Tag Archives: College Football

Jim Harbaugh says ‘I expect’ to coach Michigan in 2023; program anticipates NCAA allegations: Source

Michigan coach Jim Harbaugh issued a statement Thursday saying he expects to be back in Ann Arbor next season leading the Wolverines. In addition, a school source told The Athletic on Thursday that the football program has been under NCAA investigation and expects to receive a Notice of Allegations by the end of this week. Here’s what we know:

  • Harbaugh, who expressed interest in returning to the NFL in recent years, has been the subject of reports for open roles including Denver and Carolina.
  • The school source believes that the NCAA violations are relatively minor infractions — one includes an analyst coaching players and another involves text messages that violated NCAA rules — but that the investigation also centers on the program’s response to such violations. Three sources who have knowledge of the investigation confirmed it included self-reported violations involving an analyst coaching players on the field. It is unclear what the punishment from the NCAA would be.
  • Harbaugh has a 74-25 record at Michigan since 2015. The Wolverines went 13-1 this season, winning the Big Ten championship before losing to TCU in the CFP semifinals, Michigan’s second consecutive Playoff appearance.
  • Harbaugh was head coach of the 49ers from 2011 to 2014, leading San Francisco to three conference title games and one Super Bowl appearance.
  • Sources close to Harbaugh told The Athletic they thought this offseason felt different for the coach and he would be more likely to leave.

What he is saying

“I am aware of the rumors and speculation over the past few days,” Harbaugh said. “College and NFL teams have great interest in all our personnel, from players to coaches to staff, and I truly believe that is a testament to the strength of our University of Michigan football program.”

“As I stated in December, while no one knows what the future holds, I expect that I will be enthusiastically coaching Michigan in 2023. I have spoken with president Santa Ono and athletic director Warde Manuel and appreciate their support of me and our program. Our mission as Wolverines continues and we are preparing for the 2023 season with great passion and enthusiasm. As our legendary coach Bo Schembechler said, ‘Those who stay will be champions.’”

Backstory

Last year, Harbaugh, fresh off leading Michigan to its first Big Ten title in 17 years, pursued a return to the NFL.

On Signing Day in 2022, Harbaugh met with the Minnesota Vikings but ultimately didn’t get offered the job. He told reporters after that, “There was a pull to the NFL because I got that close to the Super Bowl, but this was the time. And this is the last time. Now let’s go chase college football’s greatest prize.”

This year, Harbaugh led his alma mater to an even more impressive season, going undefeated in the regular season and dominating archrival Ohio State, again. This time, it happened in Columbus and the Wolverines won going away, 45-23.

Over the past two seasons, Harbaugh has shown that he has continued to evolve as a head coach and his program has made a dramatic turnaround. UM was a big favorite entering its College Football Playoff semifinal game last weekend against TCU, but got upset, and now with NFL teams once again giving the 58-year-old Harbaugh strong consideration, his next move will be fascinating to watch. A return, perhaps to the Denver Broncos or his old team, the Indianapolis Colts, could be very tempting. — Bruce Feldman

What this means for Michigan

Harbaugh is reiterating what he said in December, when he stated that he expected to be “enthusiastically coaching the Wolverines in 2023.” In other words, nothing has changed. His statements about the NFL come with a caveat about not knowing the future, which keeps the door cracked open. But for the moment, Harbaugh isn’t backing off from his pledge to be at Michigan next season. — Meek

(Photo by Gregory Shamus / Getty Images)



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Rose Bowl between Penn State and Utah draws lowest viewership in game history

Monday’s Rose Bowl game between Penn State and Utah drew a TV audience of 10.2 million viewers on ESPN, making it the least-watched Rose Bowl on record.

The game, played on Jan. 2 this year because Jan. 1 fell on Sunday, was down nearly 40 percent from last year’s Ohio State-Utah broadcast (16.6 million). The previous Rose Bowl low was 13.6 million for Stanford-Iowa in 2016.

The Rose Bowl was still the most-watched non-semifinal bowl of the season, eclipsing the Dec. 31 Alabama–Kansas State Sugar Bowl (9.1 million) and Dec. 30 Tennessee–Clemson Orange Bowl (8.7 million), both also on ESPN. Tulane’s dramatic 46-45 comeback win over USC in the Cotton Bowl, aired immediately before the Rose, drew just 4.2 million, the lowest of any New Year’s Six bowl since the current format began in 2014, and lower than this year’s Gator, Cheez-It and Alamo bowls, per ESPN.

However, thanks to garnering the highest semifinal viewership numbers in five years — 22.4 million for the Georgia-Ohio State Peach Bowl and 21.7 million for the TCU-Michigan Fiesta Bowl — ESPN’s entire New Year’s Six package averaged nearly 13 million viewers, its most-watched lineup in three years.

The Rose Bowl, which originated in 1902, was long the most-watched bowl annually prior to the inception of the BCS and, later, College Football Playoff. It regularly drew more than 20 million viewers throughout the 2000s and early 2010s — reaching as high as 35.6 million for the 2006 Texas-USC national championship game — but has been gradually trending downward since in years it does not host a semifinal.

Last month, the Tournament of Roses reluctantly signed off on an agreement to allow the College Football Playoff to expand to 12 teams in 2024-25. Bowl officials had been seeking assurance that the game would maintain its exclusive TV window at 2 p.m. PT on New Year’s Day when the CFP negotiates its next contract.

The Pasadena game will host a semifinal next season as part of the current CFP rotation, then is expected to host quarterfinals in the first two years of the new system.

How viewership tracking has changed since 2020

It’s important to note that Rose Bowl viewership, like all programming and especially live sports, prior to 2020 didn’t include out-of-home audiences, which is people watching at bars, restaurants, hotels, and viewing parties at other homes. That can add thousands or even millions of viewers to major sporting event audience measurements, meaning older Rose Bowls had bigger eyeball totals than the officials’ totals.

While the game was a new audience low, it still was No. 2 in cable’s key viewer demographics — the numbers brands want to see when paying for in-game TV advertising — after the Bills-Bengals “Monday Night Football” telecast that was notable for the terrible injury suffered by a Bills player that eventually ended the game early. Like everything else on television, the Rose Bowl also was played amid the ongoing cord-cutting trend that has siphoned more than 30 million U.S. households from the cable ecosystem over the past five years, with new streaming service subscriptions not making up the gap. Live sports remain the most resistant to the TV industry’s continued audience troubles but are not immune — although this game’s viewership numbers are shockingly low.

