NFL Coaches in College

Yomanser

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There has been a lot of talk regarding Ken Whisenhunt as the next head coach for Georgia Tech football. In that regard, I wanted to take a look back at NFL coaches who were primarily involved in the pro game that came to college to try their hand. I am focusing solely on those who spent the majority of their careers in the NFL, so I will not be focusing on coaches like Nick Saban, Jim Harbaugh, or Steve Spurrier who tried their hand at the pro game before coming back to their collegiate roots. My time frame will be the last 20 years:

  • Al Groh (Virginia 2001-2009: 59-54) - Prior experience as a head coach at Wake Forest (26-40 record), where he averaged a 4-7 record over 6 years and only had 1 winning season. Spent 1 year as the head coach of the Jets where he went 9-7 after a decade of being an NFL assistant and coordinator. Came back to Virginia where he averaged a 7-6 record in 9 years, going to 5 bowl games (won 3) with 5 winning records over that span. He went 8-16 over his last 2 years and was fired after a 3-9 record in 2009

  • Chan Gailey (Georgia Tech 2002-2007: 44-32) - We all know how this went, but I'll summarize here again. Spent his first few coaching seasons in the collegiate ranks, becoming the head coach for 2 years at Troy State (19-5) and 1 year at Samford (5-6), but spent the next several decades as an NFL assistant and head coach. He spent 2 seasons as the head coach for the Cowboys where he went 18-14, and went 16-32 in 3 seasons as the head coach for the Bills (which was after his stint as HC at GT). Despite that, he had been a head coach in college before, so he was at least more experienced than most that make the NFL to CFB transition. He averaged a 7-5 record in 6 seasons at Georgia Tech, going to 6 bowl games (winning 2). He went 16-10 in his last 2 seasons at Tech before being fired in 2007

  • Bill Callahan (Nebraska 2004-2007: 27-22) - Started as a collegiate assistant but spent a decade in the NFL shortly thereafter, becoming the head coach of the Raiders and leading them to a 15-17 record over a span of 2 years before being hired to succeed Frank Solich at Nebraska. He averaged a 7-6 record in 4 years at a program that had averaged 10 wins under his predecessor. He went 14-12 over his last 2 years and was fired along with the athletic director after a 5-7 record in 2007

  • Dave Wannestedt (Pittsburgh 2005-2010: 42-31) - Spent several decades as an NFL assistant and head coach, leading the Bears to a 40-56 record over 6 years and the Dolphins to a 42-31 record in 5 years. Was hired by Pittsburgh where he averaged a 7-5 record in 6 years, going to 3 bowl games after a slight adjustment period. He went 17-8 over his last 2 years and resigned after a 7-5 record in 2010

  • Charlie Weis (Notre Dame 2005-2009: 35-27, Kansas 2012-2014: 6-22) Came to Notre Dame with a claim that his superior offensive mind would provide Notre Dame with a "decided schematic advantage" over the rest of college football. His first two seasons started well as he compiled a 19-6 record with 2 straight BCS bowl appearances. In 2007, however, his record fell to 3-9. He was fired after going 13-12 in his final two seasons. He was hired by Will Muschamp to be the OC at Florida and directed the nation's 102nd ranked offense. He was hired to replace Turner Gill at Kansas but was fired after going 3-9 in his third year.

  • Jim Mora (UCLA 2012-2017: 46-30) - Spent just about his entire coaching career in the NFL including 2 stints as head coach, leading the Falcons to a 26-22 record in 3 years and the Seahawks to a 5-11 record in 1 year. Was hired by UCLA where he averaged an 8-5 record over 6 years, after going to 4 bowl games (winning 2 of them). After starting out hot, he went 9-14 over his last 2 years and was fired after a 5-6 record in 2017

  • Lovie Smith (Illinois 2016-present: 9-27) - Spent the first few years of his career as a college assistant before spending 2 decades as an NFL coach, including 2 stints as the head coach. He lead the Bears to an 81-63 record in 9 years and the Buccaneers to an 8-24 record in 2 years. He was hired as the head coach for Illinois in 2016, and has averaged a 3-9 record over 3 years. He was publicly retained after this year, where he posted his best record at 4-8

