Simple truth is, we are a program that has celebrated championships, and we're not going to be happy until we're back at LEAST competing for championships. Maybe not even until we start winning them again.
And we know by his long track record as a head coach in less-demanding conferences that Mike Leach doesn't get to conference championship games. He gets close sometimes, tantalizingly close every once in a while (one time in his ten seasons at Texas Tech, and once so far in his seven seasons at Washington State). But he doesn't deliver championships.
I don't think we're on the same page at all here.
Mike Leach could've won a national title here. The ceiling at UT is much higher than at Wazzou or T-Tech.
The argument against him is weak. It's basically "Air Raid doesn't work" and "Leach has never won the big one." But the first is categorically untrue; the NFL is now filled with Air Raid style offenses where the QB is throwing 70%+ of the time.
And Mike Leach wins 11 games while getting recruiting classes ranked in the 40's, 50's, and 60's. It's not like Mike Leach has ever been competing with top talent. The closest he came was at Texas Tech in 2008 when he had Michael Crabtree and he beat Texas, went to a Cotton Bowl, and went 11-2. He's had even less talent at WSU than he had at Texas Tech.
Last year, WSU was ranked #65 in recruiting. Rutgers was #64. Vandy was #59. In 2017, WSU was ranked #44, behind Rutgers at #42, and a few spots ahead of Illinois (#46) and Duke (#47).
If Mike Leach wins 8-11 games with talent in the 40's, 50's, and 60's, imagine what he'd do with top 10 talent? The idea that Leach is a weak recruiter is also false. He actually significantly improved recruiting at both Texas Tech and Wash State. It's just that Lubbock, TX and Pullman, WA are not exactly "destinations." He's taken two of the toughest P5 jobs and succeeded wildly.
So I don't agree with the premise that Mike Leach couldn't win big. I think the case is mostly based on people not analyzing the details and *ASSUMING* that the Air Raid is "NOT REAL FOOTBALL" or some other nonsense.
Mike Leach would have similar success to Steve Spurrier at the right SEC program (btw, Spurrier didn't win a national title at Duke). He'd been a perfect fit at Tennessee. But it would've taken him 3-4 years to get rolling.
Nothing against Pruitt. I'm optimistic about Pruitt, but there are very few coaches out there like Mike Leach.
(I think most of the anti-Mike Leach arguments would be better used against Mike Gundy, who's track record on defense is horrendous. Leach has actually been pretty savvy in finding great discount DCs.)