Posts Tagged ‘Coaching Changes’
HLL: CFB Coaches 2009-10: In Memoriam

A solemn remembrance of the coaches that are no longer with us after the 2009 football season from the inimitable LSUFreek.
Video: CFB Coaches 2009-10: In Memoriam
Ashes to ashes…
Tis only proper that we reflect on those gone by…
HLL: “Bobby Bowden’s Swan Song”
A little video goodness from the one and only, often imitated but never replicated, the man, the myth, the legend: LSUFreek. This time, it’s all about the Bowdens.
Video: Bobby Bowden’s Swan Song
HT / via: LSUFreek
I’m just glad it’s not Tennessee this time around…
Clay Travis’ “On Rocky Top”: Beautiful Agony

After living through the unmitigated disaster that was the 2008 football season for the Tennessee Volunteers, I was not so sure I was prepared to take a stroll with Clay Travis down memory lane via his new book “On Rocky Top.” The 2008 season was the most gut-wrenching experience of my sports-watching life, one which Travis himself likened to having your arm amputated without laudanum. It was truly painful and not merely because the Vols lost seven games. Losing comes with competition, I can handle losing. Watching an entire program, an entire fanbase, an entire state devolve into a constant state of turmoil, however, was the part that made it an experience that I was more than ready to forget. Even after nine months of good vibrations—buoyed up by the hopes and energy of new Tennessee head coach Lane Kiffin and his band of invincibles—assuming that I was prepared to join Travis’ on his retrospective journey through the 2008 season, I wasn’t really sure I wanted to make that trip into the past.
I suppose, I was just ready to move on.
When first I saw that Clay Travis had written a book on the Vols 2008 football campaign, my reaction was that he picked one hell of a bad year to write about Tennessee. I knew Clay was a fine writer, having read his work for CBS Sports.com, Fanhouse, and his book Dixieland Delight. Still, I remember thinking to myself “Man, that really stinks for Clay—all that work to write a book about a 5-7 season.” After all, who wants to read about a team that loses, and loses a lot?
You do.
Clay Travis’ new book “On Rocky Top” is one of the best sports books I have read in a long time.
The Great Punkin Returneth…
Well, in case you hadn’t heard, Phillip Fulmer (a/k/a “the Great Punkin”) has been selected as the 2009 recipient of the Robert R. Neyland Trophy. Fulmer will be formally presented the award at the East Tennessee Chapter of the National Football Foundation Hall of Fame awards brunch on Saturday morning. Fulmer will also be honored on the field prior to the start of this weekend’s Orange and White game. This award, named in honor of General Neyland, has been awarded by the Knoxville Quarterback Club for the last 44 years.
This year’s choice has a few people upset, or at least scratching their heads a bit.
It is hard to argue with Fulmer deserving the award. The issue for some folks is the the timing, because now Coach Fulmer will be honored immediately prior to Lane Kiffin’s debut as the head coach of the Volunteers—the same team that Fulmer coached up until the end of last season. One need look no farther than any of the various Tennessee web forums and blogs to see the proverbial “lines in the sand” being drawn by fans on both sides.
Never afraid to make a public statement when called upon to do so, the Blackjack General commented on the matter earlier today :
Coach Fulmer has had a tremendous impact on Tennessee. He’s the second-winningest coach in Tennessee history behind General Neyland. It’s only fitting that he receives this prestigious award. I hope all Tennessee fans will show up early Saturday to show their appreciation for all he has done for our program, our university and our state.
• Lane Kiffin: Commenting on Coach Fulmer being honored prior to the Orange and White Game | GoVols Xtra
Some will say (or already have) that the timing of Fulmer’s selection was intentional—that this was an orchestrated barb at the athletic department (most pointedly at Smiling Mike Hamilton) from Fulmer supporters on the Neyland Trophy committee. Others will say that the award amounts to little more than incurable homerism on the part of some who refuse to let Coach Fulmer go. On the other side, there is the argument that Coach Fulmer was an immensely successful coach and earned the award fairly, and that it is fitting he be receive the award at the first appropriate opportunity—the first year after he leaves Tennessee. Others still will say that the only reason that some are complaining is because they fired a good coach and they know it.
Either way, it makes for some high drama…
I for one don’t see what the big deal is either way. Lane Kiffin had nothing to do with Phillip Fulmer’s ouster. Phillip Fulmer was a great coach for the Vols and remains a loyal Tennessean—I respect the man for what he has done. Coach Kiffin has had to deal with much worse, as has Coach Fulmer. There is no reason in this instance why the orange-clad faithful can’t have their cake and eat it to.
In my opinion, the “controversy” over this is nothing more than a few people with axes to grind on both sides of the fence trying to create a storm for/against Coach Fulmer being honored or for / against Coach Kiffin taking “the greensward of Shields-Watkins Field” for the first time. What I haven’t heard from anyone is this:
The politicization of this event by “factions” does nothing but dishonor the memory of one person: General Robert R. Neyland.
The Neyland Trophy was created to honor the General’s legacy, and to preserve his mark on the landscape of college football. To try and turn this award into a circus is, to me, repugnant. To anyone that would add fuel to the fire in either direction and not support both Fulmer and Kiffin, I say “shame on you.” It is bad for the fanbase, it is bad for Tennessee, it is bad for Coach Fulmer, and it is bad for Coach Kiffin. In my opinion it is wrong.
There is no reason that the fans cannot cheer their former coach for winning the Neyland Trophy and then, five minutes later, cheer their current coach as he brings his team out on to the field. In the process of doing both, those cheers also honor General Neyland. I support both Fulmer and Kiffin. I also support preserving Neyland’s place in the pantheon of the game I love.
More than any of that, however, I support Tennessee first and foremost…
It is not about either man, it is not about making a statement for or against one coach or the other, it is not about using the event as a bully pulpit. It is about supporting your team, your school, your “family,” and doing what is right.
So, who do you support?
Walking in Memphis: a Brief Reflection on Reality, Basketball, and Bruce Pearl…
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Then I’m walking in Memphis
Walking with my feet ten feet off of Beale
Walking in Memphis
But do I really feel the way I feel• “Walking in Memphis” by Marc Cohn
Well, it seems that Bruce Pearl will be staying in Knoxville for the foreseeable future, which is good. The question, however, remains: What are we to make of this “Memphis Incident”?
For starters, I am greatly relieved that Bruce Almighty will still be wearing orange next season. That is the good news, not that there is necessarily some “bad” news, but keeping Pearl on the sidelines in Knoxville is definitely very good.
That said, what exactly are we to take away from the brief and furious flirtation (so brief and furious that I never even got a chance to comment before it ended) with the notion that Coach Pearl might bolt to the Pyramid City to take the reins as head coach of the Memphis Tigers? The real answer is probably “nothing.” Still there are a few thoughts that jump out to me—random observations, I suppose—which seem relevant, if less than timely.
Bruce Pearl is Happy at Tennessee…
It seems to me that Bruce Pearl sent two messages yesterday. The first is a very positive one, namely that he is happy as coach of the Tennessee Volunteers and has no desire to leave behind what he has begun. Bruce Pearl likes it here.
Why do I say that? Well first of all is the obvious: he is staying here. More importantly, however, is the what he said in his public statement last night. To me, it makes it clear that Pearl is truly happy to be at Tennessee.
I truly love my job, and I want it to be clear that I’m not interested in any other job. There’s no place in the country I’d rather be than the University of Tennessee. My children are happy here in the Knoxville community—one is in high school, one is in middle school and two are currently attending the university.
My staff and I are building a consistent top-25 program and I’m honored and privileged to serve the greatest fans in the country. Tennessee has all the resources necessary to win championships, from our recently upgraded facilities to our ability to schedule.
It’s great to be a Tennessee Vol!
• Bruce Pearl commenting on rumors of him leaving Tennessee | UT Sports.com
Now in the era of sports double-talk and lip service (See Bobby Petrino at any point in his career), it is rarely advisable to take public professions of loyalty at face value. I understand that. Still, there are different degrees of lip service and there are different types of coaches. Pearl’s statement was anything but tepid—it was largely unequivocal and pointed. In other words, he could have simply said “I’m staying,” and left the other assurances out of the discussion; he didn’t.
Second of all, for reasons unknown to me (considering I have never met Pearl), I trust the man. Maybe that owes to the side of him that exudes infectious enthusiasm about everything to which he is tied; maybe it is because of his well documented history of loyalty at Iowa and Wisconsin-Green Bay; maybe it is because he is a con man and I’m snowed. Regardless of the reasons, Pearl is unique in my mind because I do believe that he is both loyal and trustworthy as a coach. My gut tells me that if he was not happy and was considering a move, while he might not come out and say it, he would similarly not effervesce about how much he loves it at Tennessee.
Furthermore, if he had wanted to leave, it would have been hard to argue with his decision given the suggestion that Memphis was prepared to offer up to $ 3.25 million a year (approximately $ 1.25 million more per year than his new contract is reported to provide).
Thus, I believe him when he says that he never intended to leave, and that he truly loves coaching the BasketVols. If he truly wanted to leave, he would have.
Yeah, yeah, I know—I’ve obviously been drinking the Kool Aid…
Is Billy Clyde out at Kentucky?
» Updated: 27 March 2009 — 4:25pm
Apparently, Gillispie’s firing became official about 5 minutes after I posted this. At least I was a little bit ahead of the curve…
» Updated: 27 March 2009 — 4:42pm
Now, as his comment below points out, HSH has discovered an even more interesting development: perhaps Billy Donovan is going to Kentucky.