ESPN currently pays a reported $470 million annually to broadcast the College Football Playoff final, plus separate fees for the TV rights to the Rose, Orange, Cotton, and Sugar bowls that bring the yearly combined rights cost to more than $600 million. — Shea

Required reading

(Photo: Kirby Lee / USA Today)



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Michigan Alum Rich Eisen Reacts to the Latest “Harbaugh-to-the-NFL” Reports | The Rich Eisen Show – The Rich Eisen Show

  1. Michigan Alum Rich Eisen Reacts to the Latest “Harbaugh-to-the-NFL” Reports | The Rich Eisen Show The Rich Eisen Show
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  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Sources close to Jim Harbaugh believe it’s a ‘done deal’ if he gets NFL offer

By Bruce Feldman, Nicole Auerbach, Austin Meek and Nick Kosmider

Multiple sources close to Jim Harbaugh told The Athletic on Monday they expect he will leave Michigan for the NFL if a franchise offers him a coaching job. Here’s what you need to know:

  • Harbaugh has compiled a 74-25 record over eight seasons at Michigan. He led the Wolverines to back-to-back Big Ten titles and College Football Playoff appearances.
  • The coach’s buyout is only $3 million this year, and it decreases each year of his new deal. The lump-sum payment would be due within 60 days of resignation. Harbaugh can be fired for cause if he participates in a job search without telling the athletic director, according to his contract.
  • “I think it is a done deal if he gets an offer,” said one source close to Harbaugh.

The Athletic’s instant analysis:

Backstory

Last year, Harbaugh, fresh off leading Michigan to its first Big Ten title in 17 years, pursued a return to the NFL.

On Signing Day in 2022, Harbaugh met with the Minnesota Vikings but ultimately didn’t get offered the job. He told reporters after that, “There was a pull to the NFL because I got that close to the Super Bowl, but this was the time. And this is the last time. Now let’s go chase college football’s greatest prize.”

This year, Harbaugh led his alma mater to an even more impressive season, going undefeated in the regular season and dominating archrival Ohio State, again. This time, it happened in Columbus and the Wolverines won going away, 45-23.

Over the past two seasons, Harbaugh has shown that he has continued to evolve as a head coach and his program has made a dramatic turnaround. UM was a big favorite entering its College Football Playoff semifinal game last weekend against TCU, but got upset, and now with NFL teams once again giving the 58-year-old Harbaugh strong consideration, his next move will be fascinating to watch. A return, perhaps to the Denver Broncos or his old team, the Indianapolis Colts, could be very tempting. — Feldman 

Harbaugh’s track record 

Harbaugh is 44-19-1 as an NFL coach.

He took over the 49ers in 2011 after the organization had gone eight years without a winning season and led them to the NFC title game in his debut season. In his second season, he took them to the Super Bowl where they lost to his brother John’s Baltimore Ravens team. In Year 3, Harbaugh’s 49ers made it back to the NFC title game. His team went 8-8 in his fourth and final season before returning to college to take over Michigan. — Feldman 

Why the Broncos would make sense 

After hiring three straight first-time head coaches who failed to produce a winning record in any of their six combined seasons, previous head-coaching experience is almost certainly a prerequisite in the eyes of Denver’s new ownership group. Harbaugh’s success with the 49ers — a 44-19-1 record and a stretch of three straight NFC championship game appearances — would certainly be appealing to a franchise that hasn’t reached the playoffs since 2015.

There is also the Stanford connection. Broncos CEO Greg Penner and his wife, co-owner Carrie Walton Penner, both attended graduate school at the university. Limited shareholder Condoleezza Rice, who is part of Denver’s search committee, also has deep ties to Stanford, where Harbaugh coached from 2007 to 2010. Rice recently helped Stanford conduct its search for long-time coach David Shaw’s replacement.

Penner also noted in his media address last month following the firing of Nathaniel Hackett that he was looking for CEO-type qualities in the team’s next head coach, who will report directly to Penner. That would be a box checked by Harbaugh, who has spent the past 19 seasons as a head coach at the college or pro level.

“I’ve worked with a lot of great CEOs, and it starts with really strong leadership,” Penner said on Dec. 27. “That’s going to be the most critical factor here in a head coach. Obviously, the X’s and O’s are important, but we need a strong leader for this organization that’s focused on winning. That starts with culture. It’s instilling a sense of accountability and discipline. We need an identity on offense. At the starting point, it has to be about culture and leadership. Those characteristics are what we’ll be focused on the most.” — Kosmider 

Required reading

(Photo: Kirby Lee / USA Today)



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Playoff predictions: Ohio State vs Georgia, Michigan vs TCU

The College Football Playoff is here, as the sport sends out the year 2022 with a pair of compelling semifinal clashes. In the first, undefeated No. 2 Michigan battles No. 3 TCU, a program making its first CFP appearance, at 4 p.m. ET on ESPN. In the second, two football bluebloods will meet as unbeaten No. 1 Georgia takes on upset-minded No. 4 Ohio State at 8 p.m. ET on ESPN. The winners will then play for the national championship on Monday, Jan. 9 in Los Angeles.

Who will prevail in the Playoff semifinals? A quartet of Sports Illustrated college football writers preview each game, complete with score predictions and their pick for game MVP.

Peach Bowl: No. 1 Georgia vs. No. 4 Ohio State

Pat Forde: Georgia 35, Ohio State 21

If the Buckeyes had trouble holding up in the second half against the power of Michigan, what are they going to do here? Georgia is the most physically dominant team in the nation, punishing on both sides of the ball, and Ohio State flunked a test it had a year to study for in that regard against the Wolverines. The Buckeyes have five weeks to get better in an area where that’s not easy to do. If they are going to pull this off, they will need their best players to perform like superstars—quarterback C.J. Stroud and receivers Marvin Harrison Jr. and Emeka Egbuka, specifically. That’s certainly possible, which is underscored by the roasting the Georgia secondary got from LSU in the SEC championship game. But the Ohio State defense will also need to avoid the glaring lapses it had against Michigan, because Georgia can befuddle the Buckeyes with misdirection and eye candy to spring some big plays in the passing game and on the perimeter—then finish them off between the tackles with the power running attack.

Forde’s pick for game MVP: Stetson Bennett. The Georgia quarterback is a master distributor of the ball who can also make plays with his legs. He could have another in a series of big games in big spots.

Ross Dellenger: Georgia 31, Ohio State 20

The Bulldogs are a more complete team than the one that won it all last season. Sure, their defense is rock solid as always, but QB Stetson Bennett and his offense have put together one of the best offensive seasons in the country. The unit ranks eighth in total offense, 17 spots better than last season. It’s scored more than 30 points in all but three games this season, hitting 45 points in five games. Don’t sleep on the Bulldogs’ offense. We don’t expect the Buckeyes to be napping defensively, but we do expect Kirby Smart’s defense to swallow an Ohio State offense that, while talented and explosive, has struggled against good (and some bad) teams this year (it didn’t score more than 23 points in games against Notre Dame, Northwestern and Michigan).

Dellenger’s pick for game MVP: Georgia TE Brock Bowers. Bowers will add to his three rushing touchdowns and six TD catches this year in route to the MVP honors.

Bennett and Bowers are both among our picks for Peach Bowl MVP.

Jordan Prather/USA TODAY Sports

Richard Johnson: Georgia 34, Ohio State 30

The Buckeyes offense, led by receiver Marvin Harrison Jr., will push the Dawgs on defense like they haven’t been yet this season. But in the end, Georgia’s offense surprisingly will be the thing that takes it over the top when Stetson Bennett outduels C.J. Stroud thanks to the help of his matchup-nightmare tight ends.

