It is only 11 weeks until the kickoff of the 2008
NCAA College Football Season. The best part of this week is that it is
only 11 Saturdays until the Washington Huskies travel south to face the
Oregon Ducks in their opener. Husky Coach Ty Willingham had better have
his players ready to win.
It is a foregone conclusion that
Willingham MUST lead Washington to a winning season and bowl appearance
or his time as the Husky coach will be over.
Since Willingham
started his first season in Seattle, Husky fans and boosters have been
underwhelmed by his poor record. In 2005 Washington was 2-9 and last in
the Pac 10 Conference. In 2006 Washington was 5-7 and next to last in
the Pac 10. In 2007 Washington was 4-9 and last in the Pac 10. You get
the picture.
An 11-25 record and zero bowl appearances have left
Husky followers bewitched, bothered and bewildered. Stacked against Don
James 18-year career record of 153-57-2 (72%), a 10-4 bowl game record,
and winning 22 consecutive games from 1990 to 1992, Willingham's mark
looks really lame.
The Washington Huskies have a proud football
tradition that has fallen on hard times with Willingham at the helm.
Prior to Willingham, the Huskies have won 15 Pac-10 Conference
championships, 7 Rose Bowl titles and 2 NCAA national championships. No
wonder Husky fans were slamming their helmets and pulling memorabilia
off the rec room walls.
Washington has not had a winning season
since 2002 (the last season under Rick Neuheisel), and has had 4
consecutive losing seasons for the first time in the history of Husky
football. Yikes! Time to stop screwing around and get with it.
Willingham
was given marching orders to get better coaches around him, and
responded by hiring Ed Donatell as the new defensive coordinator and
Brian White as the new tight ends/special teams coach.
Donatell
is a veteran NFL defensive coordinator with both the Green Bay Packers
and Atlanta Falcons. Donatell seems like a no-nonsense kind of guy who
could drop a player on his backside if needed.
White really made
his mark at Wisconsin as the Running Backs Coach and Offensive
Coordinator, helping the Badgers to 9 bowl appearances, including Rose
Bowl selections in 1999 and 2000. He mentored 1999 Heisman Trophy
winner Ron Dayne, 2001 NFL first-round draft choice Michael Bennett,
and 2001 Big 10 Freshman of the Year Anthony Davis.
There may be
nicer, more patient, more loyal to loser coaches in America than Ty
Willingham, but only God knows where they could be.
Willingham's
main claim to fame at Washington has been to keep the program clean (no
NCAA recruiting violations or other indiscretions), recruit some
promising players to join freshman sensation Jake Locker, exude
integrity, academic standards for players and good sportsmanship, and
become President of the American Football Coaches Association Board of
Trustees.
Winning football games (ultimately, the only reason he
will remain head coach of the Huskies), on the other hand, has been
very elusive for Willingham.
Up until now, Willingham and his
Huskies have reminded me of what Lou Holtz had to say one fine
Saturday-"When all is said and done, more is said than done." Lou Holtz
had a way of cutting to the chase.
For Willingham, the future is clear: have a winning season in 2008 and go to a bowl game, or get gone.
Copyright © 2008 Ed Bagley
Read my other detailed, knowledgeable, outrageous articles on football, including:
"Famous Quotes by Vince Lombardi, Knute Rockne and Lou Holtz During Football's Annual Bowl Season"
"The Sagarin Ratings: What They Are, How to Read Them and What to Do With Them"
and
my 14 consecutive weekly wrap-up articles on the 2007 College Football
Season as well as wrap-up articles on all 32 College Bowl Games. Be
bold and audacious, read my stuff, exercise your eyeballs as well as
your brain. And, yeah, don't forget the brewsky, tacos, sauce and
chips. Find them all in my Sports link.
Ed
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