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Coaches on the supposed hot seat

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Big-name coaches on the hot seat

By Mark Stewart
Milwaukee Journal Sentinel
(MCT)
MILWAUKEE - Miami's Larry Coker and Michigan's Lloyd Carr have won two national championships between them, 79 percent of their games the past five-plus seasons and five conference titles during the stretch.
They'd better step it up.
There are seven matchups pitting ranked teams on Saturday and no one needs a big victory more than these men, if only to quiet the dissatisfaction some fans have had with their work to start the season.
Sure Coker won a national title in 2001 and came close to another championship in 2002, but what about those consecutive subpar, nine-win seasons the past two years? And Carr, who led Michigan to the 1997 national title, may have won the 2004 and `05 Big Ten titles, but he is a sinful 1-3 against Notre Dame and 1-4 against Ohio State the past five years.
"As coaches, I think we all understand that regardless of what the past is, the constant pressure is always there," said Carr, whose 11th-ranked Wolverines play at second-ranked Notre Dame at 2:30 this afternoon. "We understand that and that is part of the job we deal with as best as we can."
Part of their coping mechanism after last season was to revamp their staffs.
Carr has two new coordinators. Offensive coordinator Mike DeBord has made the biggest impact, employing a zone-blocking scheme that has jumped-started the Wolverines' run game.
At Miami, Coker has six new staff members, including a new offensive coordinator, Rich Olson . The immediate results were so underwhelming that Coker, perhaps sensing fans' frustration, pleaded for patience following the Hurricanes' 13-10 loss to Florida State Sept. 4.
"We've got work to do. We've got to improve. We can improve," he said "We've got a great group of young men with great attitudes. Let's make sure not to give up on this football team."
The 17th-ranked Hurricanes (1-1) can provide hope at 12-ranked Louisville (2-0) today in a matchup of the nation's top offense and Miami's talented defense, which ranks seventh overall. Led by preseason All-American safety Brandon Meriweather, the unit allowed just 175 yards to Florida State and 224 yards to Florida A&M.
A victory there would say a lot about the Hurricanes, at least for the time being.
"If we go out there and win a game like this on the road, it's a huge statement," Coker said.
Carr couldn't have said it better.
Scary situation
According to a story in the Des Moines Register, former Iowa coach Hayden Fry received a death threat during the 1982 season and feared his life so much that he wore a bulletproof vest for three or four games that year. He even briefly gave up his trademark white pants in favor of black ones so that he'd blend in on the sideline.
At the time, Fry was in the early stages of his popularity, having led Iowa to its first winning season in 20 years and a Rose Bowl appearance the year before.
"My bodyguard at the time got word that someone had me on a list of people that he wanted killed," Fry said told the newspaper. "The guy was afraid I was going to someday be the governor.
"He knew I was from Texas, and for some reason, he didn't want a Texan to be the governor of the state of Iowa."
The individual making the threats was reportedly mentally ill and eventually was institutionalized. He is now dead.
"This person had a message from Satan," said Gary Hughes , who a former police officer who was Fry's sideline bodyguard. "Someone in the FBI brought the threat to me, and we proceeded from there.
"It was a credible threat, so we felt it best that Hayden wear the vest until the guy was captured."
 
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Let me nominate Al Groh, whose Virginia Cavaliers were beaten today by Western Michigan, 17-10. The Cavs are 1-2 on the year (annihilated by a lousy Pitt team, beat Wyoming by a point in OT), and going nowhere fast.

Also, add Coker to the list - The U is getting pummelled by Louisville.
 
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LordJeffBuck;609062; said:
Also, add Coker to the list - The U is getting pummelled by Louisville.

Pummeled by a Louisville squad without Michael Bush, and without Brian Brohm after the score was 17-7. Coming after the Peach Bowl last year, it looks like he's doomed.
 