Johnson’s pick for game MVP: Georgia TE Brock Bowers

John Garcia: Georgia 34, Ohio State 24

The more I read into the game, from a casual personnel perspective or a more specific research-based one, it keeps coming back to Georgia. The program has been the juggernaut of the sport since the 2020 pandemic season and could be wrapping up its best campaign relative to its offensive ability climbing closer to the dominant nature of the Bulldogs’ defense. The Buckeyes argument has me playing more hypotheticals than pure matchups—IF Ohio State can establish the run against the vaunted UGA front, then the passing game could open up. IF C.J. Stroud uses his legs and Ryan Day’s staff works a mobile pocket, perhaps Marvin Harrison Jr., Emeka Egbuka and a talented wide receiver corps can win one-on-one matchups with the Bulldogs’ secondary.

It’s the opposite on the defending champions’ front, where the feel is Georgia can adjust to whatever nature the game presents with ease. It could dominate time of possession and combine its run game and short passing game to keep the ball away from Stroud, creating fewer possessions and a fresher defense to attack the Buckeyes in the process. Even in the event of a shootout, Georgia has shown the capabilities to operate more freely offensively in 2022 with the best tight end room in the country and an all-of-a-sudden healthy wide receiver group available for the first time since its demolition of Oregon to open the season. Familiarity seems to be the best formula to slow down Stetson Bennett & Co., as select SEC teams have come close over the years, compared to nonconference opponents that have been met with Georgia power and aggression on both sides of the ball.

The last non-SEC program to beat the Bulldogs was the “We’re Back!” Texas Longhorns and Sam Ehlinger back on Jan. 1, 2019. Nearly four years to the day later, it’s tough to imagine it happening again.

Garcia’s pick for game MVP: With Ohio State’s defensive focus on Brock Bowers & Co., Georgia RB Kenny McIntosh will make big plays on the ground and in the air against an OSU defense vulnerable to a power scheme. The last time we saw the Buckeyes, Michigan ran for 250-plus yards without its lead back.

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Fiesta Bowl: No. 2 Michigan vs. No. 3 TCU

Forde: Michigan 38, TCU 28

The crux of the matter is whether the Horned Frogs can hold up defensively enough to give their offense a chance to win the game. The data suggests no. TCU is a middling defensive unit, entering bowl season ranked 56th nationally in yards allowed per play (5.41) and 118th in number of scrimmage plays allowed of 20 yards or longer (69). That’s a bad combination against an opponent with newfound explosiveness (Donovan Edwards on the ground, several receivers through the air) but also the mentality to patiently grind out five-yard runs all day.

Max Duggan will be able to make some plays passing and probably will make some running, as well. It would certainly help TCU’s cause if Kendre Miller can get untracked early in the running game, but doing that against the No. 3 rushing defense in the nation will be difficult. Sonny Dykes needs to come to the desert ready to get risky, whereas Harbaugh can arrive relatively certain that his preferred gameplan is probably good enough to carry the day.

Forde’s pick for game MVP: Donovan Edwards. The Michigan running back has been on fire at the end of the season, and that probably won’t stop against TCU.

Dellenger: Michigan 37, TCU 31

Like Georgia, I feel like Michigan is even better than the squad we saw advance to the CFP last season. The Wolverines play a more traditional offensive game mixed with a sturdy and talented defense. But can they corral the Comeback Kids? QB Max Duggan and TCU have put together one of the more unexpected and magical seasons in recent college football history. Coach Sonny Dykes and the Horned Frogs have won six games this season in which they trailed by double digits in the second half. The fairy tale will come to an end in Phoenix, where the Big 12 regular-season champs meet their toughest test of the year. Even without RB Blake Corum, the Wolverines will roll.

Dellenger’s pick for game MVP: Michigan QB J.J. McCarthy. Against TCU, McCarthy will continue to be one of the most efficient quarterbacks in the country. He has thrown just three picks this year to go with 20 touchdowns.

Both Duggan and McCarthy’s mobility could be critical in the matchup. AB, the Michigan QB tries to evade a tackle.

Junfu Han/USA TODAY Network

Johnson: Michigan 31, TCU 20

In the end, I think Michigan’s running game simply will prove too fierce. Expect a heavy dose of Donovan Edwards, although the Wolverines have other capable backs in the stable. But the Joe Moore Award–winning offensive line will be the difference in this one.

Johnson’s pick for game MVP: Edwards

Garcia: Michigan 37, TCU 31

While the other semifinal is getting more run on my timeline, it is the battle of elite mascots that should play to more conventional college football entertainment. Both offenses are led by intriguing mobile quarterbacks who have come into their own this year en route to the big stage. TCU Heisman finalist Max Duggan may very well lead the team in rushing before all is said and done; he’s a true dual-threat approach that Michigan’s dominant defense hasn’t quite had to contend with thus far. Duggan’s creativity and grit should help to keep the Horned Frogs in it, though the Wolverines’ attack presents more balance and ball control. Even without Blake Corum, UM presents a lot of issues for opposing defenses with breakout star Donovan Edwards—who is also more comfortable in space than the injured back. That combination should open things up for J.J. McCarthy and one of the most well-distributed and efficient passing attacks in the nation.

Naturally, in a game where the expectation may call for plenty of points, it will be a defensive movement that alters the course of the result. This is where the Michigan secondary, possibly even true freshman Will Johnson, could make that late splash to either help the favorites get the ball back late for a game-winning drive or play catalyst to a clock-milking possession to hold off TCU’s Cinderella ride one final time.

Garcia’s pick for game MVP: McCarthy has shown plenty of flashes in taking over in 2022, but this will be his most complete effort to date—as both a passer and a runner. 



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NFL Draft 2023 mock draft: Our beat writers make their top-10 picks

Most years, it’s not a matter of if a quarterback run will happen in the NFL Draft, but when. By the looks of things, it could come early in 2023.

That is unless a potentially elite crop of defensive prospects (and maybe a handful of offensive tackles or skill-position players) have a say. With two weeks left in the regular season and the draft picture starting to settle into focus, we asked our team of beat writers and draft experts how the top 10 could play out. Will the Texans go QB at No. 1? Should the Seahawks or Lions lean in on that position, too?

Here’s our current best guess:

1. Houston Texans: Bryce Young, QB, Alabama

Young’s size (listed at 6-foot-0, 194 pounds) is one reason there’s no consensus top quarterback prospect in this draft. There’s little debate, however, that the Texans should address that position here. If Houston has decided 24 starts into Davis Mills’ career that he’s most effective in a two-quarterback offense with Jeff Driskel, then Mills, a 2021 third-round pick, is clearly not the long-term answer.