  • Herm Edwards (Arizona State: 2018-present: 7-5) - Spent several decades as an assistant or head coach in the NFL, and the last decade as an analyst for ESPN. As an NFL head coach, he led the Jets to a 39-41 record over 5 years and the Chiefs to a 15-33 record in 3 years. He was hired by Arizona State after a decade away from coaching in what was unveiled as a "CEO model", which was publicly ridiculed at the time. He has gone 7-5 in his first year and will play in a bowl game

The coach I find the single most interesting in terms of his similarity and tenure is Jim Mora. I believe Ken Whisenhunt models after him the most of any of the above. Mora was only a graduate assistant in college before embarking on an NFL coaching career, very much like Whisenhunt. Jim was reasonably successful in his first stint as a head coach but dropped off soon thereafter, much like Ken. The only difference in their careers really being the locations and the fact that Mora spent his time on the defensive side of the ball rather than the offensive

What intrigues me the most about Mora were his final few years at UCLA. He started off hot, going 9-5, 10-3, 10-3, and 8-5 in his first few years. But he wasted a premier quarterback talent in Josh Rosen, and left a depleted roster that Chip Kelly has to overhaul due to poor recruiting. Mora went 4-8 and 5-6 in his last 2 seasons at UCLA, and it wasn't looking like it was going to get any better. I fear this too could happen with Ken Whisenhunt at the reigns

There is plenty of data that shows that good college head coaches have a tough time adjusting to the NFL (Nick Saban, Steve Spurrier, Greg Schiano, and plenty of others), but there is also substantial data that supports the reverse transition. NFL head coaches have trouble figuring out the recruiting landscape of college football (Herm Edwards said that was the single biggest hurdle that he didn't expect when he took the Arizona State job), and have difficulty implementing certain schemes that work in the pros but do not work in the college game. Most former NFL coaches also lack innovation in their schemes and do poorly against teams that have better talent (whereas some coaches are far more competitive in those games than their peers that worked in the professional game)

The data leads me to a conclusion that Ken Whisenhunt would unfortunately be unsuccessful in his tenure at Georgia Tech were he to be hired. Nevertheless, I would continue to support Georgia Tech regardless of results, and I urge everyone to do the same, regardless of who is hired as the head coach. I apologize for the lengthy post, but please post your thoughts below - I would love to hear and discuss them

(Edited to include excerpt on Charlie Weis from @flounder)
 
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Deleted member 2897

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Seeing how the baseball program seems rudderless and nothing happened in the offseason after Todd and Danny had a sit down a year ago in the offseason to figure out how to right the ship, I am wondering out loud if Todd Stansbury is an amazing AD in a lot of things, but head coach hiring/firing decisions may be a blindspot.

I could not agree more with Yomanser's conclusion: "I would continue to support Georgia Tech regardless of results, and I urge everyone to do the same, regardless of who is hired as the head coach."

We as fans MUST take this approach. We have recruits and current players who may be trying to figure out if they stay or go. Assistant coaches. Other staff. Negative energy and vomiting on the internet will help nothing. In fact there is plenty of evidence that this negatively impacts all these folks. Others outside of our circle see this chatter too, and it shows poorly upon us. We don't make the hiring decisions. We as fans should do everything we can to try and make whoever the next coach is successful. If it doesn't work out, at least we can say we were behind them and did everything we could to help. If it does help, then you all can pat yourselves on the back for being part of the positive tailwind that helped push the program along.

Also, I think it is incumbent upon us to listen to the plan and let the plan play out. We don't know who all Todd has or has not spoken to. For all we know, he went down this exact list of former NFL coach roadkill and asked Ken (or whoever) what his plan is to be different. We owe it to everyone to be relentlessly positive and to give them a chance.
 

lv20gt

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Pete Carroll is the best case scenario of guys like that. NFL guy for 20 years, came to college and flourished.

Also, warning wikipedia quote ahead, this sounds familiar "The choice of Carroll for USC's head coaching position was openly criticized by the media and many USC fans, primarily because of USC's stagnation under the outgoing Hackett and Carroll's record as a head coach in the NFL and being nearly two decades removed from the college level"
 

Deleted member 2897

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“If you took one-tenth the energy you put into complaining and applied it to solving the problem, you'd be surprised by how well things can work out... Complaining does not work as a strategy. We all have finite time and energy. Any time we spend whining is unlikely to help us achieve our goals. And it won't make us happier.”

