šŸˆ Update: Kiffin to FAU (Bama OC through playoffs)

Top options for Houston's coaching vacancy
Mike Farrell and Adam Gorney | Rivals.com

Former coach Tom Herman is off to Texas, so the Houston job is open. According to reports, some high-profile candidates will interview for the position. The Cougars’ coaching job has been a launching pad for some coaches in the past and could be once again with a lot of talent on the team coming back next season.

Here is a breakdown of the Houston candidates and a take on each from Rivals.com National Recruiting Director Mike Farrell


LANE KIFFIN

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The good: Kiffin has re-energized his coaching career during three seasons as Alabama’s offensive coordinator, where he’s shown excellent play-calling ability and maturity leading the Crimson Tide to dominance in college football. Alabama coach Nick Saban vouched for Kiffin during the SEC Championship weekend, saying Kiffin has done a ā€œphenomenal jobā€ during his time in Tuscaloosa.

The bad: Kiffin has been horrible in head coaching spots before. He made it through only 20 games with the Oakland Raiders, going 5-15, and then went to Tennessee for only one season where he finished 7-6 but also openly accused then-Florida coach Urban Meyer of cheating in recruiting. Kiffin was 28-15 into his fourth season at USC but after a 62-41 loss at Arizona State Kiffin was fired in a room at LAX upon return to Los Angeles.

Farrell’s take: He would be a home run hire for them. The program has made its name through the years as an offensive-minded program with high scoring offenses and that’s what Kiffin can provide. He has matured enough to handle a job like that. He can handle a Power Five job, but I certainly think he could handle the Houston job, too.

LES MILES

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The good: Miles is a winner. He won the 2007 national championship, two SEC titles and three SEC West crowns during his 11-year stint at LSU, where he finished 114-34. Miles had no losing seasons during his time in Baton Rouge. Prior to LSU, Miles spent four years at Oklahoma State where his only losing season was his first.

The bad: There are concerns about his offensive style since it’s so deliberate, so run-heavy and so conservative. It had become a major issue at LSU during the 2015 season when he was close to being fired, and then it turned out to be his demise when he was terminated after four games this season. Miles is also 63 years old.

Farrell’s take: He doesn’t really make sense for what Houston is going for. He’s a very good coach but he’s super conservative offensively. I don’t see it unless they want to change who they are. People are pretty much used to having Houston as that wide-open spread offense. Miles could change and he could hire the right offensive coordinator, but the fact that he didn’t at LSU even under tremendous fire leads me to believe he’s a stubborn guy and is going to run things his way. I don’t think that one makes a lot of sense even though he’s a good coach.

MAJOR APPLEWHITE

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The good: As Houston’s offensive coordinator this season, Applewhite led the Cougars to an average of 38 points per game in a pass-happy offense where QB Greg Ward threw for 3,328 yards and 22 touchdowns and also rushed for 518 yards and nine scores. Another positive for Applewhite is that he has a resume similar to Herman’s with even more extensive experience at Texas, plus Applewhite played for the Longhorns.

The bad: Applewhite has no head coaching experience.

Farrell’s take: He’s done a good job there. Herman gets a lot of credit for what they do offensively, but Applewhite comes from a huge program, he’s coached at a huge program, he has a lot of experience at an offensive guy. The risk is you’re giving a guy an opportunity from coordinator to head coach, but that worked out for Tom Herman. I would take Kiffin because he’s had head coaching experience before, but with Kiffin comes all the other distractions and the maturity questions. With Applewhite comes experience. It would be a good fit.

TODD ORLANDO

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The good: An old-school defensive-minded coach, Orlando has been phenomenal at his time in Houston, as the Cougars allowed 22.6 points per game this season and less than three yards per rush. Houston gave up 325 yards of offense per outing. Orlando is highly respected for his defensive mind, especially in difficult jobs like UConn, FIU and Utah State before coming to Houston.

The bad: Orlando was named interim coach for Houston’s bowl game after Herman left for Texas but he has no head coaching experience. There are no real in-state connections Orlando can speak of, either.

