A
alexzelada
Guest
I'm a moron who doesn't understand history and things like breaking the color barrier
I'm a moron who doesn't understand history and things like breaking the color barrier
Does it really take that much to get into the HOF? Even though Kirk is an average coach statistically, he'll get in simply because he's coached so long, especially at the same school. For all we know, he's going to pull a Paterno and coach till he dies minus the pedo stuff, of course.
Jon. 7 Wins=BONUS YIKES?.597 to .617
.597 to .617
Well, Alvarez and Snyder are already in. Neither of them won NC's. Obviously they're getting credit for their program turnarounds and good but not great win ratesAnyone have a list of other HOF coaches. I don't think it's all about wins and winning percentage is it? I'm just curious of other coaches that are in and maybe even some that aren't but are pretty good and how he compares to them.
Thanks for the examples. So yeah I could see KF being looked at in a similar light to a guy like Slocum than. I wonder if KF will be looked at as 'turning Iowa around' so much as just rebuilding it. Fry did the heavy lifting in regards to totally turning it around. Sure Iowa was in rough shape when KF took it over but I think his ability to get them good again within a recruiting cycle shows the difference between what Fry took over and what KF did. KF had a recruiting landscape and program he could sell way more than what Fry did to start with.Well, Alvarez and Snyder are already in. Neither of them won NC's. Obviously they're getting credit for their program turnarounds and good but not great win rates
But, there are lots of other guys you look at and go "I'm not sure I'd call him a HOF'er, but he's in". An example I'd say compares to KF is R.C. Slocum. At A&M they had a stretch of very good years in the early '90's- top10 finishes, 3 straight years undefeated in the conference. But there wasn't much competition in the SWC at that time. Slocum won at a better rate than KF (just over 70%), but was only there 14 years. And obviously being in Texas helps a little bit.
Thanks for digging all that up. To me I think this makes him good enough to be in the hall of pretty good. Not HOF so much. To me if every coach that hangs around awhile in the middle of the pack of everything is a HOFer than that just waters it down to me...KF is #54 all-time for career games coached:
https://www.sports-reference.com/cfb/leaders/g-coach-career.html
He is #69 all-time for career wins:
https://www.sports-reference.com/cfb/leaders/g-coach-career.html
He is #55 all-time for career losses:
https://www.sports-reference.com/cfb/leaders/losses-coach-career.html
He is #182 allt-time for win%:
https://www.sports-reference.com/cfb/leaders/win-loss-pct-coach-career.html
Of the current 129 FBS coaches, he has the 70th best win%. From that same list of 129 current coaches, he has the 39th best win% at his current school. If we limit the pool to only the coaches who have been at their current school for at least 5 years (50 total coaches), he has the 22nd best win%.
Of the 65 current P5 + Notre Dame coaches, his win% is somewhere around 40th. Looking just at the 53 coaches who have been at their schools at least 1 year, he has the 24th best win%.
Iowa has finished in the top 10 nationally 7 times since 1960. KF has coached 5 of those teams. He has finished in the top 10 in 5 of his 19 years (about 25% of the time). Oddly, there has been only 1 season that he has finished ranked AND not in the top 10 (#20 at the end of 2008).
Far from elite. But I would also argue above average. I don't think average coaches come to Iowa and finish in the top 10 nationally better than 25% of the time, although I guess we have no way of really knowing if that is true. I wish I could find a list of how many major college football coaches have ever coached at least 10 years to give his 182nd place in all-time win% in perspective. I am guessing his percentile rank puts him substantially above average.