šŸˆ UPDATE: Florida hires Jim McElwain as HC

After Will Muschamp whiff, pressure on Florida AD to revive football program

By Pat Forde
On the floor of the Louisiana Superdome after Florida had blasted Cincinnati in the 2010 Sugar Bowl, Jeremy Foley offered me some reader feedback.

I’d written a column the previous day surmising that the game might be the last night of the Florida dynasty – Tim Tebow was leaving, defensive coordinator Charlie Strong was leaving, and head coach Urban Meyer’s future was uncertain after a bizarre retirement/unretirement in a matter of 48 hours. It had been a great run, but the future was in the balance.

ā€œThis is not the last night of the Florida dynasty,ā€ Foley said, friendly but firm. ā€œI guarantee you that.ā€

Nearly five years and zero Southeastern Conference championships or BCS bowl wins later, the dynasty is dead and in need of a revival. And it’s on Foley to bring it back to life.

He’s an accomplished and respected athletic director who suddenly finds his continued viability at Florida very much on the line. After firing Will Muschamp Sunday, Foley has to get his replacement right.

He is batting .500 in revenue-sports hires. If the next one doesn’t work out, and he has more failures than successes in Florida’s marquee sports, it almost certainly would be his last major hire. He’d be gone, too.

Billy Donovan as basketball coach in 1996, and Urban Meyer as football coach in 2005. He identified a young star on the way up in Donovan, and has kept him in Gainesville for 18 phenomenally successful years. And he outflanked Notre Dame to get Meyer, a coup that altered the football trajectory of both schools for several years. Those hires yielded four national championships between them.

But Foley also hired two unproven football head coaches who were busts. He had to fire bumbling Ron Zook after less than three full seasons, and now he has trap-doored Muschamp after fewer than four complete years. This one undoubtedly hurt more than firing Zook – Foley, like most everyone else, greatly liked Muschamp and badly wanted it to work out.
It didn’t. Muschamp never could field quality offense, and rarely fielded even a competent one. At a school that had been on the cutting edge of offensive football for more than a decade with Steve Spurrier and then with Meyer, ineptitude on that side of the ball was difficult to swallow.

A lot of athletic directors who have two strikeout football hires don’t get to make another one. Foley’s stature gives him wider latitude – but there will be a lot of pressure to hit a home run this time.

Florida has a new president, Kent Fuchs, who arrives Jan. 1 from Cornell. He has no ties to Foley. Loyalty won’t keep Foley on the job if the athletic department’s performance is insufficient.

So where will his coaching search lead? In broad terms, the new guy almost certainly will be an experienced head coach – the Zook and Muschamp eras guarantee that. And after years of offensive futility, expect the new guy to have a track record of lighting up scoreboards.

http://sports.yahoo.com/news/after-...-home-run-with-next-hire-192700543-ncaaf.html
 
(Interest from Nebraska and Michigan?)

McElwain, Gators stalled by buyout

Colorado State coach Jim McElwain is familiar with SEC territory as Alabama's former offensive coordinator.
Colorado State's Jim McElwain wants to be Florida's coach. And the Gators desperately want McElwain as their coach.

There's one huge problem: CSU is not budging on McElwain's $7.5 million buyout, and Florida refuses to pay the entire amount, sources said Wednesday night.

"At this point, any potential deal is on hold until there's some sort of resolution with the buyout issue," a source said.

If Colorado State president Tony Frank doesn't agree to a lower buyout, Florida officials are "pessimistic" the deal will get done, sources said.

Florida athletic director Jeremy Foley and UF administrators flew to Fort Collins on Tuesday under the impression that there were provisions in McElwain's contract that would allow him to leave for a lower buyout.

However, Frank -- the only individual who's allowed to reduce the buyout -- refuses to accept anything less than the $7.5 million amount, sources said.

Florida targeted McElwain to replace Will Muschamp after Foley was led to believe the buyout could be reduced, sources said.

McElwain's contract states that "in the case or event of extenuating circumstances the University's President shall have the discretion, but not the obligation, to reduce in whole or in part McElwain's buyout obligation to pay [the buyout to CSU]. McElwain shall have the right to request that the Parties engage in a good faith discussion of such Liquidated Damages amount prior to McElwain providing formal notice to the University of his decision to terminate this Agreement without cause, and in such event the University agrees to engage in such discussion, although the University has no obligation to reduce in whole or in part McElwain's obligation to pay Liquidated Damages."

During a June 6 meeting with McElwain's representatives, Frank agreed to reduce or eliminate the buyout if McElwain were offered a "once in a lifetime"-type job, a source told ESPN. There were five individuals in the room when the agreement was struck, including former athletic director Jack Graham, who drew up the 10-year, $15 million contract for McElwain.

Graham confirmed to The Coloradoan on Tuesday that during McElwain's contract negotiations, Frank agreed to "reduce if not eliminate the breakup fee" should McElwain have a chance to leave for a "dream job." Graham told the newspaper he disagreed with the decision since it eliminated the purpose of the buyout.

