GrizBacker04 said:PlayerRep said:GrizBacker04 said:And one other thought -- what does an extra year really give you? It is not that much more stability than what is already there with Delaney coaching through the end of the year. Won't help much in recruiting, other than the fact that this will be brought up next year with recruits and whether or not Delaney will be back or if there will be a new head coach.
And what if Delaney is a flop as a head coach? He may be a great guy with a great relationship with his players...and he is obviously a great position coach. But it is a lot different being the head guy than an assistant. Now I think that Delaney will do just fine - in the realm of a conference championship and playoff run. However, he is an unknown as a head coach at this level.
An extra year for Delaney and removal of the interim label would be very positive for the program--maybe even huge. It would allow the assistant coaches to not have to seriously consider jumping for the first offer they get as the season comes to a close, and make it more likely that the most of the staff would remain at UM. It would allow the coaches to recruit more effectively. Competitors would not be able to use the fact that the assistants (as well as head coach) recruiting them will probably not even be around after the season. Any new head coach brought in from the outside would likely hire most of his own staff, and there would probably be few holdovers from the existing staff. In addition, competitors would not be able to point out to skill players that the current offensive system would probably change if/when a new head coach was selected.
The extra year does not do anything you mentioned. Assistants, knowing that they possibly/probably would be gone the following year (2013) are still going to jump for a more stable job opportunity if presented one after the upcoming season. And nothing really will keep assistants from going to a more lucrative job offer. Recruiting will be the same as it is right now. Opposing coaches will still say to kids that the current coaching staff could be gone before you get the chance to play for them, since a majority of freshman don't make immediate impacts. So when they are ready to contribute as sophomores/juniors, the coaching staff could be different. Same with your "system" argument. Heck, if given an extra year, Delaney may want to revert back to more running and balanced offense, since he is more a traditional guy.
The extra year would be meaningless. It sure didn't hurt Ohio State in recruiting and such when Fickell was the interim coach for a year. And I think that is a fair comparison -- OSU one of the top FBS schools, UM clearly one of the top FCS schools.
Nope, removing the interim tag and giving assurance of another year would in fact help with all the things I mentioned. It would also help with all or most of the things that FCS has been saying. By the way, I've talked to some of the people who are involved. Removing the interim tag would help stabilize the program now. Assistants are more likely to stay with the interim tag removed, and recruits are more likely to commit. Changing the head coach after the season, would further de-stabilize the program. An extra year might allow a good internal candidate to emerge, including someone on the staff now or someone who would be added later.
Actually, your Ohio St comparison supports my view, not yours. Ohio St has been hurt in recruiting. They lost two top tier recruits who had initially committed, and lost a bunch of others who were thought to be leaning to Ohio St. See below blurb from the Bleacher Report.
"Lewis Neal and Alex Anzalone committed, then quickly de-committed. Fire and wrath from OSU fans descended upon these two young men.
Players once thought to be Ohio State leans, like Ethan Pocic and Jaylon Smith, chose other schools. Players who had offers, like TE Josh McNeil and Maurice Hurst Jr., complained that OSU lost interest in them. Mike McCray, an OSU legacy, committed to Michigan, then received an OSU offer late. Logan Tuley-Tillman burned an OSU envelope and then posted it on social media."