Farrell’s take: He’s an old-school guy. He’s a throwback defensive coordinator, no-nonsense guy. He worked for some very good coaches, worked up in Connecticut for a long time and is a very well-respected defensive coordinator. You would think the Houston job would go to an offensive-minded coach and that’s where they’ll lean first, but you couldn’t go wrong with a hire like Orlando as long as he got the right offensive coordinator.
Rivals.com - Top options for Houston's coaching vacancy
 
Like many others, I wasn't a fan of Lane pre-BAMA (though I never questioned the hire, I trust CNS). He just seemed like your typical privileged petulant douche-bag. To be honest he still does, in a way (it's that face, man, I'm sorry). That said, my perception of him has improved drastically the past several years and I feel like I've come to regard him higher than before. Regardless of what anyone thinks of his personality however, no one can deny that he's a helluva coordinator and QB coach. I genuinely appreciate what he has done for the team and I have no doubt he'll take what he's learned under CNS and apply it as HBC of his own program. He deserves another shot and I hope he gets it and has great success (unless against BAMA). Roll Tide, Lane!
 
So....Just my 2 cents. Iv noticed Saban being very vocal about Kiffin having "matured" and is a great coach and will m,ake a great "head coach." Word on the street is that.....Kiffen to LSU is real if he doesn't get the Houston job....and Saban doesnt want to have to face Kiffin in the SEC so Saban is Hoping to get Kiffin the head coaching job and get him away so we dont have to face him.
 
So....Just my 2 cents. Iv noticed Saban being very vocal about Kiffin having "matured" and is a great coach and will m,ake a great "head coach." Word on the street is that.....Kiffen to LSU is real if he doesn't get the Houston job....and Saban doesn't want to have to face Kiffin in the SEC so Saban is Hoping to get Kiffin the head coaching job and get him away so we dont have to face him.

lol.... Saban is doing what you do in his position. Your former assistants reflect on you and he has a responsabilty to help them further their career. When you are hiring your next assistant coaches they want to come to a place that helps them be head coaches and to a boss that helps them get better, goes to bat for them and carries enough weight with other schools to help them get hired. Few great assistant coaches want you to hire them and try to keep them from better opportunities.

In return for Saban helping assistants move on, he keeps getting great assistants to come here to work. Because we win, have great facilities and have a better coaching staff.. we get better players each year.

We already go against multiple former assistants including ones that spent much more time with Saban than Kiffin.. fear is not part of Saban's MO
 
I think this might be appealing to Kiffin because of the conference status. Recruiting would be the same monster as it would be for any smaller school in Texas.

Report: Lane Kiffin a potential top target at AAC school

Report: Lane Kiffin a potential top target at AAC school


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Depending on how the coaching carousel plays out, Alabama offensive coordinator Lane Kiffin could have another potential suitor this offseason.

If current South Florida coach Willie Taggart is offered the open Oregon job, Kiffin could be in line to take over for him at USF, according to a CampusInsiders.com report.

Kiffin also has drawn interest from other schools, though, most notably Houston:


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Shannon B. Terry

āœ”@sbterry247

From what I'm hearing, I expect Lane Kiffin to ultimately get the Houston job.

12:25 PM - 5 Dec 2016




Kiffin, of course, still has some unfinished business with the Crimson Tide. The Tide play Washington in the national semifinals on Dec. 31.

Unless Kiffin leaves before then, he has as many as two games left with Alabama.
 
I can't think of an OC hire at Bama I've cared less about.

That said...

If this goes well for Lane and they want him quickly don't expect Sark to just step in.

There's a former OC already on the sidelines coaching every weekend.
 
Im gonna have to disagree with you Terry. CNS has shown the last few years that his newest innovation is to be ahead of his coaching hires. Sark is here for a reason.

Sark is also mucho important to several of our blue chip west coast recruits. He is the next OC. This is not lsu where the "fan favorite" or "the guy that deserves a shot" will get the job. Sark is equal to, or better than Kiff. Actually Sark being more detail oriented, and going about his business in a very methodical way would lead me to believe that Sark will be an upgrade relative to working well with CNS.
 
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