🏈 Nussmeier Leaving to be Michigan OC

All this talk, and assuming, that Kiffin is going to be the OC is very pre-mature. The funny thing is, some of it is coming from the media, not just fans. I would think it is much more likely to be someone like Napier or Mike Groh than Kiffin. Kiffin makes for a great story and lots of clicks though I guess...



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Conceivable: An encouraged-to-look-around Doug Nussmeier could go to Michigan and open door for, yep, Lane Kiffin at Bama. Saban likes Lane.
— Travis Haney (@TravHaneyESPN) January 8, 2014
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I would love to see Neuheisel!

What is the rumor?

What's the rumor?

Someone tweeted it to Cecil Hurt.

BdggTBeIcAAVgGu.jpg


One of the more ridiculous rumors I've seen started, right up there with Saban throwing the 2010 Iron Bowl.
 
Doug Nussmeier brought unprecedented success to the Alabama offense in his two years as coordinator in Tuscaloosa. The Crimson Tide averaged more than 38 points per contest over and succeeded in opened up the passing game to include more big plays down field. AJ McCarron evolved from a "game manager" into a Heisman Trophy contender and added another BCS National Championship ring to his already impressive collection.

But the more immediate memory of Nussmeier is not so rosy. The numbers, however impressive they might be, only serve as a faint silver outline of what turned out to be a disappointing ending, as Alabama's offense failed on the national stage against Oklahoma in the Sugar Bowl. It turned out to be the final game of Nussmeier's tenure, as he's agreed to move north and take the same job at Michigan.

In the Sugar Bowl, the flaws of Nussmeier's scheme were put under a heavy spotlight: the protection broke down, McCarron faltered and three turnovers ultimately doomed the Tide. Alabama's most potent weapons -- guys such as O.J. Howard and Derrick Henry -- were underutilized, and a back-and-forth commitment to the running game turned the offense from dangerously dynamic to utterly predictable.

However explosive Alabama was on paper, it was never a team built to score quickly. Without a running game, there was no threat of play-action. Without the threat of play-action, nothing worked. When Alabama fell behind to Oklahoma by two scores, the game was all but over. McCarron became human and the offense hit a wall. And in today's version of college football, where high-octane passing offenses dominate the landscape, that style of play is no longer acceptable.

Alabama coach Nick Saban will have to think of that when he hires his next offensive coordinator, the fourth in his time with the Tide. In fact, he's probably already thought plenty about it.

Over the past year, Saban has dropped a number of not-so-subtle hints that change was coming. No-huddle, up-tempo offenses were something he wanted to explore and even implement, he said.

"It's something we're going to look at. I think we'll have to," Saban told ESPN.com in September. "I think we need to play faster and will have to do more of that going forward."

But who will be the man to make those changes? One name being bandied about is Lane Kiffin. Yes, the same Lane Kiffin who unceremoniously bailed on the SEC when he left Tennessee in 2010 and then was unceremoniously dumped by USC in 2013. He's something of a villainized character in college football, and that's an area where Saban can sympathize. Saban's been called a "devil" himself, so a devil-may-care attitude might be fitting.

The connections between Saban and Kiffin are obvious: both coaches share the same agent (Jimmy Sexton) and both coaches have shared the same meeting room in the past few months. Saban invited Kiffin to Tuscaloosa to help evaluate the offense in mid-December, and Saban had only glowing things to say about Kiffin at the time.

"Lane is a really good offensive coach, and I've always had a tremendous amount of respect for him," Saban said. "Just to come in and brainstorm a little bit to get some professional ideas with our guys is a really positive thing."

Whether that mutual respect will lead to a contract is anyone's guess. There are plenty of high-profile offensive coordinators out there who might be interested in moving to a program so stockpiled with talent that blue-chip prospects overflow from the roster.

If the hurry-up is what Saban's after, a guy such as Clemson's Chad Morris would be a home run. If Saban wants to stick to the run, Stanford's Mike Bloomberg would be a big name to go after. If Saban wants to stick to what he knows, current wide receivers coach Billy Napier and former wide receivers coach Mike Groh could be possibilities.

Whoever Saban chooses will have immediately high expectations. It's championship-or-bust at Alabama, and putting up big numbers isn't always enough to make everyone happy. Just ask Doug Nussmeier.

http://insider.espn.go.com/blog/col.../19018/tide-can-start-fresh-without-nussmeier
 
BTW, here's an exercise in logic for you guys.

When you add this up, what do you get?

Saban brings Kiffin in to consult for a little over a week.
+ Nuss is gone.
________________________________________________

Saban isn't happy with the offense from last season.
 
I would love to see Neuheisel!

What is the rumor?

