From mgoblog.com here’s an overview of the last few
years of Nussmeier’s performance:
INFORMATIVE
UPDATE. So who is this dude? He started his coaching
career in the CFL with a couple of years as a QB coach, then moved on to
Michigan State in the same capacity for three years (Jeff Smoker as a senior
and then two years of Drew Stanton), then the Rams for two years. Marc Bulger
was an All-Pro in year 1, which was an 8-8 season, and then the Rams went 3-13
and everyone got fired.
Nussmeier landed at Fresno State as OC for one season, was immediately
hired away by Washington, and after three years was hired by Saban. His numbers
as an offensive coordinator:
Don’t panic with the Washington stint…That was two
years coming off a Willingham 0-12 disaster…no one could have turned that
around in a year. But there was
improvement. Then on to Bama, which,
yeah, is Bama, but still, if you believe all of the “S-E-C is G-O-D” crap, Nussmeier was
doing it against the best in college football.
So, I’m encouraged.
I’m slightly discouraged in the fact that Bama fans
are happy to see Nussmeier go…but that could be an attitude issue of, “We’re at
the top, we need to do better.” So Saban
grew dis-illusioned with the guy…It happens.
Whatever the case, it can’t be any worse than what Michigan had.
In an earlier Tuesday rant in December, I penned
the following stating why I wasn’t calling for Barney’s head this season (but
it was a tough decision) and reasoned that Michigan couldn’t get an X’s and O’s
guy that would be able to make lemonade out of lemons…or something like that. Let’s just re-print what I wrote then:
I know I said I was
going to call for at least the canning of Barney this week. I reneged.
I’m sorry about that and I had a complete list of reasons that are
frankly still valid:
- Multiple
games with obvious offensive play calls that were just wrong
- Two of the worst rushing totals in two (consecutive)
games in Michigan History
- 12 consecutive quarters where Michigan didn’t
score an offensive TD
- and the list goes on….
And then I thought
to myself: Who or which O-Coordinator do
I want for this team? What, ideally, do
you want in an O-coordinator? I want an
X’s and O’s guy that can make things happen, regardless of the talent he has at
his disposal. I want a coordinator that
thinks out of the box and uses the talent he has to its fullest. One team came to mind this year that in the
past had been a running team that passed a bunch this season, LSU. But I didn’t know who the O-Coordinator was for
The Hatter, so I looked it up. Cam
Cameron – a former Michigan Man. Damn…I
wish Michigan would have thought of him a little sooner. LSU’s problems weren’t on the offensive side
of the ball this year..they just let everyone else score too much.
So, where does that
leave Michigan? I dunno – but I highly doubt
that LSU is giving up Cameron…When Borges had Denard, things were not great,
but I was still blaming the personnel…this year, I have to lay the blame of at
least two losses at the feet of Barney.
I’ll give both Fred and Barney one more season and next year, it’ll be
time to make the call.
Oooooops…
So, I guess you can chalk this up to, “Reason
number 4,098,456,751 why the MMQ is not the Head Coach or Athletic Director at
the University of Michigan." I will admit
that when I heard the news I was a little surprised, but a feeling of whimsy
came over me. I was actually happy that
someone had made a decision based on results and didn’t fall back on some lame
excuse that “There are going to be
seasons like this when you have issues with the offensive line and younger personnel.”
Auburn’s one year turnaround similar to other team's
revival like seasons at the D-1 level have proven one thing true:
Excuses are
Bullshit.
I think maybe Brandon might have finally woken up
and smelled the coffee. Let’s face
it: Having a former Domino’s CEO as an
AD coming from a quarterly performance business arena has its benefits. He sees the balance sheet and looks at the
cash flows – and the trends of each of those.
Maybe he didn’t like what he was seeing…. Or maybe it was Hoke. Or was it the desperate act of two yahoos that don’t have a clue? Or was it a shrewdly calculated move by two
great football minds that saw an opportunity in Nussmeier and said, “We have to do this.”
As usual, the reality was probably somewhere in the
middle. I’m sure Hoke believed that
Borges’ offense at some point would produce positive results (and yardage), but
Brandon probably asked a simple question after looking at the offensive
production trend-line (falling off the cliff) over the last two seasons and
said: “When?” And when Hoke couldn’t provide a definitive
answer, Brandon went sniffing around and discovered that Saban was looking at
Kiffin (which is a topic for a completely different discussion and an entire
blog entry by itself) and figured that Nussmeier, who when hired by Alabama was
considered a major coup at the time, was ripe for a phone/text/whatever from
the University of Michigan.
When Nussmeier said, “Yeah, I’d love to come back
to Michigan (He was the former QB coach at MSU and coached Smoker and Stanton –
Two overachieving QB’s for sure under JLS which Nussmeier had to have something to do with), that was it. I’m sure Brandon said to Hoke, “It’s
ultimately your call to do whatever it takes to right the ship here, but in two
years (or less), it’ll be my call if Michigan doesn’t have a double digit
winning season.” At that point, Hoke’s
hands were tied or he saw the light – however you want to view/spin it.
Such is the fate of Head Coaches and coordinators at
the FBS/D1 level. Too much money…Bloated
AD budgets that rely on the Almighty Football revenue. If you’re not producing and fans aren’t
opening their pocketbooks, well, that’s just the way it is.
Again, I’m tickled, frankly, and the timing of this
move also tells me that Barney had absolutely NO IMPACT WHATSOEVER on recruiting.
That’s big. Everyone should be
involved in recruiting and if you can let a O or D Coordinator go in what is
considered the most important month of the year for recruiting (February 8th
is signing day), well, than Borges was even less important than I had
previously thought.
I suddenly find myself looking forward to next
season!
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