BirdsOfPrey
Well-Known Member
There have been several recent in-depth studies done on coaching changes in college football. These studies covered a twenty-five
year timeframe. The performance of football programs that replaced their head coach was compared to those where the coach
was retained. Several factors examined included records of teams that made changes, whether successful conditions existed for a
new coaching staff and performance after the hiring of a new coach was observed for three to five years.
The results of these studies showed that poor teams with few wins who changed coaches often experienced a brief enthusiasm within
their programs but there was little to no effect on overall winning and those teams soon returned to their previous level of winning. The
surprising result of the study involved teams with middling records of .500 or above where there seemed to be favorable conditions for a
new coaching staff. With these teams, replacing the head coach appears to result in worse performance over subsequent years than
comparable teams who retained their coach. Based on these facts "buying out" existing coaches is akin to economic stupidity.
The study reached no conclusions as to why performance declined nor did it examine results after the 3-4 year period. For what it's worth,
this study suggests Iowa is in a tough spot & is unlikely to see performance improvement when they hire a new coach. Iowa needs to be careful & dilligient when the time comes to hire a new coach - not sure I want Barta making that selection.
year timeframe. The performance of football programs that replaced their head coach was compared to those where the coach
was retained. Several factors examined included records of teams that made changes, whether successful conditions existed for a
new coaching staff and performance after the hiring of a new coach was observed for three to five years.
The results of these studies showed that poor teams with few wins who changed coaches often experienced a brief enthusiasm within
their programs but there was little to no effect on overall winning and those teams soon returned to their previous level of winning. The
surprising result of the study involved teams with middling records of .500 or above where there seemed to be favorable conditions for a
new coaching staff. With these teams, replacing the head coach appears to result in worse performance over subsequent years than
comparable teams who retained their coach. Based on these facts "buying out" existing coaches is akin to economic stupidity.
The study reached no conclusions as to why performance declined nor did it examine results after the 3-4 year period. For what it's worth,
this study suggests Iowa is in a tough spot & is unlikely to see performance improvement when they hire a new coach. Iowa needs to be careful & dilligient when the time comes to hire a new coach - not sure I want Barta making that selection.