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Underachieving
College Coaches
By Jim Johnson
Posted: 6:00 am PDT 2006-07-12 |
Courtesy Of Wager
Web Sportsbook |
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When you're trying to beat the
odds, it's just as important to know which teams are likely to disappoint as ones that
will be surprise winners. Over the years, several coaches have made a name for
themselves that they probably would like to change. These are the men who win the
recruiting rankings in February but by November have come up short of expectations; the
leaders that turn a solid 8-9 win team into one scraping for a bowl bid.
Chuck Amato, North Carolina State: The short version of justifying the selection is
this: The Wolfpack had three NFL first-round picks on their squad last season, yet managed
to lose five games. It appears Amato's success at NC State was directly tied to
former quarterback Philip Rivers. Amato and Rivers arrived in Raleigh at the same
time and compiled a 34-17 record in four years -- good but not great. In the two
years since Rivers' departure, the Wolfpack are 12-11. The results on the field do
not reflect the highly rated recruits that Amato has been attracting. After a
No. 34 class in the Rivals.com rankings in 2002, State was No. 7 in 2003, No. 28 in
2004 and No. 27 in 2005. Recruits may have figured out they need to go elsewhere to
win since Amato's 2006 signing class was ranked only No. 54.
Ron Zook, Illinois: Zook took over a Florida program in 2002 that had won 10 or more
games nine of the previous eleven seasons (nine the other two), added classes ranked No.
20, No. 2 and No. 7 (Rivals.com), and won eight, eight and seven games in his three
seasons at Gainesville. During his tenure, the Gators lost all three bowl games they
played in and dropped five of six to in-state rivals Miami and Florida
State. Watching Urban Meyer come in last season and post a 9-3 record with Zook's
recruits despite trying to run an offensive system the players were not well-suited to
only reinforced the thought that Zook underachieved. Zook's first Illinois squad
posted a dismal 2-9 record last season, but he still managed to land a No. 30
class. Look for Illinois to eventually become competitive in the Big Ten but still
manage to lose games to opponents with lesser talent.
Al Groh, Virginia: Groh has signed three national top 20 classes the past five
years. Despite this, the Cavaliers' best record during that stretch is 8-4, and the
highest they've moved on the bowl game pecking order is the Continental Tire Bowl (that's
not very high). Groh achieved his early recruiting success by presenting the Virginia
football program as a primer for the NFL. He has the resume for it; he spent 13 years
in the league as an assistant and a head coach and had a long working relationship with
Bill Parcells. Groh has delivered on draft day: 12 Cavaliers have been drafted over
the past two years, two of them in the first round (TE Heath Miller in 2005, OT
D'Brickashaw Ferguson in 2006). Under Groh, Virginia often plays down to the level of
its competition, especially on the road. The Cavs lost at Maryland and North Carolina
last season, two teams that weren't nearly as talented as Virginia.
Phil Fulmer, Tennessee: Unlike my other choices, Fulmer earned this designation
primarily due to an atrocious 2005 performance. How can a team with all the talent
the Volunteers had last season, even in the brutally tough SEC, wind up with a record of
5-6? Fulmer clearly butchered his handling of the quarterback position, and losses at
home to South Carolina and Vanderbilt are completely unacceptable in Knoxville. At
least Fulmer realized he needed help in righting the ship, which often looked like it did
not have any particular direction on offense last season. He rehired offensive guru
David Cutcliffe to clean up the mess and try to get quarterback Erik Ainge's head back on
straight. Last season wasn't the first time a Fulmer team has underachieved; his 2002
team had too much talent to lose five games, four of them by at least 17
points. Tennessee should bounce back this year, but approach the Vols warily when
wagering.
John L. Smith, Michigan State: Smith earned a reputation at Louisville as a coach
who could bring excitement and explosive offense to a program, and he has lived up to that
at Michigan State. That has not resulted in wins, however. The Spartans
struggled to 5-7 and 5-6 records the past two seasons and have shown a disturbing trend of
losing games they have no business losing. In 2004, Michigan State fell to Rutgers
and Hawaii. Last season, despite having the fifth-ranked offense in the nation, the
Spartans fell 41-18 at Minnesota and 49-14 at home to Northwestern. Smith has brought
in three solid recruiting classes (his 2004 class was ranked No. 16, the highest so far),
but Michigan State's recent history of bad losses reeks of underachieving.
Dennis Franchione, Texas A&M: A few years ago, "Coach Fran" was one
of the hottest coaches in the nation. He had led TCU to its best season in more than
60 years and cashed in when he accepted the Alabama job. Two years later, he jumped
again to Texas A&M, where things have hit a bit of a snag. Franchione's
three-year record is only 16-19 with one bowl appearance, a 38-7 drubbing by Tennessee in
the 2005 Cotton Bowl. Last season A&M, a school with a proud tradition of strong,
hard-nosed defense, finished last in the nation in pass defense. This trend is even
worse when you consider that Rivals.com ranked Franchione's first three recruiting classes
at A&M No. 10, No. 13 and No. 8 in the nation. With talent like that, the Aggies
should be a serious threat for a BCS bowl. Instead, they are struggling to be
eligible for any bowl. Franchione has brought in 35-year veteran coach Gary Darnell
as defensive coordinator to try and fix the problems on that side of the ball. He'd
better hurry because the clock is ticking loudly on Franchione's stay in College Station.
The bottom line with the schools I mention here is to evaluate how many games a team with
their talent level should win in a season, then subtract two. Also, count on at least
one unexplainable loss along the way |
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