I don't think we're on the same page at all here.
Mike Leach could've won a national title here. I'm not endorsing Mike Leach because I think he wins 8 games. I'm saying he could win a natty at the right program.
The argument against him is weak. It's basically "Air Raid doesn't work" and "Leach has never won the big one."
...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?
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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.
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DG, I'm going to focus on the part of your post that applies to my perspective on Leach. I've never said "Air Raid good" or "Air Raid bad," so I'm ignoring that part. The part of your response that applies here is "Leach has never won the big one," which is pretty much exactly my argument.
Your counter to that argument is, in a nutshell (I've copied all the pertinent bits for easy reference), "but he had sub-SEC talent at those places."
My counter to your counter is, "but he was playing against sub-SEC talent, too [the B12 and then PAC teams]...and he still never got to a conference championship game." In other words, his playing fields in the B12 and PAC were at one tier, but they were level playing fields. For there.
And the playing field would be at a higher tier in the SEC, for all teams--us
and our opponents. So, sure, we can say that he would be able to recruit SEC talent if he were coaching at Tennessee (we can't know for sure, because he has never recruited at this tier). But he would be competing for conference titles against other teams who also have SEC talent.
In short, he wouldn't have it any easier in the SEC. So the valid conclusion one can draw from his 17 years as a Power 5 head coach--and extrapolate to the hypothetical of him coaching at Tennessee or another SEC school--is that, he's Richt-like. Often close, never quite there. Never quite a champion.
I don't see any reason to believe that would change if he were imported into the Southeastern Conference.
And so we would run him out of town come the 4th or 5th year without a trip to Atlanta. Fact of our nature, and of Leach's.