NDChief is always telling us that we're just incredibly biased against Charlie Weis and insinuating that the world just doesn't take our point of view. Well, although posted earlier in the RR thread, perhaps for perpetuity, let's just record that at least one major sports website agrees (
link). I'm not saying by the way that SI.com is the world's truth detector, but I do want this recorded so we don't have to listen to that nonsense about being biased and unique in that bias.
Bottom line: Lots of folks do not think well of Weis and his coaching.
3. Charlie Weis, Notre Dame. From the "If I knew I could get paid this much to fail, I'd be a billionaire" file: The architect of three Super Bowl-winning offenses under
Bill Belichick, Weis famously took over his alma mater in '05 and was hailed as a messianic figure second only to Touchdown Jesus. Halfway into Weis' first season (in which the Fighting Irish finished 9-3), Notre Dame signed him to an enormous extension that runs through 2015. Last season, his team hit rock bottom: a 3-9 record, including being shut out twice and losing to Navy for the first time in 43 years.
Creep factor: 7
2. Rich Rodriguez, University of Michigan. There are messy divorces, and then there's the Rodriguez saga. After repeatedly claiming he wouldn't leave the Mountaineers, the West Virginia native agreed in December to become
Lloyd Carr's successor at Michigan for a reported six-year, $15 million deal. Since Rodriguez left for Ann Arbor, WVU has filed suit against him, claiming breach of contract, and the university has also alleged recruiting and player files disappeared from his former office in Morgantown.
Creep factor: 8
1. Nick Saban, University of Alabama. Really, is there any coach on the planet who's better at this game? No one questions Saban's coaching credentials; the guy has turned every college program he's touched into a winner. Still, he's rubbed countless fans, players and trustees the wrong way during his head coaching stops at Toledo, Michigan State and LSU, then killed much of his credibility by adamantly denying he wasn't in the running for the Alabama job during his lackluster stint with the Miami Dolphins. Two weeks later, he was
Mike Shula's replacement in Tuscaloosa with an eight-year, $32 million contract that made him the best-paid in college football.
Creep factor: 10