Well, friends and neighbors, it’s not like it is unexpected, but it appears that Billy Gillispie is out at Kentucky. This comes from WHAS TV in Louisville. Seemingly in response to this report, the Kentucky athletic department issued a public statement which—paraphrased—amounts to their complete refusal to make a public statement. It read, “UK mens basketball coach Billy Gillispie has not been fired. There have been no meetings between Gillispie and UK officials today and there is no scheduled press conference tomorrow.“
I think a simple “no comment” would have sufficed.

Either way, this does seriously change the dynamic in the SEC East. Hooper over at RTT has an interesting article on why this prospect scares him as a fan of SEC and Tennessee basketball. The uncertainty at Kentucky will definitely add confusion to recruiting, but what if Kentucky actually gets a “good” coach? With rumors flying about as to who will replace Gillispie, it stands to reason that Kentucky Mitch Barnhart will be trying to save his neck by getting a coach who is a little better fit for the Wildcats this time around than was Billy Clyde. According to the guys at Team Speed Kills, however, that new coach will not be Billy Donovan (or will it?).
In the meantime, I suppose we will all be guessing…
Lane Kiffin Names New Staff Members
According to Basilio and GVX, Lane Kiffin has named former-Vol Inquoris “Inky” Johnson as a graduate assistant. Johnson was a key member of the Vols’ defensive backfield prior to his career ending injury in 2006. Johnson will be coaching the defensive backs.

Inky Johnson in 2006
It was also announced that Kiffin has named Leonidas of Sparta as the Vols new Kicking and Hurling of Sharp Objects Coach.**
(click to enlarge)
As you can see from the press conference, Leonidas is pumped!
Hmm… wonder how long I can keep this Sparta thing going?
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