― Randy Pausch, The Last Lecture
 

flounder

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One more:

  • Charlie Weis (Notre Dame 2005-2009: 35-27, Kansas 2012-2014: 6-22) Came to Notre Dame with a claim that his superior offensive mind would provide Notre Dame with a "decided schematic advantage" over the rest of college football. His first two seasons started well as he compiled a 19-6 record with 2 straight BCS bowl appearances. In 2007, however, his record fell to 3-9. He was fired after going 13-12 in his final two seasons. He was hired by Will Muschamp to be the OC at Florida and directed the nation's 102nd ranked offense. He was hired to replace Turner Gill as the head coach of Kansas but was fired after going 3-9 in his third year.
 

Yomanser

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One more:

  • Charlie Weis (Notre Dame 2005-2009: 35-27, Kansas 2012-2014: 6-22) Came to Notre Dame with a claim that his superior offensive mind would provide Notre Dame with a "decided schematic advantage" over the rest of college football. His first two seasons started well as he compiled a 19-6 record with 2 straight BCS bowl appearances. In 2007, however, his record fell to 3-9. He was fired after going 13-12 in his final two seasons. He was hired by Will Muschamp to be the OC at Florida and directed the nation's 102nd ranked offense. He was hired to replace Turner Gill as the head coach of Kansas but was fired after going 3-9 in his third year.
Thank you, I included it in the above!
 

vamosjackets

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@Yomanser , what is the deal with the inside info you got about Whisenhunt NOT being a serious candidate for the job a few days ago? Not trying to all you out at all, just genuinely wondering how that kind of conflicting info can happen.
 

Yomanser

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@Yomanser , what is the deal with the inside info you got about Whisenhunt NOT being a serious candidate for the job a few days ago? Not trying to all you out at all, just genuinely wondering how that kind of conflicting info can happen.
When info isn't getting to you directly from the mouth of those involved (i.e. if you're not getting your info from either the athletic director or coaches involved themselves) you can get a little bit of conflicting info. I've heard from other insiders that perhaps nobody has a truly good idea of what is going on except for Todd Stansbury. There are currently a lot of rumors being thrown around from just about everywhere, and we try to do our best in discerning what is credible and what isn't. The info I provided has (as of right now) not been disproven, though, and I continue to believe that my previous assertion based on that info is correct (which, was not that he wasn't a serious candidate for the job, but that he will not end up getting it). Time will tell
 
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Deleted member 2897

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When info isn't getting to you directly from the mouth of those involved (i.e. if you're not getting your info from either the athletic director or coaches involved themselves) you can get a little bit of conflicting info. I've heard from other insiders that perhaps nobody has a truly good idea of what is going on except for Todd Stansbury. There are currently a lot of rumors being thrown around from just about everywhere, and we try to do our best in discerning what is credible and what isn't. The info I provided has (as of right now) not been disproven, though, and I continue to believe that my previous assertion based on that info is correct (which, was not that he wasn't a serious candidate for the job, but that he will not end up getting it). Time will tell

The less Todd lets get out the better for him. If we announce a hire in a week and everybody thinks it was a Tennessee cluster and our fifth option, that would not be a good look for him.
 

vamosjackets

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The less Todd lets get out the better for him. If we announce a hire in a week and everybody thinks it was a Tennessee cluster and our fifth option, that would not be a good look for him.
The problem is, with the rumor mill and people claiming certain airline seats as their legitimate source of credibility, and with our culture's tendency to ride emotionalism and the wave of the "(false) information age", it may look like that anyway.
 

slugboy

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If it's this crazy with us, can you imagine the rumors that have been going by at Louisville since Petrino was fired? Or USC lately?

Oh, @Yomanser , Bobby Petrino was an NFL coach, kind of.

(never mind--you said "primarily" NFL, and he fled before he could become "primarily")
 

okiemon

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With the wealth of evidence saying that the transition from long-time NFL coach to college HC is at best risky and at worse abysmal, I certainly hope TS doesn't convince himself that we will be the exception. I'm sure most of the AD's who hired the guys you listed above thought that, too.
 
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