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Carr puts the barking dogs to rest -- for a few days, anyway
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Posted: September 16, 2006

Jim Litke
AP Sports Columnist

SOUTH BEND, Ind. -- By halftime, even the geniuses running firelloydcarrnow.com had seen enough to take the rest of the weekend off. And so maybe even more galling than the broad smile Michigan coach Lloyd Carr wore after his 11th-ranked Wolverines clocked No. 2 Notre Dame, at least as far as the bitter Web masters and barking talk-show hosts calling for his head were concerned, was the expression on Carr's face. For once, he was smiling.
Normally, Carr regards sideline reporters the way he does unopened packages from Ohio State -- with plenty of suspicion and a scowl that suggests nothing good can happen next. But when an NBC sideline reporter caught up to Carr heading into the locker room at halftime, already ahead 23 points in a game Michigan would win 47-21, he was downright talkative.
Carr always knows how talented the Wolverines are; after all, he recruited them. This time, though, he had a sense of how committed this bunch might be, too.
"We've had to deal with all the negative things that surround the football team and a program when things aren't going your way. So now we'll see," Carr said afterward. "We've handled that pretty well during the off-season, the preseason and the first three games.
"Now we're going to have to deal with some other issues. But I'm extremely happy for this team, that they could come in here, and have some success today."
Carr's kids returned the love by giving him a Gatorade bath with 48 seconds left, just one indication of how much this game mattered. Most people carrying around a resume as complete as Carr's -- one national title, five more championships in the Big Ten, a 105-34 record, few graduation issues and none with the NCAA -- don't play games that really matter until late in the season.
But just like Charlie Weis is learning about South Bend, few people in Ann Arbor will afford Carr that luxury. His seat gets hot the moment the first kickoff is in the air, and the mercury only climbs from there on out.
"Everybody said the first two teams we played weren't any good. This was going to be our big test. Well," said Michigan defensive lineman LaMarr Woodley, "we passed the test today."
A little of the air goes out of college football balloon every time Notre Dame loses, but especially early in the season. That's because the Irish are their sport's version of the Yankees -- the team everyone loves or loves to hate -- and every loss shoves the national championship a little farther out of their reach. Man, does Carr ever know how that feels.
Before Saturday, he'd lost six straight road openers, was 0-6 against Notre Dame, Ohio State and the Wolverines' last two bowl opponents -- Texas and Nebraska -- and nearly 80 percent of his losses came against lower-ranked opponents. He was coming off a 7-5 season.
"They've been much maligned coming into the game," Weis said, after beginning his news conference with a nod to his counterpart. "I have a lot of respect for coach Carr. I think it's really important to understand that team just came in and whupped us pretty good."
 
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BB73;609331; said:
Pummeled by a Louisville squad without Michael Bush, and without Brian Brohm after the score was 17-7. Coming after the Peach Bowl last year, it looks like he's doomed.

In his last four games, Coker has been shellacked by LSU and Louisville, lost to his in-state rival Florida State, and beaten a D-IAA school, Florida A+M. Not good....
 
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LordJeffBuck;609383; said:
In his last four games, Coker has been shellacked by LSU and Louisville, lost to his in-state rival Florida State, and beaten a D-IAA school, Florida A+M. Not good....
Going back further in Nov 2005, they lost to Georgia Tech (at the Orange Bowl) and weren't very convincing in beating Virginia.

2005
Nov 19 L Georgia Tech
Nov 26 W Virginia
Dec 30 L LSU

2006
Sep 04 L Florida State
Sep 09 W Florida A&M
Sep 16 L Louisville

Miami is 1-4 in their last 5 games against Div 1A opponents. They were an 18 point favorite when they lost to Tech, AT HOME, last year. They were a 17-1/2 point favorite against Virginia, AT HOME, and had to smother a Virginia on-side kick to secure an 8-point win. 3-1/2 point favorite, AT HOME, over FSU this year? Loss.

Oh ... oops, almost forgot that they were 7 point favorites against LSU in the Peach Bowl too.

So what does a failing program, in a tailspin, who has had so many notable off-field issues this year do as a road dog? Stomp on the opponents logo at mid-field in the pregame! "Thug U" is back! The inmates have taken over the asylum, and for the first time since 1999, Miami will not be ranked in the Top-25 come Monday.

Everything Butch Davis built: the talent pool, the swagger, the discipline; generally just doing things "The Right Way(tm)" ... *poof*
 
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buckeye247;609619; said:
good call, i think Coker is the number one coach on the hot seat, you can deff. take of Carr from that discussion.

The rumor on the Canes board is he is already gone and a press conference is just to announce that fact.