The Texans and GM Nick Caserio haven’t been scared to operate against conventional wisdom (see: their last two head coaching hires), but I’ll go with the relatively obvious choice here. Young is draft expert Dane Brugler’s top-rated prospect at the position and the No. 3 prospect overall. — Aaron Reiss

2. Chicago Bears: Jalen Carter, DT, Georgia

If you listen to first-year Bears coach Matt Eberflus, you should know how important the three-technique defensive tackle position is for his defensive scheme. Just last week, Eberflus described the three-technique as “the engine that makes everything go.” It’s not easy to pass on Alabama pass rusher Will Anderson Jr., but Carter can be that engine for the Bears’ defense in the future. He’s a nasty, do-everything lineman in the mold of Hall of Famer Warren Sapp. They’re actually from the same high school (Apopka) in Florida. Carter also is the best player on the best team in college football and arguably has been for the past two years. — Adam Jahns

3. Seattle Seahawks (via Broncos): Will Anderson Jr., Edge, Alabama

The Seahawks are in desperate need of a game-changing pass rusher. They haven’t had a double-digit sack guy since Frank Clark in 2018. Outside linebacker Uchenna Nwosu (nine sacks through 15 games) should reach that level before the year ends, but his presence alone hasn’t prevented Seattle from being average when it comes to pressuring the passer. The Seahawks are so desperate for a dominant edge to pair with Nwosu that they’re starting 35-year-old Bruce Irvin. He has played fine, to be fair, but the fact they had to call Irvin up from his couch to play 54 percent of defensive snaps speaks to how serious the need is for a plug-and-play talent on the edge. — Michael-Shawn Dugar

4. Arizona Cardinals: Kelee Ringo, CB, Georgia

Since Kliff Kingsbury took over as head coach, only one of Arizona’s first-round picks has been spent on a player at a premium position (Kyler Murray, No. 1 in 2019). With a change at general manager on the horizon, it’s time for the Cardinals to stop messing around with high-value draft opportunities, and Ringo is the best non-quarterback available here.

Combined over the last four seasons, Arizona ranks 25th in defensive pass EPA, 29th in opponent passer rating, 28th in first downs allowed per pass and 30th in touchdowns allowed per pass. Ringo would give this defense the lockdown corner it’s missed since Patrick Peterson’s peak years. He’d also help maximize Byron Murphy in the slot/on secondary options and go a long way toward fixing a defense that’s tried to gimmick its way to success. — Diante Lee

5. Indianapolis Colts: Will Levis, QB, Kentucky

The Colts have to make a determination: Is Levis the top-tier quarterback prospect who had scouts salivating earlier in his Kentucky career, or is he the player who struggled in 2022? He looks the part: a prototype with size, arm strength and mobility. But that inconsistent tape may give some scouts pause. It should also be noted that Levis lost his top target, most of his offensive line and his offensive coordinator in 2022, but he also had only one game with 250-plus yards in 15 starts against SEC defenses. Still, he has all the traits, which is why he’s been on a top-10 trajectory for quite a while. — Bob Kravitz

6. Atlanta Falcons: Myles Murphy, Edge, Clemson

Everything in Atlanta is contingent on Desmond Ridder’s development over the final two games. If the rookie quarterback shows he’s the man for the job for (at least) 2023, then the Falcons don’t have to add another young player at that position. Atlanta used a second-round (Arnold Ekibetie) and a third-round pick (DeAngelo Malone) on edge rushers last year, but it hasn’t helped much yet. While Ebiketie and Malone have progressed, Atlanta still is last in the league in sack percentage, at 3.9 percent. Only six teams in the last five years have had a lower sack percentage and one of them was last year’s Falcons (3.1 percent). Defensive tackle and cornerback would be enticing here, too. — Josh Kendall

7. Detroit Lions (via Rams): Christian Gonzalez, CB, Oregon

This is … not an ideal board for the Lions. We would have been thrilled if Ringo was available here, but he was not. Murphy was an option, too, as was Clemson defensive tackle Bryan Bresee. But the emergence of rookie James Houston has lessened the need for another pass rusher and GM Brad Holmes remains high on DT Levi Onwuzurike, a 2021 second-round pick who’s been unable to stay healthy. Since there are no trade scenarios here, the Lions are kind of stuck. However, corner is a clear and obvious need, so Gonzalez — who fits what defensive coordinator Aaron Glenn likes to do — is the pick. — Colton Pouncy

8. Carolina Panthers: C.J. Stroud, QB, Ohio State

The Panthers have stayed in the playoff hunt thanks to the dreadful state of the NFC South and despite the lack of a franchise quarterback. Sam Darnold is the third QB to start for Carolina this year, following Baker Mayfield and P.J. Walker. And while Darnold has played better and protected the ball — his four-game stretch without a turnover is the longest of his career — the Panthers should be in the QB market again. That could be trickier if they take the division, which would drop the Panthers to 19th in the draft order (or lower if they win a playoff game).

The Panthers passed on an Ohio State QB in 2021, when they took Jaycee Horn at No. 8 while Justin Fields was available. It’s not inconceivable that they make the same decision again. —  Joe Person

9. Las Vegas Raiders: Cam Smith, CB, South Carolina

We were a tiny bit tempted by Florida QB Anthony Richardson. For all his physical skills, though, he is just not accurate enough on short and intermediate routes.

GO DEEPER

Reed: Derek Carr is taking the fall, but pressure is now on Raiders’ brass

Meanwhile, Smith checks all the boxes with his frame (6-1, 187 pounds), long arms, sticky coverage, ball skills and position versatility. Smith played outside, inside and even safety in college. Opposing teams avoided him this season — he’s allowed only 15 catches on 32 targets for 184 yards — but the energy and leadership that he plays with still jump out. — Vic Tafur

10. Philadelphia Eagles (via Saints): Bryan Bresee, DT, Clemson

The Eagles believe in building along the line of scrimmage — 12 of their last 17 first-round picks either rushed the passer or protected the QB — so a good bet would be the best available lineman. It would be tempting to go offensive tackle here to find Lane Johnson’s eventual replacement, but Bresee would be a compelling option. Brugler also had the Eagles take the Clemson DT at No. 6 in his most recent mock draft, and for good reason. Combining Bresee with Jordan Davis would give the Eagles building blocks in the middle of their defensive line, which would be especially valuable considering both Javon Hargrave (30 years old in February) and Fletcher Cox (32, as of Dec. 13) are impending free agents.

Bresee didn’t necessarily have prolific production at Clemson, and he tore his ACL in 2021, but the former top recruit has the type of physical and athletic profile that is rare to find. He also brings the scheme versatility to play in different alignments for the Eagles. — Zach Berman

(Illustration: Sean Reilly / The Athletic;
Photos: Jay Biggerstaff, Kevin C. Cox, Todd Kirkland,  / Getty Images)



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Deion Sanders’ first Colorado commits feeling the love: ‘I need you’

By Grace Raynor, Manny Navarro and David Ubben

Ryan Staub had visited Colorado three times before Deion Sanders took over as head coach.

Outside of the red, shiny new McLaren parked on Folsom Field, everything else on campus looked pretty much the same to Staub two weekends ago.

“(Deion Sanders) was coaching at Jackson State so I don’t know if he had enough time to make that many arrangements,” said Staub, a 6-foot-1, 190-pound three-star quarterback from Stevenson Ranch, Calif. Staub committed to Colorado last January and was one of seven holdover recruits from Karl Dorrell’s staff who signed with the program Wednesday.