Frank fired Graham on Aug. 9 because of irreconcilable differences of opinion over the direction of the department.

Frank apparently will now not accept a lesser amount, and the Gators also must pay about $6 million for the remainder of Muschamp's contra

Jim McElwain led Colorado State to a 10-2 mark this season and is 22-16 in three years with the Rams.

UF officials met with McElwain and his wife, Karen, at their residence in Fort Collins for two days before returning to Gainesville, Florida, on Wednesday night.

Foley said talks went well with the McElwains.

"We've had very productive conversations with Coach McElwain and his wife Karen and those continue," Foley said through the school's Twitter account.

Nebraska also has shown serious interest in McElwain, and there are indications Michigan would pursue him, sources said.

McElwain is 22-16 in three seasons at Colorado State, including 10-2 this year. The Rams were one of two Group of 5 teams with victories this season over two Power 5 conference teams, defeating Colorado and Boston College.

Named the Mountain West Conference's coach of the year Tuesday, McElwain has turned the Rams into an offensive powerhouse. Colorado State averages 498 yards per game (13th-best in the nation) while boasting the nation's second most efficient quarterback in Garrett Graysonand the top receiver by yards per game (149.1) and touchdowns (17) in Rashard Higgins.

Before taking over Colorado State, McElwain, a Montana native, was Alabama's offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach from 2008 to 2011.

The Gators are looking for a replacement for Muschamp, who was fired last month. The Gators are 6-5 this season, and a program that grew accustomed to putting points on the board ranked 90th this season in total offense, which is Florida's best mark during Muschamp's tenure.
http://espn.go.com/college-football...da-gators-hold-due-colorado-state-rams-buyout
 
Florida: Another Bite From the Tree of Saban
After a couple of pump fakes in the general direction of Oklahoma State’s Mike Gundy and Ole Miss’s Hugh Freeze,1 the Gators’ search zeroed in Tuesday on Colorado State coach Jim McElwain, who was literally stalked at his front door by local reporters as he met with Florida athletic director Jeremy Foley at McElwain’s Fort Collins, Colorado, home. Not at all creepy!

Around the same time, a Colorado State recruit told a reporter he was planning to cancel an upcoming visit because a CSU assistant had told him McElwain ā€œis taking the Florida job.ā€ Reports indicated the sides were ā€œnearing a dealā€ on Tuesday night, the main sticking point being the $7.5 million–ish buyout on McElwain’s current contract. Write about enough coaching searches and you learn that the deal is never really done until it’s done,2 but as of this morning, McElwain to Gainesville looks like a done deal.

At 52, McElwain is not what you’d call a sexy, up-and-coming candidate by Florida standards — if you recognize him at all from his stint at Colorado State, it’s probably from the clip of him getting pissed off at Denver’s mayor following the Rams’ season-opening win over Colorado in August — but his career has been building toward a shot at a marquee job. In three years at CSU, McElwain elevated the Rams from perennial doormats in the Mountain West to one of the top outfits in the conference, breaking through with eight wins in 2013 and a 10-2 mark this year, Colorado State’s first 10-win season in more than a decade; before last weekend’s loss to Air Force, the Rams had enjoyed three straight weeks in the AP Top 25.

Maybe more important, McElwain has meaningful SEC experience as Nick Saban’s offensive coordinator at Alabama from 2008 to 2011, a span that yielded two BCS championships and Bama’s only Heisman Trophy winner to date (Mark Ingram in ’09). In lieu of a blockbuster courtship involving an instantly recognizable, household name, a winner from the mid-major ranks is usually a sound, rational bet that’s certain to infuriate the fans who had their heart set on, like, Jon Gruden or whomever. McElwain’s not a slam dunk, but at least he’s not Josh McDaniels.

Perfect Fit: Mississippi State head coach Dan Mullen. At this point, I’m willing to acknowledge that I’m a full-blown, possibly irrational Mullen-Florida shipper. Still, reports that Mullen was never on the list for the gig are baffling, even though they’re apparently true. (Unless Mullen sent word through the grapevine, early and emphatically, that he wasn’t interested, allowing Foley to later pretend he wasn’t, either. Another plausible explanation might be a lingering, undisclosed personal grudge between old colleagues, though no evidence of one has ever come to light.)

Mullen is a former UF assistant with direct ties to the halcyon Urban/Tebow years in Gainesville, and he should be looking to cash in on his improbable (and likely unsustainable) success at Mississippi State, which just wrapped up the best regular season in school history. The personal connection, rĆ©sumĆ©, and timing are too perfect in this case to believe there was no communication. The iron’s too hot. If the McElwain thing falls through, I still don’t see any reason why Mullen and Florida wouldn’t make an ideal match.

http://grantland.com/the-triangle/florida-michigan-nebraska-college-football-coaching-searches/
 
Nice hire by Foley. Coach Mac will do a good job there. I would look for the Gators and CSU to announce a series in the very near future in order for CSU to regain some of that $7.5 million.
 
Dang! I wish him nothing but heartache and misery on the football field. Except against Auburn. And maybe Georgia. Tennessee too. And the Big10 of course. But other than that, may Florida continue to wallow in the mire of used-to-be!
 
