So think about this for a second...since beating Clemson for the ACC championship we are 34-32 in ACC games. That is not very good. The program is not in a great place, but it’s not a dumpster fire either. Needs improvement for sure.
Care to post Chan's ACC record? Here, I'll do it for you:
4-4
4-4
4-4
5-3
7-1
4-4
Doesn't look all that different.
But my bigger concern is this: college football is not sustainable at the rate it's going. Do you know what Dabo's buyout is? $40 million. Jimbo's? 39 million. Chris Peterson out at U-Dub? $30 million. Saban? He's pretty cheap at $26 million.
These are public institutions.
Let's say for some reason Dabo ends up wetting the bed and gets canned. How is the school going to come up with 40 million dollars? FORTY MILLION DOLLARS. Yes, sure, boosters would probably cover the majority of that, but I have a really big problem when that kind of money is being thrown around for football entertainment. We simply can't compete with that kind of money. Dabos' buyout is nearly our entire AD's budget! We have to scrape and scrounge for every last thing and both Chan and PJ have said that the margin for error at GT, particularly in this day and age of college football, are razor thin. One tipped pass and a miracle catch equals a loss. One blown PI call equals a loss. One missed recruit (or three) equals a bad season. Those margins are razor-thin, and I am concerned that it's going to be very tough to play on an already-unlevel playing field.
But more to the point: college football is getting out of hand. Considering the Louisville-Adidas scandal, who can honestly say that those kind of things don't happen in football? We all know they do. And when we have a coach who plays by the rules, who is forced to abide by the APR because there's nowhere to hide, who has to recruit a special type of kid in a region surrounded by football-first-education-last "schools", on a shoestring budget, it makes you realize what a tremendous job he's done.
Can things be better? Of course they can. Consider these recruiting misses: can you imagine starting DTs Tuitt (Steelers), Tomlinson (Giants), and DE Flowers (Patriots)? We had zero pass rush in 2014. We would've won the national championship with those 3 starting and that JT offense. And those were 3 guys who were either committed or close to committing. And as an aside, I get a kick out of the, "Why didn't you recruit Jadaveon Clowney, PJ? You're an idiot who loves 2-star players." (Clowney was an academic exception to South Carolina. Come on. To South Carolina)
But after all that drivel, here's my point:
No matter who we hire at GT, they are going to face similar struggles that Gailey and PJ faced. Tough, rigorous academics. A mostly-unbending Hill. And a CFB landscape that is rapidly changing to a small group of haves and a large contingent of have-nots.
It doesn't matter if we get that energetic young guy who runs an uptempo Air Raid and slings it 90 times a game, he's going to face the same problems:
JP Felck: "Hey, tall 6'5" white guy with a rocket arm. Want to come to GT for our Forty Year Plan?"
5* White Guy with Rocket Arm: "Naw, I'm going to Clemson cuz gurlz and Parks n' Rec. And dat slide!"
Now, all is not lost. We all have one great hope: Stansbury. Regardless of coach, Stansbury is the guy who can lead us into national (relative) prominence. He "gets it". He wants to succeed. And regardless who is the coach or what scheme we run he'll do his best, unlike other guys who said we can't win, or bolted for better jobs, or were just plain Sasquatch. [isn't that a Jack Links commercial? "AD'ing with Sasquatch, starring Mike Bobinsky"]
So my take on the state of the program: could be better, could be a lot worse. But considering we have to scrap and fight for every single thing, we haven't done too badly (2 OB's, 3 ACCCG appearances, a couple of 10-win seasons and an 11-win season).
Could it be better? Of course it could. Nobody is satisfied with losing seasons or lower-tier bowls. But CFB can't be looked at in a vacuum - if you did, you'd have to fire Jimbo on the spot right now. Ultimately, I hope that Stansbury can reduce some of the hurdles GT football faces. I've mentioned this before and I'll do it again because it symbolizes some of The Golden Hurdles the team faces: PJ and D-Rad had to go to the school of management to talk to two professors who deliberately scheduled a required lab during football practice because "they didn't want dumb football players polluting their classes."
This does not happen at Clemson or Georgia or Miami. Also, consider that the two times we played FSU in the ACCCG the entire football team had their final exams moved. Something in my gut tells me that probably didn't happen at GT; ask Sean Bedford about 09 and if he slept on the bus to the championship game or was cramming for his AE finals.
So taken as a whole and with all that backdrop in mind, I think we've done pretty well. This season, to be sure, has been an immense disappointment, but I'm hopeful that the ship can get righted.
Let's start on Saturday. Stupid mutts. Hate 'em.