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Les Miles (grass eater)

ok, serious questions for y'all (and anyone else outside the LSU fanbase)

put aside any personal feelings for Miles and his Alma Mater.

Miles or Jimbo?
Which coach makes LSU more of a threat to compete for/win National titles.

If you had to choose between these 2 (and only these 2) to be tOSU head coach which would you choose?
Jimbo.
 
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ok, serious questions for y'all (and anyone else outside the LSU fanbase)

put aside any personal feelings for Miles and his Alma Mater.

Miles or Jimbo?
Which coach makes LSU more of a threat to compete for/win National titles.

If you had to choose between these 2 (and only these 2) to be tOSU head coach which would you choose?
the NFL.

And that has nothing to do with Les & Michigan.
 
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ok, serious questions for y'all (and anyone else outside the LSU fanbase)

put aside any personal feelings for Miles and his Alma Mater.

Miles or Jimbo?
Which coach makes LSU more of a threat to compete for/win National titles.

If you had to choose between these 2 (and only these 2) to be tOSU head coach which would you choose?
Miles. He has a long term record of success that rivals any LSU coach in history. His recruiting is, at worst, third best in the nation.
 
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As badly as I hate to admit this, at this point in the season, and after the shit show I have endured watching, I just do not feel I have the right, ability, or conscious to make fun of anyone else's offense in the country, including those in the buddy league ranks.
 
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Here's the ticket, Les. Get fired, take your 15 M and go to USC Lite. Use part of your 15 to leverage a buyout from the SEC where you're never going to get beyond a sniff at the championship, let alone a slot in the CCG. Slide right into the ACC where you used to be and still ought to be. Now you're up against teams in your own weight class; teams that prefer to pass and run around like their hair is on fire instead of pound the damn ball into oblivion. You bring defense to a conference that has only a vague notion of why anyone wants to play defense. You bring ball control and clock eating drives to a conference that doesn't know you can do that. And guess what? You can get an all but guaranteed #1 slot in the CFP because you're the ACC champ.
 
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Miles or Jimbo?
Which coach makes LSU more of a threat to compete for/win National titles.
During the poll era (1936 to present), eighteen head coaches have won multiple national championships (AP and coaches poll), and not one has ever gone past seven years between his first national championship and his second. The average between first NC and second NC is 3.4 years. Notre Dame's Ara Parseghian is the only one to go seven years between titles, winning national championships in 1966 and 1973.

The 2016 season will be the ninth year since Miles won it all in 2007. If history stays consistent, Miles will never win another national championship. Never.

Fisher won it all in 2013, so he still has a chance to get a second title.

There you have it.

Here's a list of all 18 head coaches with multiple national championships:

Bear Bryant (Alabama): 1961, 1964, 1965, 1973, 1978, 1979
Frank Leahy (Notre Dame): 1943, 1946, 1947, 1949
John McKay (Southern Cal): 1962, 1967, 1972, 1974
Nick Saban (LSU, Alabama): 2003, 2009, 2011, 2012
Bernie Bierman (Minnesota): 1936, 1940, 1941
Bud Wilkinson (Oklahoma): 1950, 1955, 1956
Woody Hayes (Ohio State): 1954, 1957, 1968
Darrell Royal (Texas): 1963, 1969, 1970
Barry Switzer (Oklahoma): 1974, 1975, 1985
Tom Osborne (Nebraska): 1994, 1995, 1997
Urban Meyer (Florida, Ohio State): 2006, 2008, 2014
Red Blaik (Army): 1944, 1945
Ara Parseghian (Notre Dame): 1966, 1973
Bob Devaney (Nebraska): 1970, 1971
Joe Paterno (Penn State): 1982, 1986
Dennis Erickson (Miami): 1989, 1991
Bobby Bowden (Florida State): 1993, 1999
Pete Carroll (Southern Cal): 2003, 2004​
 
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