“It definitely looked the exact same, but it didn’t feel the exact same,” he said. “There’s a new energy and a new message in town. That’s obviously Coach Prime and what he’s kind of conveying to the whole world. What he’s going to do here, he’s just gonna bring change. And he’s gonna win.”

Sanders, who stands out much like a $400,000 sports car on a football field, has a long road ahead of him in trying to turn around Colorado’s downtrodden football program.

The Buffaloes were 1-11 in 2022 and ranked 63rd nationally in the 247Sports Team Talent Composite — only four spots better than Sanders’ former team, Jackson State.

The recruiting class Sanders signed Wednesday featured 14 high school recruits and 10 transfers. Only five of the 24 signees were blue-chip prospects coming out of high school, but it’s also been only two weeks since Sanders was hired. Late Wednesday night, Jackson State corner Travis Hunter, the No. 1 player in the Class of 2022, announced his decision to transfer to Colorado, and several of his former JSU teammates should soon be joining him in the Rockies.

Colorado’s recruiting class currently ranks No. 53 nationally, but its overall rank — which includes transfers — is No. 29. The Buffs’ overall rank was No. 58 in 2022 and No. 65 in 2021.

So, what was it like for the first batch of recruits to get wooed to Colorado by Coach Prime?

“Really, we were just kind of getting to know each other,” said Staub, who spent about 20 minutes with Sanders during his official visit weekend. “It basically got to the point where Coach Prime told me, ‘Get on Twitter and start recruiting your future teammates.’ That’s what I’ve been trying to do.”


Since Sanders was hired on Dec. 3, the Buffaloes have hosted two recruiting weekends: one from Dec. 9-11 and another from Dec. 16-18 before Monday’s dead period began.

Sanders was back and forth from Mississippi to Colorado as he split time with his Jackson State team ahead of the Tigers’ Celebration Bowl appearance. But after the game ended Saturday afternoon, Sanders flew back to Boulder, where he caught the last 90 minutes of a three-hour dinner at the Colorado team facility, complete with macaroni and cheese, green beans, blackened shrimp, fried chicken and dinner rolls, according to three-star cornerback signee Carter Stoutmire. A DJ was on hand, which prompted a few of the more gregarious recruits to start dancing.

But despite Coach Prime’s flashy personality, Saturday night felt more like a “cookout” than a “party,” said former Western Michigan defensive end Marshawn Kneeland, who is now considering Colorado as a transfer destination. Save for the McLaren and Aston Martin luxury cars on the field for the ever-anticipated photo shoot, there was a relaxing vibe to the visit.

Even Sanders’ entrance was understated.

“(He) just walked in,” said Kneeland. “Don’t get me wrong: There’re cameras on him at all times. (But) he just walked in: ‘What’s up?’ It didn’t feel like a head coach, if that makes sense. It felt like a father or an uncle. You know what I mean? It wasn’t like, ‘Oh I’ve got to be pressured to not say the wrong thing.’ It’s just like, ‘This is my peoples.’”

Kneeland, who has since visited UCLA, said he spent about 30 minutes with Sanders in his office as Sanders made his rounds with recruits. When the two of them sat down, Sanders had a series of cards that contained Kneeland’s information, including his stats.

“The first thing he said was, ‘I need you.’ And after that, it was like, I don’t know what else anybody can say to make you feel more at home, to make you feel more wanted,” Kneeland said. “It’s definitely a feeling that can’t be reciprocated anywhere else.”

Kneeland said he got the sense that Sanders is more humble now than he was as a player when he was making his name high-stepping up and down the field. His personality can be hard to explain, though, other than, “You just have to see it.”

“His personality is just different from most coaches. I can’t say all (coaches) because I haven’t met all of them,” Kneeland said. “It’s like when he talks, it’s similar to, I want to say how everybody looks at how Jay-Z talks in the rap industry. He knows what he’s talking about. He knows what he’s doing. He’s been there, done that. He was the greatest. So it’s like, he has that extra pizazz, if you will.”

Indeed, Sanders’ resume seems to be striking a chord with recruits who say there’s something different about the potential of playing for the only active college football head coach who is in the Hall of Fame as a player.

Stoutmire, whose father, Omar, played with Sanders and Colorado cornerbacks coach Kevin Mathis for the Dallas Cowboys in 1997, said his future coach — once the top prospect in the state of Florida — has a unique ability to relate to current recruits.

Perhaps three-star wide receiver signee Asaad Waseem summed it up best: “He’s Coach Prime. He played under a legendary coach in Bobby Bowden. He has a gold jacket, College Football Hall of Fame. It’s just different knowing you’re going to play for somebody who did it, got to where you want to go.”


Sanders may not have had much time with the most recent group of visitors, but the rest of the Buffaloes’ staffers made sure recruits had a memorable experience.

Stoutmire, who played at Prestonwood (Texas) Christian, said he and fellow recruits arrived around 3 p.m. on Friday. Stoutmire and his family first drove around campus to catch a view of the mountains. Then it was back to the hotel to get ready for dinner at local Italian restaurant Pasta Jay’s.

Saturday brought a facility tour, a photo shoot with the luxury cars and lunch at the facility. Because the photo shoot took about an hour-and-a-half, Colorado split recruits into two groups so that one could tour campus while the other posed for photos.

Stoutmire said he had never seen a McLaren, let alone sat inside of one, and wasn’t sure if the Buffaloes acquired the cars via an assist from boosters or a local dealership. Regardless, they were a nice touch. “I mean, athletes care a lot about cars. Athletes are all about style,” he said. “So I’d say that helps out a lot with getting athletes there because they know that the program has money and (that the school) would be able to help them get to the next level.”

Kneeland added: “The photos definitely came out great, which is lovely. I know I only posted a couple of them, but there were a lot.”

Saturday afternoon, both groups went to Colorado’s football cafeteria for lunch, where several televisions were tuned into the Jackson State game as Stoutmire munched on lemon pepper wings, barbecue chicken, brisket and cornbread. Each time Jackson State scored or made a big play, the room erupted with cheers.

And by Saturday night, Sanders was in town and making his rounds. That’s when Deuce Roberson, a Colorado Springs native and junior college transfer from Snow (Utah) College, informed the coaches that he was ready to commit. Roberson took an unofficial visit with fellow Snow College teammate Isaiah Jatta, a three-star offensive tackle who is the No. 19 juco prospect in the 247Sports Composite.

Jatta, who had already used all five of his official visits and therefore also visited unofficially, stayed with Roberson as the two commuted back and forth to campus. He, too, committed and signed Wednesday.

For all of the flash Sanders brings to Colorado football, the recruiting operation felt rather low key, according to several of the recruits. Kneeland said he even took an Uber from the airport to the school after he landed in Denver, about 30 miles from Boulder. That doesn’t mean Colorado didn’t impress, though.

“I’d say a lot of us were actually a little bit starstruck of like, how nice everything was, because we had an idea of what I was gonna expect, but it was honestly more than what I expected,” Stoutmire said. “Everything that I saw out there — just the campus and stuff and how nice everything was.”

