GTLorenzo
Helluva Engineer
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By itself, 7 years was not necessarily an issue. By itself, $3m/yr was not necessarily an issue. It was the combination of the two along with the buyout that was the issue.
7 years at a lower rate would have given Collins the same length of runway, allowed for more money to be spent on better assistants, and if he succeeded there would have been contract extensions/renegotiation.
So a question we will likely never know the answer to, who pushed Stansbury to give him the seven year deal? Big money guys? Collins (obviously)? And why didn't Stansbury try to come up with a better plan of using what we had to try to get some more wins in Years 1 and 2 rather than transitioning the entire program to a throwing/spread offense? I guess I'll just never get it unless Stansbury told Collins " you have 7 years, start the transition now so that by Year 3 or 4 you'll be rocking and rolling." But they had to expect 5 or 6 wins in Year 1 (Citadel and Temple plus one more) and that recruiting would improve and they'd be off and running. But the poor coaching and playing in Year 1 and then more of the same in Year 2 after the great start against FSU (Wow! We've got a quarterback!) and then it's been sort of downhill from there. Unfortunate, as Collins, with the right staff and ideology, could've done great things here.