LOL..I like this guy.

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http://www.orlandosentinel.com/spor...jim-mcelwain-mike-bianchi-20141204-story.html

New Gators coach Jim McElwain out to fix Florida football program he demolished

By Mike Bianchi,

McElwain, who was hired as the new coach of the Gators on Thursday, was the offense coordinator under Nick Saban at Alabama in 2009 when the Crimson Tide crushed Urban Meyer, Tim Tebow and the undefeated Gators 32-13 in the SEC Championship Game. McElwain’s Alabama offense rolled up 490 yards that day and stampeded a UF defense that was ranked No. 4 in the nation.

Tebow -- in his final collegiate season -- cried after the game.

And Meyer quit.

And Florida football hasn’t been the same since.

Good hire but pricey. Could have done better cheaper hiring former Spurrier protege and assistant offensive coordinator Carl Franks. Carl has 5 SEC and National Championship from his years at Florida. He was also head coach at Duke. He and Jim Leavitt where responsible for those USF teams...

After enduring four boring, snoring years under offensively-challenged former coach Will Muschamp, UF Athletic Director Jeremy Foley made it clear when Muschamp was fired a few weeks ago that the new coach must bring some offensive flair and excitement back to Gainesville. Gator fans once flocked to the Swamp to revel in legendary coach Steve Spurrier’s ā€œFun N Gunā€ offense, but in recent years there has been a mass exodus of fans who simply grew weary of enduring Muschamp’s ā€œGrunt and Puntā€ philosophy.

Now the Gators have decided to go from one Nick Saban disciple to another.

If at first you don't succeed, try, try again.

Maybe Foley's thought process was this: "OK, I hired Muschamp, a former Saban defensive coordinator, and he was a bust. So maybe the trick is to hire McElwain, a former Saban OFFENSIVE coordinator!"

Hey, it worked for Florida State when the Seminoles replaced the iconic Bobby Bowden with Jimbo Fisher, another former offensive coordinator under Saban – the Jedi Master of college football.

Can McElwain work the same kind of magic in Gainesville that Jimbo has worked in Tallahassee? Foley must think so, but, then again, Foley thought Muschamp was going to become the next Bob Stoops.

Of course, Foley wasn’t alone. Many believed Muschamp to be college coaching’s next rock star. Which just goes to show that coaching hirings and firings are, in many ways, a crap shoot. Foley, one of the most respected ADs in the country, whiffed on the hirings of Muschamp and Ron Zook, but hit grand slams with Meyer and basketball coach Billy Donovan. The Magic once fired Doc Rivers, who is now one of the top coaches in the NBA. The Cleveland Browns once canned Bill Belichick, who is now perhaps the greatest coach in NFL history.

Unfortunately in today’s off-the-cuff Twitterverse, media and fans are already making instantaneous judgments and running Internet polls on whether McElwain is a good hire or a bad one. There are some who believe Foley should have tried to land a sexier, splashier name from a bigger, better program. I don’t necessarily agree. As I keep saying, the two greatest Gator coaches of all-time – Spurrier (Duke) and Meyer (Utah) – didn’t come from high-profile programs.

McElwain, 52, took over at Colorado State in 2012 and inherited a program that was coming off three consecutive 3-9 seasons. After going 4-8 in his first year, the Rams went 8-6 last year and are now 10-2 in his third season. He was named the Mountain West Conference's coach of the year on Tuesday after transforming the Rams into an offensive juggernaut. Colorado State averages 498 yards per game (13th best in the nation) and has the nation's second-most efficient quarterback in Garrett Grayson and the top receiver in yards per game (149.1) and touchdowns (17) in Rashard Higgins.

We know McElwain has been a good offensive coordinator at the most prestigious program in college football. We also know he’s been a good head coach at a much lesser program. But what we don’t know is if he can be what Gator Nation demands: A great head coach at a major program in the toughest conference in college football.

With all due respect to all of you fans and all of us media members, it doesn’t matter today what you or I think of this hire. It doesn’t matter if the hire is sexy or dull. It doesn’t matter if the new coach comes from Mountain West or the Missouri Valley.

All that matters is if Jim McElwain can win and win big at the University of Florida.

Everything else is just noise in the system.

He once made Tim Tebow cry, but can he make Gator Nation smile once again?
 
The biggest loser in all this (other than other SEC East teams) is LSU. I would have hated for Mac to end up at Tennessee, for example.

This will be really good on-the-job SEC training for him though for when we come calling eventually..............
 
The biggest loser in all this (other than other SEC East teams) is LSU. I would have hated for Mac to end up at Tennessee, for example.

There are two good things from this move in my opinion: one for college football fans and another for LSU.

For LSU their game prep for Florida should be easier due to not having to prep for a Wing-T or Spurrier's pass happy approach. It'll make two "Bama" type games on their schedule: hard nosed football.

I think in the next two years the Florida vs UT game will be one of those match-ups we'll want to see much like the game was 10 years ago.
 
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