Im curious as to who all was interviewed in 08. Little before I started following so in depth and it would be interesting to know.
after Fulmer was let go, that search was pretty tight lipped. Kiffin was always on the list, i do remember that. but he was hired pretty quick, so there wasn't a lot out there that tangible as to who may have actually said no at that point. others here probably have more info on that search specifically.
but in 2009 and 2012, there's some more clarity...
i know Mushcamp and Cutcliffe said no. Brian kelly was in the mix i think, but wound up at ND obviously. not sure how far that actually got, but i think it got further than many of us know.
i can't remember for sure, but i think Doug Marrone was involved in either 09 or 12 as well, but that didn't happen, for whatever reason.
after Dooley, Gruden was in play, but it fell thru...probably money, some others here have more insight on that, but it's pretty well known, that he was in play at that point.
charlie strong agreed in principle to the job, before Louisville compelled him to stay and ultimately say no.
Mike gundy said no as well after using TN get his.
cutcliffe said no, again.
there were others, mostly pipe dream type candidates that probably didn't even return the call.
long story short, it was a pretty big dose of reality in 09, and it was especially big when we "wound up" with Dooley a year later.
and butch was down the list as well.
but i think all of that, as LWS said, had a lot more to do with the condition of the program at the time, more so than just the money...
from 08 to 12, we had Fulmer, Kiffin, Dooley and hired butch. that's not exactly a great track record that warrants serious candidates at that time. financially, we were a mess, administratively we were a mess, we were talent deficient, and completely irrelevant on the field.
if you kind of follow the track at other places, generally mosts programs will go thru a couple/three coaches before pressing the right button. Bama did, GA did, LSU did, Ohio State and MIchigan did.
but it took the right coach, right time, right situation, and the money to make that happen.
and for what it's worth, it appears that Tennessee is to that point now as well. there's no doubt we're better off today than we were back then. the financials are way better today, and we should see some pretty good stability in the very near future from an administrative standpoint, and football wise, it's in much better condition now.
the table is set much better than it was then, now all we need is an administration that decides what the priorities are going to be going forward. if being and 8-9 win program is the priority, we're there. it's more, questions will have to be asked, and answered as to what needs to happen to do more.