…
If considering Golden, UConn should also look at Mike London. He bombed out at UVA like Golden did at Miami, but was successful at Richmond before UVA, and has since turned things around at William & Mary. Guys go the the NFL for a reason and my concern with Golden is that the college recruiting/coaching gig is not his preference at this point. It is not like he took a break for a year or two from the college game. He has been in the NFL for 6 years now, which is the same amount of time Pasqualoni was coaching in the NFL before UConn called. I would rather stick with a guy like London who has stayed connected to the college recruiting game. Yes, London is 61 which is pushing the top of desired age, but Golden absence from the college game for 6 years concerns me more than London's age.
Good point.. didn't think of the 6 years away thing that way...If considering Golden, UConn should also look at Mike London. He bombed out at UVA like Golden did at Miami, but was successful at Richmond before UVA, and has since turned things around at William & Mary. Guys go the the NFL for a reason and my concern with Golden is that the college recruiting/coaching gig is not his preference at this point. It is not like he took a break for a year or two from the college game. He has been in the NFL for 6 years now, which is the same amount of time Pasqualoni was coaching in the NFL before UConn called. I would rather stick with a guy like London who has stayed connected to the college recruiting game. Yes, London is 61 which is pushing the top of desired age, but Golden absence from the college game for 6 years concerns me more than London's age.
Without question that disqualifies him.When Golden got the Temple job in 2006 he hired George Deleone to be his offensive coordinator. In 2007 Deleone was also made the offensive line coach at Temple.
# automatic disqualification. Sorry, not sorry.
With zero winning records in 3 prior UCLA seasons, Kelly's likely jettisoned if his 5-4 Bruins lose to bad Colorado (2-6), blah Cal (3-5), and particularly SC (4-4) once AGAIN. 6-6 with an L to the Trojans? 6-6 beating SC, another year? Time will tellChips got another year at UCLA before they can him, he started season good with high expectations but it’s leveled off lately losing to some winnable teams, love the guy though
Just go to Hartford and ask Jeff if he wants the job. Dude is 96-19 since 2006.
Either that or find a coach with a link to Mount Union. Three successful coaches currently at the FBS level in Campbell, Candle, and Grinch (OU OC). And several other football alums coaching at the D3 and D2 levels. Larry Kehres not only built a powerhouse program, but also a future coaches program.
I agree. Golden has been away from the college game too long for my liking. Holtz on the other hand has 6 bowl victories in the last 8 years.
Golden has a lot more more in common with Edsall than Holtz does. Both fired form their last college job, both have defensive backgrounds and both coming from the NFL.
Heck Golden has a lot in common with PP.
I'd definitely prefer Alex Grinch if we're talking about Mount Union. Or Jason Candle. He needs a change of scenery before he becomes stagnant and old hat. But Mount Union or rather Larry Kehres, seems to be able to breed coaches.I checked out Mount Union’s coach last night. He’s only worked in two places. Very young.
Same with John’s Hopkins
Great summary!Cignetti's track record on "turning losers to winners"
IUP
IUP had a 4–10 conference record prior to Cignetti's arrival in 2011. In his first year as head coach, the team won 6 of its last 7 games, by an average of 28 points per game, to finish 7–3. In 2012, The Crimson Hawks won the Pennsylvania State Athletic Conference and advanced to the NCAA Regional Finals, finishing 12–2. Cignetti’s 2013 team finished 9–2 and he led IUP to the NCAAplayoffs in both 2015 and 2016. His 2016 team finished 10–2. Cignetti finished 53–17 at IUP with three NCAA playoff appearances and two conference championships. On December 31, 2016, he accepted the head coaching position at Elon University.
Elon
The Elon team had had a 4–20 conference record and suffered through six straight losing seasons prior to Cignetti's arrival, but in his first season the squad won eight games in a row after an opening season loss to MAC Champion Toledo. The Phoenix were ranked as high as 6th nationally, played James Madison for the conference championship and were selected for the NCAA Playoffs for the first time since 2009. Cignetti was named CAA coach of the year and was a finalist for the Eddie Robinson National Coach of the Year. In 2018, Cignetti led the Phoenix to a 27–24 win over James Madison, ending JMU's 22-game CAA Football winning streak and then FCS-best 19-game home winning streak. The win marked Elon's first over a top-five FCS opponent.[2] The Phoenix earned back to back NCAA playoff appearances for the first time in program history.
James Madison
Curt Cignetti was named Head Football Coach at James Madison on December 14, 2018. In his first season, Cignetti led the Dukes to a seven game improvement over 2018, finishing 14–2. The Dukes won the CAA Conference with an 8–0 record and advanced to the 2020 FCS National Championship.
One tweet and the fuse is lit…
I'd rather bring Peterson if we are going that route.Seems like Gary Patterson is still all-in on coaching