Also, I agree that Amato is done at NC State. They may let him finish the year, but he's done.
 
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A post on the Miami board states a news report where the Miami Board of Trustees will meet tomorrow to discuss Coker.

Lots of NC State fans are pissed at Amato not only because of the loss to Akron but of the things he said at the weekly press conference a day or two after the game.

I'm hoping Coker stays for the season as his team is in shambles and I am kicking myself for not taking Louisville. :biggrin:
 
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Squeaky McMantits is definitely gone...his mounting losses and all the crap he said last week trashing Akron will not see him finish the year, I don't think, but if he does, he won't be back next year.

Obviously Coker and Groh are the two other biggies...I think Coker is gone now, and Groh probably at the end of the year. Anyone have any feelings about the Ron Zook situation? I know he's early in tenure yet, but there seems to be zero improvement of any kind so far.

Have to think Houston Nutt better win this year (at least 6 games), and I think Mike Reily at Oregon State might also be ushered out if they have another losing season.
 
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Carr no longer on the hot seat
Michigan coach can relax 'til OSU
BY MIKE LOPRESTI | GANNETT NEWS SERVICE
A day must be big to have its own first name. So what separation did college football get from Separation Saturday?
Let the consequences roll ...
? Michigan is back. Old word on Lloyd Carr: He's fading fast! New view on Lloyd Carr: Bring on Ohio State!

? Nebraska is not back. Not quite, anyway. Not averaging 1.9 yards a carry.
? The USC offense still needs a little aging. "A work in progress," said new quarterback John David Booty.
? Phillip Fulmer still will hear questions about the state of Tennessee's team, when its longest run against Florida went for 5 yards. But not nearly as many as Larry Coker will hear about the state of Miami. Coker lost three of his first 44 games, but four of his last six.
? One minute Notre Dame is No. 2, the next it's giving up the most points at home since the Eisenhower administration. Historically, the Irish faithful do not react to such disappointment very well.
? How can Auburn hope to stay unbeaten living the hard life of the SEC? Well, the Tigers have won seven of their last eight games against top 10 opponents.
? TCU just gave up 10 fewer touchdowns to Texas Tech than it did two years ago, and has outscored the opposition 46-3 in the second half this season, and has given up only 31 fourth-quarter points in the last 15 games, and had its first home sellout in 22 years, and pushed the nation's longest winning streak to 13.
So TCU coach Gary Patterson would like a word: "People have been underselling our kids for years ... I get tired of being treated like a stepchild in this state and in this town, and our kids do, too."
? What did LSU do to deserve its fate? The Tigers outgained Auburn 311-182, did not commit a turnover, and lost. One thing. Next time it's down to a last play, pass into the end zone, not to the 4-yard line.
? Oregon is hard to beat at home, no matter what it wears.
? Disrespect the Louisville Cardinals at your peril. According to the sports information department, Miami was the fifth visiting team to stomp on the Cardinal logo on the field during pregame warm-ups. The five teams lost by a combined 256-37.
? How many teams could lose its star running back and quarterback and still do what Louisville did to Miami? "I think people underestimate how deep this team is," said quarterback Brian Brohm, out 4-6 weeks with a hand injury. Bad luck for the birds. But Brohm plans on being back for the enormous Nov. 2 home game against West Virginia. The Mountaineers might want to avoid stomping on the Cardinal.
WEEKEND AWARDS
Heart-tuggers everywhere:
? Iowa linebacker Mike Klinkenborg made eight tackles against Iowa State six days after his father died of a heart attack.
? Tennessee defensive tackle Justin Harrell knew his career was over because of a ruptured biceps tendon, but played one last time through the pain against Florida. His teammates gave him a standing ovation in the locker room.
? Indiana coach Terry Hoeppner sat quietly in the press box three days after brain surgery for a possible tumor, watching his Hoosiers lose to Southern Illinois.
QUOTEBOOK
? "Today I coached the worst offense in America, which would make me the worst offensive coach in America." - Texas Tech's Mike Leach.
? "A football game is never won on swagger ... It's fake hype, is what it is, and I'm tired of it." - Miami quarterback Kyle Wright. He was angry some of the Hurricanes stomped on the Cardinal logo before the game, then were blown out.
 
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