MADISONGAVOL
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So one produces national championship defenses and has been integral in Clemson beating UT for some of the best players in Tennessee... but "no", right?
Morris turned a doormat into a credible team in less than two years... took the O from one of the worst to one of the best with basically the same players... But you aren't interested in him either?
You probably want Miles... right?
And whenever Venables turns down a programs overtures, theoreticians assert that he is waiting to return to his alma mater, Kansas State, after its legendary coach Bill Snyder retires.
The only thing that turns more rapidly than the coaching carousel is the rumor mill. There is little patience left in college football. There is even less loyalty. Coaches leave programs at the drop of a domino for higher salaries and higher profiles. It is expected and encouraged.
Young coaches who flourish at lower tiers are supposed to advance to the Power Five. Seasoned coaches are supposed to seek a new challenge and a new tax bracket. Longtime assistants are supposed to become head coaches.
However, Brent Venables has no interest in playing dominoes. He is too busy playing chess.
He is too content as the defensive coordinator at Clemson. He is too satisfied serving as the first lieutenant. He is too fulfilled by his community. He is too devoted to his family.
He is too assured to be swayed by convention, too gratified to be lured by money, too loyal to the present to be charmed by the future.
Earlier this week, Venables denounced the coaching carousel rumors and reiterated his focus. He acknowledged that some schools may be interested in him, but he is only interested in stalling Miami on Saturday night in the Atlantic Coast Conference championship game.
"I've got a great job, and Ive said that many, many times," Venables said. "Im very thankful and grateful for that. Were in a great position, so why would I be worried about whats on the other side of the fence?"
His trophy cases holds two national championship rings. His salary exceeds $1.4 million. His son, Jake Venables, will join the Clemson roster next season, and his other son, Tyler, recently picked up a Clemson offer.
His roots are secure in Pickens County. He will not be easily moved.
Venables values continuity, routine and relationships. His values kept him at Oklahoma for 13 seasons. He agonized over the decision to leave Bob Stoops to join Dabo Swinneys staff at Clemson.
Here, he found a similar family atmosphere in the office. He was embraced by the community. His family transitioned seamlessly through the relocation. He has been granted a generous salary and the full authority to direct the defense.
Conventional avarice contends that pursuing a head coaching position is the imperative order of operation. This traditional wisdom argues that Venables contentment reveals a lack of ambition. However, Venables exhibits a presence of mind. He adheres to his values and understands his value.
Every player cannot be a captain. Every soldier cannot be a general. Every professor cannot be a dean. Every writer cannot be an editor.
In this era of rapid turnover, self-promotion is treasured over teamwork. Change appears to be the only constant.
Venables is an oasis in this desert of devotion. He appreciates the honor in serving faithfully and consistently under someone else's leadership. He realizes the profit of longevity and the cost of impetuous egotism.
He will not allow others to project their priorities on his plans. He will let the coaching carousel spin. He will let the rumor mill churn. He will let the dominoes fall.
He will step over the collapsed pile and continue to walk his own path.
Phil is very persuasive. Would go with defense first.
Not Fulmer's issue. Fulmer is AD because more UT related people like him. Doesn't mean he's going to do a better job. Facts are, UT is handcuffed. What Fulmer has to do is find a coach who has enough ties to bring a quality SEC staff in with him. That's our only hope. Chad Morris takes tons of s@@@ on this board, but he's a solid OC/QB coach. You surround him with a solid staff, he can have success IMO. Venables is the same way. Eventually, we got to man the h$$$ up and accept where we are here. There's no better realistic options out there, so we better find a coach who has a proven track record at winning at some level in the power five, which Morris has as an OC and I don't need to tell you what Venables is doing. Both of these options are better than Butch on Saturdays. Butch was the worst on the field coach I've ever seen. We can only upgrade on Saturdays IMO.
If PF thinks he has Tee coming home then the obvious hire will be Venables. Then you have offense and defense taken care of so you just need good position coaches. I still think he goes Les with Tee and Steele coordinating. That's a good nucleus of coaches to surround.I kinda agree. Even though it was so painful to see our offense struggle this year, I really miss having physical hard hitting tough defenses. I miss our teams having an agression to them, an attitude or swagger if you will.
That's why if it's coordinator route. I would go get Brent Venables and hire a big time OC like Tee Martin.
Give Venables the money to put together a big time staff.
He has zero, 0, zilch, nada experience as a HC at any level and you and others want him to learn how to be a HC at Tennessee?! Unbelievable.lol:
I posted this breakdown of Chad Morris on reddit. Take a minute to read it, and see if it doesn't change your mind. The guy is a very good coach.
The more I read on him, the more I come around to the idea of hiring Chad Morris. Aside from a losing record as a head coach, which can be attributed to inheriting one of the worst programs in college football, Morris checks a lot of the boxes in which we need in a head coach. He installed the offensive system that Clemson currently runs, and has proven to be extremely effective, he's raised SMU's win total 2 to 7 wins within 3 years while improving their total offense which was ranked in the 100s, to a top 15 offense. Just 3 three years prior to Morris, SMU didn't have QB throw for 1000 yards, a RB rush for 1000 yards, or a WR catch for 1000 yards. Fast forward to now, and they have a QB throw for at least 3000, RB rush for over 1000, and WR catch for 1000.
That's development folks. Morris reminds me a lot of Malzahn. He dominated the high school ranks in Texas before joining the college level at Tulsa, and has completely flipped each team into an offensive juggernaut in a rather short amount of time. He would also likely form a staff with some recruiting aces, and VFLs like Marion Hobby, and perhaps Dan Brooks should he return from retirement. Steele would make sense at DC as well due to their time together on staff at Clemson. Point being, do your homework on the guy before you write him off. He could very well turn out to be a much better hire than a retread hire in Les Miles.
I like Les, and he would bring an established name, and record to the table, but he inherited a really great situation at LSU and continued to build on that as time passed. He recruited top 5 consistently, and though he won a lot of games, he also lost a lot of games he should've won. I'd almost rather take a chance in Morris who fix our offensive troubles almost instantly, and have the resources to do big things at Tennessee. There's a reason this guy's name has been attached to jobs like Tennessee, Arkansas, and A&M. He very well might be worth the risk.