<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-partner="tweetdeck"><p>For 'Bama OC job, keep an eye on two names: WR coach Billy Napier and former <a href="https://twitter.com/UCLAFootball">@UCLAFootball</a>, Washington and <a href="https://twitter.com/cubuffs">@cubuffs</a> HC Rick Neuheisel.</p>&mdash; Phil Savage (@SeniorBowlPhil) <a href="https://twitter.com/SeniorBowlPhil/statuses/421133691255939072">January 9, 2014</a></blockquote>
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With the great offensive mind I've got :sarca:, I wonder why he called some of the plays he did but he did a great job for us overall. Good luck to him except when they play Bama.
 
A Sparty fan weighs in on Nuss being hired by Michigan:

CaptainComeback said...


The Truth about Nussmeier to Michigan


Okay, here we go ago, Nussmeier to Michigan! AD Dave Brandon made the steal of the century to bring this young OC to the Wolverines and wrestled him away from the mighty Crimson Tide, right?


Not so fast my friend. If you know anything about Nick Saban, it’s that even those assistant coaches that appreciate learning under him, have a hard time tolerating him for very long. He is demanding, he is a perfectionist, and behind his back some have called him things that rhyme with Nick. However, since he wins National Championships, all is soon forgotten—but then they soon leave and he is rotating coaches in, including offensive coordinators every couple years. Yes, some are promoted or seeking advancement, but it is a double bonus to get the heck out of there as soon as they get an opportunity.


Some will remember when Saban left MSU for LSU, none of his assistant coaches followed him. That might have shocked him--that would not be a shock to any of the assistants left behind. Former MSU assistant Greg Colby got the wrath of Saban on the defensive side of the ball and as everyone knows Saban is not afraid to take over. At LSU, he took over the 2nd half play-calling for D-Coordinator Phil Elmassian during the Peach Bowl.


After having just 10-men on the field against Penn State the last game of the year and last series (during his tenure at MSU)—he walked into a defensive coaches meeting the next day and threatened to fire everyone on that side of the ball. That might have happened as Brad Lawling would explain later, but MSU intercepted the ball even with a defensive back missing.


Saban can be funny as well in his demanding way, when he was at Toledo, he says to his offensive coordinator Greg Meyer, “Hey you see that free safety cheating up on every play, do we have a play-action pass in our play-book? You know something over his head?” The next play is a play-action pass for a TD, Saban gets on the head set and says, “Thank you!” Also you better have the coffee ready, just ask Tim Staudt about that.


So fast forward to today---you don’t want to be an assistant under Saban where he feels you need to get better and that’s what was happening. Saban brought in Lane Kiffin in December to take a look at the offense because of perceived failures during the season despite averaging over 39.7-points a game. Too much of this against A&M, not enough of this against Auburn fans would say. The wrong play at the wrong time—in other words Nussmeier was being second guessed. Just like someone else we know… Al Borges at UM. I have to laugh at the vicious cycle of scape-goating in big time college athletics; it would be rather amusing if people weren’t losing their jobs like Borges.


Anyway—So Nussmeier is desperate to leave and interviews with Washington, which goes to Chris Peterson. So after he loses the head coaching job there, he says ‘I want to be a head coach someday, but am very, very, excited to remain a part of this (Alabama) program.' So excited he bolted for the Wolverines as soon as they called. Which makes no sense. Hey, if you want a head-coaching gig, you do not leave Alabama for Michigan where things could go wrong and you have less talent. Doesn’t look good on the Resume’, which means something was not right at Alabama.


Saban has had three offensive Coordinators, and supposedly Major Applewhite couldn’t get along with Joe Pendry. Jim McElwain, another John L. Smith assistant coach like Nussmeier, bided his time for three years and became the head coach at Colorado State. So why wouldn’t Nussmeier do the same? Again, it doesn’t make sense. (Of course it makes sense to the delusional UM fan because it’s ‘Michiganfergodsakes’.)


Another concern the Wolverines should have with Nussmeier is that few if any Alabama fans cared if he left. There was no outrage he was gone, no outrage at Michigan for this ‘steal’. Rather, Alabama talk radio was filled with relief, hoping they could get Lane Kiffin, Mike Groh, or even Mike Shula to take over. Many of the Alabama media who once covered Al Borges feel he is a better offensive coordinator that Nussmeier.

Then what does Michigan get? They went from giving Al Borges a raise to firing him. Sure UM struggled on offense at times, but they did average 32.2 points a game, scoring 40+ points against Notre Dame and Ohio State. Oh wait, except that doesn’t count because they are worried they were held to negative rushing yardage by their non-rival Michigan State, so it all makes sense..in their minds. So let this be an important lesson to you aspiring coaches, if you average 29.8 points a game, you can keep your job and get a raise, if you average 32.2 points a game---you can lose your job. Must be the Michigan difference.

Here’s another thing, teams take on the personality of their head coach. Keeping Brady Hoke on board is the real problem when you have Greg Schiano available or Bowden at Akron—but oh wait, Hoke is a certain species that continues to plague Michigan football—he is a “Meeeecchigan Man,” whatever that means. What it really means is they are going to be rotating assistant coaches like deck chairs on the Titanic without realizing the real two-headed problem with Michigan football---Hoke and Brandon.