And of course, Sander’s personality came out in full force.

“Deion’s dope. Deion’s a very personable guy,” said Cal transfer tight end Champion Johnson, who committed along with his younger brother Victory Johnson. “Everyone loves to talk to him. I don’t think I’ve seen him not smile yet. Honestly, I like to match people’s energy, and his energy was an energy I really enjoyed to match.”


Sanders has already flipped four-star running back Dylan Edwards thanks to their long-standing relationship, giving him a top-200 national prospect at the running back position. His quarterback position is in good shape as well, with the arrival of his son Shedeur from Jackson State. There’s also Staub, who committed to Colorado over SMU.

Now it’s time for Sanders to turn his attention to the February signing period, which gives him more time to establish relationships with high school coaches and unsigned prospects. On Wednesday, 247Sports reported five-star cornerback Cormani McClain, the nation’s No. 2 prospect out of Lakeland (Fla.) High, had been in contact with Sanders and Colorado.

Flipping a prospect of McClain’s caliber would send shockwaves through the recruiting world — just like last year when Sanders flipped Hunter from his longtime commitment to Florida State.

Carter Whitson, who coached Colorado edge signee Taje McCoy at Putnam City (Okla.) High, believes Sanders will engineer a quick turnaround and will get “more than people would think that he could bargain for” out of his players. He commended Sanders for hiring a quality staff that will take care of the X’s and O’s so that Sanders can presumably play the CEO role.

Over the last 10 years, Whitson said, Colorado has been “Rutgers or Kansas,” in terms of routinely producing teams that struggled.

Now?

“Name somebody that’s done it better on social media. And what do these kids do?” Whitson said. “If I asked Taje, (if) I’d say, ‘Hey, have you watched any Deion Sanders film?’, his answer would be, ‘Yes, I’ve seen him on TikTok.’ It wouldn’t be, ‘Oh yeah, we saw his highlights on SportsCenter, we watched it over and over again.’ That’s what my generation would say.

“Those guys, I think they’ll do it right. They’ll do it fast. And we’ll see what happens after that.”

(Photo: Ron Chenoy / USA Today)



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Mike Leach, college football coach who made the Air Raid mainstream, dies at 61

There is an alternate universe where the committee that selected the new football coach for the Key West (Fla.) High Conchs chose correctly in 1996. That year, the offensive coordinator at Valdosta State applied for the job, which would have allowed him to do his favorite thing in his favorite town. Committee members barely considered Mike Leach. They thought he was overqualified.

Had they given him the job, Leach probably never would have left. He probably would have spent the rest of his days drawing up plays while the palms swayed. He and wife Sharon would have walked to Harpoon Harry’s and dined while laughing at all the tourists running to look at a giant buoy.

Robbed of his dream job, Mike Leach instead had to settle for changing the way nearly everyone at every level of football studies offense. His impact flowed down from the collegiate ranks into high school football and up into the NFL. He brought the Air Raid to the mainstream, showing everyone in the sport that teams could overcome talent deficits (or enhance talent advantages) if they spread the field, juiced the tempo and tolerated a healthy degree of risk on fourth down.

Leach made Kentucky an offensive juggernaut. He helped jump-start Bob Stoops’ tenure at Oklahoma. Then, as a head coach, he produced winners at places where it’s supposed to be difficult to win: Texas Tech, Washington State and Mississippi State. All the while, he eschewed the usual coaching cliches. Instead, he talked about pirates, about Geronimo, about candy corn, about what happened with the ice pick after the final scene of “Basic Instinct.”

There will never be another coach like Leach, who died Monday night following complications from a heart condition at age 61. He was transported from his home in Starkville, Miss., on Sunday to a hospital in Jackson.

“Coach Mike Leach cast a tremendous shadow not just over Mississippi State University, but over the entire college football landscape,” MSU president Mark E. Keenum said in a statement. “His innovative ‘Air Raid’ offense changed the game. Mike’s keen intellect and unvarnished candor made him one of the nation’s true coaching legends. His passing brings great sadness to our university, to the Southeastern Conference, and to all who loved college football. I will miss Mike’s profound curiosity, his honesty, and his wide-open approach to pursuing excellence in all things.”

Leach, the son of a forester, spent his high school years in Cody, Wyo., before leaving home in 1979 to attend BYU. “I liked BYU,” Leach wrote in his 2011 autobiography Swing Your Sword (written with The Athletic’s Bruce Feldman). “The place is like Disneyland, only without rides and merchandising.” Though Leach was fascinated by the offense LaVell Edwards ran in Provo, the former high school football player didn’t play for the Cougars. Leach tangled multiple times with the Honor Code patrol over the length of his hair, but he did well in his classes and was admitted to Pepperdine University School of Law.

Leach enjoyed law school, but as he finished he realized he wasn’t consumed by the law. So he decided to take one stab at his dream job: coaching football. Worst case? He’d coach for a few years, nearly starve and go live the rest of his life as a lawyer. So he racked up more student loans seeking a master’s in sports science from the United States Sports Academy in Daphne, Ala. In 1988, Leach talked his way into a part-time coaching job at Cal Poly-San Luis Obispo. His salary: $3,000 for the year.

While visiting Leach in Key West in 2011 — between his firing from Texas Tech and hiring by Washington State — for a story for Sports Illustrated, I asked him if he ever wished he’d gone into law. Absolutely not, he said. “It’s ridiculously fulfilling,” Leach said of coaching. “But it’s kind of a narrow existence. It changes all the time, because young people that age change. Their lives are changing. … Now, I get variety.”

Talk to Leach for any length of time, and the desire for variety made sense. He was interested in everything. This would lead to hours-long quarterback meetings in which only a few minutes of football were discussed. It also led to Leach getting featured on “60 Minutes” in 2008. But he was always more interested in football than he let on, and often the soliloquies about weddings or cargo shorts or live animal mascots were calculated moves to keep anyone from asking him to reveal actual football information that might put his team at a disadvantage.

Stints at Cal Poly-San Luis Obispo and College of the Desert led to a coaching job in Pori, Finland, where “half my players puffed cigarettes on the sidelines,” Leach wrote in “Swing Your Sword.” After that, Leach sent his resume to a football outpost only slightly less remote: Iowa Wesleyan, a school of about 550 students in Mount Pleasant, Iowa. Hal Mumme was a former UTEP coordinator who had created a wacky, wide-open offense to get more students to come out for football at Copperas Cove (Texas) High.

Mumme had just taken over a team that had gone 0-10 the previous season. Mumme liked Leach because Leach knew BYU. He also liked him because he wouldn’t have the same preconceived notions more established coaches had about offensive line play. The two meshed immediately, and at Iowa Wesleyan they planted the seeds for an offense that eventually would take over the Big 12 and get cherry-picked by coaches across college football and in the NFL.

The Air Raid as conceived by Mumme and Leach is not a complicated offense. For most of his head coaching career, Leach held a play sheet the size of a napkin. The Air Raid has a few core concepts — the Stick, the Mesh, the Corner, the Shallow Cross and Four Verticals — that quarterbacks and receivers drill relentlessly. Receivers don’t run a traditional route tree; they are taught to find open space within the defense. The more quarterbacks and receivers repeat the plays, the better they get at wordless communication that allows the quarterback to know what the receiver will do long before the defense does.

