Fryowa
Administrator
With all the talk lately about Matt Campbell talking to the Bears, it got me thinking deeper about college coaches making the step to the NFL (as head coaches).
Started thinking about how truly rare success is. Like...you'd have to be a complete idiot to even think about it rare. How many have actually done it and been successful?
We all know the flops...there's too many to even mention. Saban, Spurrier, urbs, Kingsbury, Rhule, Schiano, Petrino, Kiffin, the list goes on and on and on.
Jimmy Johnson did it but right out of the gate he lucked into the most lopsided trade in the history of football and he had that big oil money to buy him a team. Tom Coughlin was pretty good but he had an uber short stint at BC and was way more in the pro game by that time anyway. Harbaugh and Pete Carroll definitely did it well.
In what I'd call the modern age of the last say, 50 years, I'd say you can count on one hand the coaches who were able to make it work. Why in god's name would anyone (especially in today's world of requiring immediate success) even think about leaving a cushy college job with the money college coaches get paid? Obviously guys who are driven enough to be successful P4 coaches don't get that way by being "settlers," but holy shit. They also have to be intelligent enough to understand the odds.
Started thinking about how truly rare success is. Like...you'd have to be a complete idiot to even think about it rare. How many have actually done it and been successful?
We all know the flops...there's too many to even mention. Saban, Spurrier, urbs, Kingsbury, Rhule, Schiano, Petrino, Kiffin, the list goes on and on and on.
Jimmy Johnson did it but right out of the gate he lucked into the most lopsided trade in the history of football and he had that big oil money to buy him a team. Tom Coughlin was pretty good but he had an uber short stint at BC and was way more in the pro game by that time anyway. Harbaugh and Pete Carroll definitely did it well.
In what I'd call the modern age of the last say, 50 years, I'd say you can count on one hand the coaches who were able to make it work. Why in god's name would anyone (especially in today's world of requiring immediate success) even think about leaving a cushy college job with the money college coaches get paid? Obviously guys who are driven enough to be successful P4 coaches don't get that way by being "settlers," but holy shit. They also have to be intelligent enough to understand the odds.