Hoke is a good recruiter and probably a decent position coach, but hopelessly over his head as a head coach. Brandon is a problem in my opinion because Hoke was Brandon’s hire and he doesn’t want to admit he made a mistake---and apparently breaks down film with Hoke, so he can vicariously live out his dream as a quasi-head coach.


Finally, this does not mean Nussmeier isn’t a good coach, he certainly is to an extent---which means he can average 39+ points a game with five star talent at Alabama, and with less talent at Michigan, he will be in the, dare I say it, the Al Borges area code. Which ultimately means, the more things change, the more they stay the same.


Saban still watches Spartan football, and next fall he will tune in on October 25th (if it doesn't conflict with Alabama football-they play Tennessee that day so he may tape it) to watch the Spartans play the Wolverines. He might still be wearing that green t-shirt under his Bama gear, and inside... he might be smiling just a little bit, because it's not Dave Brandon pulling the strings, it's Nick Saban still running the show.
 
It's always hard for me to believe the "Saban is hard to work for" stuff. Bobby Williams didn't go from MSU to LSU because he stayed behind to be HC at MSU. He has worked for Saban more than 10 years now. That kind of loyalty doesn't indicate Saban is hard to work for. Additionally, Kirby Smart has had many opportunities to leave and stays in Tuscaloosa. Again, not a sign Saban is a bad boss.
 
It must be tough being a Meechegan fan now. After the debacle with Rich Rod, things have not gotten better under Hoke. Now they are looking up not just at Ohio state, but also at a clearly superior program at Wisconsin. And the non rival from across the state has run past them. Tough times.
 
A comparison of Brady Hoke to Gen. Maynard Mitchell...Ouch!

http://www.freep.com/article/201401...lverines-doug-nussmeier-brady-hoke-drew-sharp
A press conference in which the gregarious head coach wouldn’t take any questions matched the dysfunction of an explosive Michigan offense that couldn’t gain those extra yards.

The utter meaninglessness of Friday’s introduction of the Wolverines’ new offensive coordinator Doug Nussmeier reminded me of an old episode of the sitcom M*A*S*H in which a dimwitted general sternly chastised reporters at a briefing for daring to seek information, applying the classic conundrum of “This is a press conference! The last thing I want to do is answer a lot of questions!”

Michigan clearly didn’t want any prying into the nuances of a dramatic organizational turnover that speaks to the desperate urgency of the Wolverines’ program. Brady Hoke pretty much assumed the role of bystander, giving Nussmeier the entire stage. When approached afterward for some elaboration on “his” decision to change coordinators, Hoke told a reporter

“Not today.”

If it was Hoke’s call, then isn’t he obliged to explain his rationale?

Or maybe it wasn’t his call.

Michigan recorded its first loss of 2014 Friday. It lost the press conference. It blew it. Its incongruity was downright laughable. Even if its purpose was promoting a solid hire like Nussmeier, the end result was the unwelcomed steering of more attention to those actually running the Michigan program.

Perhaps it didn’t matter that Hoke didn’t take questions because athletic director Dave Brandon did and isn’t he the true face of the Michigan program? Isn’t he the CEO, the man with the final say?

Reporters practically barricaded the door of the Yunge Champions Center, denying Brandon passage until he provided some clarity as to how Michigan got itself to this curious point where the hiring of an offensive coordinator gets spun as deserving of hosannas and hallelujahs.

This dog-and-pony show was all about Michigan football generating any buzz possible, a feeble attempt at diverting fascination away from Michigan State football, which has consumed much of the oxygen in this state with its steady progression over the last five years and accomplishing something in 2013 that Michigan never had — a 13-win season.
Big-time programs don’t hold lavish introductory press conferences for assistant coaches unless they’re desperately begging for attention.

This was Michigan saying “Look at us. We still matter. We still count.”

If they actually thought it through unemotionally, Brandon and Hoke would’ve understood that all they did by making this hiring such a huge theatrical production was elevating the new offensive coordinator to a higher profile than the head coach.

Is that really what they wanted?

The power pecking order at Michigan football now stands as Brandon No. 1, Nussmeier No. 2 and Hoke No. 3.
Brandon insisted that he didn’t demand Hoke fire former offensive coordinator Al Borges, instead he said there was a mutual agreement that dramatic change was necessary following a 7-6 season. He also expressed surprise when he learned that Nussmeier might be available considering that he was the offensive coordinator for the top program in college football.

Nick Saban brought in Lane Kiffin to “consult” with the Alabama offense for several days during the Crimson Tide’s Sugar Bowl preparation. And now that Saban hired the former Oakland Raiders, Tennessee and USC head coach as his new offensive coordinator, it certainly suggests the feasibility of Saban encouraging Nussmeier to look elsewhere because he desired making a change.

But there was no way Michigan could afford Borges such latitude. He had to go regardless of appearances, putting Michigan in the uncomfortable position Friday of explaining itself without actually explaining.
 
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