Ideally, a veteran quarterback could either change Leach’s called play or call the plays himself. “By the end of my junior year and all through my senior year, I was probably calling 70 percent of the plays,” former Washington State quarterback Connor Halliday told The Athletic in 2019. “He would give me a formation and then I would call the play. His coaching philosophy is, ‘You’re out there on the field, you can see the way the defense is lined up better than I can. So it’s my job to get you to the best point of believing in yourself and believing in your ability to call the plays.’ That’s the way he coaches. He does it in a roundabout way sometimes, but it’s his philosophy to get the quarterback to run the entire show.”

Leach stayed with Mumme; they moved to Valdosta State and then Kentucky. It was at Kentucky where Leach’s offense so vexed Florida defensive coordinator Bob Stoops that when Stoops was hired in December 1998 to be Oklahoma’s head coach, he hired Leach to run the offense. Leach immediately went in search of a junior college quarterback to run his offense. Though several other coaches were less than impressed, Leach convinced Stoops to allow him to sign Josh Heupel from Snow College. Heupel led Oklahoma to a national title in 2000; in 2022, he went 10-2 in his second season as Tennessee’s head coach.

That 1999 season planted the seeds for an offensive revolution in Norman, and it also included Leach planting something else. At the Texas game in the Cotton Bowl, Leach masterminded a plot to leave a fake play sheet on the field during pregame warmups. A Texas assistant found the sheet and brought it to Longhorns defensive coordinator Carl Reese, who proceeded to call plays thinking it was real. The Longhorns fell behind 17-0 before Reese realized he’d been duped. Texas went on to win 38-28, but Leach had served notice that he’d be a massive pain for Big 12 defensive coordinators.

Leach wasn’t in Norman for the national title. That first year at Oklahoma impressed Texas Tech brass, and Leach was hired to replace longtime coach Spike Dykes. There, Leach would meet another quarterback destined to become a coach. Leach inherited Kliff Kingsbury, who threw for a modest 3,418 yards and 21 touchdowns in their first season together. In their third season together in 2002, Kingsbury threw for 5,017 yards and 45 touchdowns. Near the end of that season, the Red Raiders upset then-No. 4 Texas and put the rest of the Big 12 on notice. The funky offense run by the weird coach with the law degree could beat anyone.


Leach and QB Graham Harrell (left) brought a fun, high-flying offense to Texas Tech. Leach was head coach from 2000-09. (Ronald Martinez / Getty)

Leach reached the height of his success at Texas Tech in 2008 when the Red Raiders went 11-1 and found themselves locked in a three-way tie with Texas — which Texas Tech beat — and Oklahoma — which beat Texas Tech — atop the Big 12 South. Oklahoma was chosen to play in the Big 12 title game by virtue of its higher Bowl Championship Series ranking, but Leach had become a household name in the world of college football, and teams across the country were either borrowing his concepts or hiring former assistants such as Dana Holgorsen.

Leach’s time at Texas Tech wouldn’t last much longer. In 2009, Leach was accused of mistreating receiver Adam James. James, the son of former SMU star and then-ESPN commentator Craig James, accused Leach of ordering him to be placed in a closet for several hours while sitting out practice recovering from a concussion. Texas Tech’s trainer later contradicted James’ story, saying that James was told to stay in a large room typically used for visiting team media interviews at Jones AT&T Stadium.

Texas Tech fired Leach days before the Red Raiders were to play Michigan State in the Alamo Bowl. Leach later filed suit against Texas Tech and ESPN. Those suits were dismissed, though Leach said repeatedly that he intended to keep fighting Texas Tech for the money he believed the school was contractually bound to pay him.

While documents and interviews surrounding those lawsuits vindicated Leach with regard to the James incident, he did not always have the best relationship with some players. Last week, Mississippi State tailback Dillon Johnson announced his intention to enter the transfer portal. The graphic Johnson tweeted out began like many similar announcements. He thanked his family and teammates and Mississippi State fans. Then the announcement took a turn.

“With that being said, since I am not very tough and Leach is glad I am leaving, I will be entering my name into the transfer portal with the hopes of finding a more fit playing environment for me,” Johnson wrote. The following morning, someone posted a video on Twitter containing audio of Leach saying “I don’t think (Johnson) is very tough.”

Leach had a habit of questioning the toughness of his players when dissatisfied with their performances. “Instead of playing hard you want to sit behind a shade tree, eat a fish sandwich and drink a lemonade with your fat little girlfriend,” Leach said of his Mississippi State team this season after the Bulldogs allowed Auburn to come back and force overtime in a game Mississippi State ultimately won.

After a loss to Oklahoma State in 2007, Leach said of his defense: “The entire first half we got hit in the mouth and acted like somebody took our lunch money. All we wanted to do was have pouty expressions on our face until somebody dabbed our little tears off and made us (expletive) feel better. And then we’d go out there and try harder once our mommies told us we were OK.”

Don’t remember that last one? There’s a good reason. In the other head coach’s news conference after that same game, Cowboys coach Mike Gundy emphatically announced his gender and age while criticizing a column written about one of his quarterbacks.

Leach was the first to admit that he wasn’t for everyone. He could be blunt and profane in meetings and practices. He didn’t apologize for that, either.

But those were qualities that many of his former players admired. Some of those players — Holgorsen at Iowa Wesleyan, Kingsbury and Graham Harrell at Texas Tech — became coaches. Leach quickly recognized Texas Tech walk-on quarterback Lincoln Riley’s limitations as a thrower. At the same time, Leach sensed Riley’s offensive mind might be limitless. So he offered the kid a spot as a student assistant. Riley rose quickly to receivers coach, and at 23 Riley wound up calling the plays in the Alamo Bowl days after Leach was fired. Riley won four Big 12 titles at Oklahoma, and he just finished his first regular season as head coach at USC with a loss in the Pac-12 title game. When Caleb Williams held the Heisman Trophy aloft on Saturday in New York, he became the third of Riley’s quarterbacks to win the award.

On Sunday, Riley asked for prayers for Leach.

Leach’s final game was a 24-22 Egg Bowl win at Ole Miss. It was Leach’s first in three seasons in the series, but he had no plans for it to be the last. “The better we get, the more we’ll be able to hoist trophies,” Leach told reporters after the game. “If that’s all it takes, I’m going to invent a trophy for every game so they can try to hoist something up.”

Leach won’t get the chance to invent more trophies, but he will play a role in the hoisting of plenty. Every time a team that runs a version of Stick or Mesh — and that’s almost every non-triple option team at every level of football — wins a championship, Leach will have had a hand in it.

If those people at Key West High had known how badly Leach wanted their head coaching job back in 1996, all that offensive magic might have remained confined to one little island. Instead, it spread all across the football world.

(Top photo: Justin Ford / Getty)



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Former Cowboys coach Jason Garrett a finalist for Stanford head coach opening: Sources

Former Dallas Cowboys head coach Jason Garrett has emerged as a finalist for the Stanford head-coaching job, multiple sources with knowledge of the search process told The Athletic on Thursday. Here’s what you need to know:

  • Garrett, who spent this season as a color analyst for NBC’s Notre Dame games, nearly became the head coach at Duke last season, but the job went to Mike Elko.
  • Sacramento State coach Troy Taylor is one of the other finalists, sources said.
  • Candidates the school talked to who are no longer in the running include former BYU and Virginia coach Bronco Mendenhall, Baltimore Ravens offensive coordinator Greg Roman and former Denver Broncos head coach Vic Fangio.

Backstory

Stanford has conducted interviews with numerous candidates since longtime Cardinal coach David Shaw announced his resignation on Nov. 27. It’s unclear how many other candidates remain in the mix.

Garrett went 85-67 in Dallas from 2010 to 2019, then was hired as offensive coordinator of the New York Giants in 2020. He was fired 10 games into the 2021 season. He joined NBC Sports last April.

Shaw, Stanford’s coach from 2011 to 2022, stepped down after the final game of the Cardinal’s 3-9 season. He was the school’s all-time winningest coach at 96-54 but had losing records in three of his last four seasons.

Required reading

(Photo: Nick Cammett / Getty Images)



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Who will replace Jeff Brohm at Purdue? Watch for Dino Babers, Troy Calhoun and more

Jeff Brohm is leaving Purdue to return home to Louisville, opening up another Power 5 job. Brohm did an excellent job with the Boilermakers and leaves the program on a high note. He won 17 games the past two seasons, the Big Ten West this year, and finished 12-6 in Big Ten play. Purdue is a tough job, though, and it probably has only gotten tougher with Michigan continuing its ascent, Illinois springing back to life under Bret Bielema and Nebraska and Wisconsin adding top-tier head coaches in Matt Rhule and Luke Fickell respectively.

Purdue has produced a lot of good NFL talent but big success on the field in the Big Ten has been spotty. The program hasn’t won 10 games since 1979 — the school’s only 10-win season. Joe Tiller did well a generation ago but prior to Brohm’s arrival Purdue had a dud of a decade of football. We suspect the Boilermakers will lean toward an offensive mind, since most of their success came under Brohm and Tiller.

Head coach candidates

Dino Babers, Syracuse: Babers spent three seasons as a Purdue wide receivers coach in the early 1990s. He’s a good offensive coach and has a lot of presence. Babers is 61, but seems at least 10 years younger. He also knows the area well from four impressive seasons as head coach at Eastern Illinois and Bowling Green. He’s been up-and-down at Syracuse in his seven seasons there; this year, the Orange went 7-5 but peaked at No. 14 in the nation before losing five in a row. And that’s a program that is in a really tough place to win now.

Troy Calhoun, Air Force: Calhoun has done well at Air Force for a long time. He coached in the MAC at Ohio for a half-dozen years in the 1990s. He’s 33-11 the past four years. He’s a really good coach and very good on offense. The Oregon native is 56 and might make a lot of sense for the Boilermakers.

Jason Candle, Toledo: Candle, 43, is another really good offensive mind who Miami almost hired a year ago as offensive coordinator. He just led Toledo to a MAC title and he’s been on a lot of athletic directors’ radars for awhile. He got off to a fast start there, succeeding his buddy and former Mount Union teammate Matt Campbell, going 11-3 in his second season. Since then, his teams have been good more than great, but he has shown he can be a consistent winner.

Kane Wommack, South Alabama: Wommack has a strong defensive background and is a rising star in coaching. The 35-year-old knows the Big Ten well. His defense at Indiana in 2020 played a huge role in the Hoosiers finishing No. 12. He took over a program that has never had a winning season in 11 years at the FBS level and the Jaguars went 10-2; their two losses this year came by a combined five points, including a one-point loss to top-10 UCLA. If Purdue is not locked in on an offensive coach, he should get strong consideration.

Assistant coach candidates

Among these rank four men with strong Big Ten ties we think might get some consideration and a fifth who might be an attractive option.

Todd Monken, Georgia OC: The latter is Monken, who is actually from Wheaton, Ill., two and a half hours away. The 56-year-old won the national title last year and has put the Bulldogs in good position to win a second. He’s helped turn former walk-on Stetson Bennett into a Heisman finalist and has created unique ways to exploit the talent of tight end Brock Bowers. A former NFL OC,  Monken did an outstanding job as a head coach at Southern Miss, taking the Golden Eagles from 1-11 his first year to 9-5 in his third season despite big administrative challenges.

Jim Leonhard, Wisconsin defensive coordinator: Leonhard, who went 4-3 as the Badgers’ interim head coach this year, will leave his alma mater after the bowl game. Right after he took over, the Badgers beat Brohm and the Boilermakers 35-24. He’s shown that he’s one of the brightest defensive minds in football. Expect Leonhard to be a hot commodity in college and the NFL for places looking to upgrade the defense. Would be a fit for Purdue as a leader? We’ll see.

Sherrone Moore, Michigan co-OC/offensive line coach: Moore has been a huge asset to Jim Harbaugh and has proven to be a very good play caller this year. The 36-year-old’s O-line won the Joe Moore Award and this year’s unit is even more deserving of it.  Moore has been critical for Jim Harbaugh staff, turning this team into the bully of the Big Ten and dominating arch-rival Ohio State the past two years. The Wolverines rushed for 549 yards in those two games combined. We know Moore is going to be a very choosy about his next move and is locked in on trying to win a national title, but Purdue brass might want to still reach out.

Ryan Walters, Illinois DC: Walters has made a big impact in the Big Ten in helping the Illini breakthrough, turning one of the country’s worst defenses into the second-best (at 4.26 yards per play allowed). The 36-year-0ld Colorado product, who came from Missouri, has risen up the ranks fast and is a name to remember.

Brian Hartline, Ohio State passing game coordinator: Hartline was a candidate at Cincinnati and might be in play here. The 36-year-old is arguably the top position coach in college football for his work recruiting and developing the Buckeyes’ incredibly stacked receiver room. The Ohio native would have to consider a solid Big Ten job if offered. We know he can get talent.

Wild cards

Kevin Sumlin: The former Purdue linebacker has deep ties inside the school. Sumlin, 58, was the hottest coach in college football a decade ago. He fizzled out at Texas A&M after leading the Aggies to their first top-5 season in a half-century. (He went 51-26 there, which is actually better than his successor Jimbo Fisher has done there since.) Sumlin then took Arizona and that proved to big a big mistake for both him and the Wildcats. He had a dismal run, going 9-20. If he’s re-energized and re-focused, this could be an interesting fit.

Dan Mullen: The former Florida and Mississippi State head coach had two top-10 seasons before the bottom dropped out on him in 2021 after a lot of bad recruiting caught up to his program. Mullen, 50, spent a season doing TV. If he’s re-dedicated and can put together a good staff, he also might be an attractive option.

(Top photo of Dino Babers: Rich Barnes / USA Today)



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