Scott Woodward, the University of Washington's newly
appointed permanent athletic director, has made it official that Tyrone
Willingham will not be back for another season as the Huskies' head
football coach.
Willingham will stay on to coach the team's 5
remaining games and then leave with a $1 million buyout. Willingham was
in his 4th year of a 5-year contract.
His Huskies are currently
0-7 this season following a 33-7 slapping by Notre Dame last Saturday
(10-25-08) on the Huskies' home turf. Their 7th straight loss of the
season meant that the Huskies will end the year with a losing record
and elimination from bowl eligibility.
Only a fool trapped in an
outhouse for the last 5 years would not know that it was not if but
when Willingham would go. With any kind of luck whatsoever Willingham's
entire staff will go with him right out the front door.
Washington's
football program needs some new faces, new game plans, new offensive
and defensive schemes, new personalities, new life and new excitement
before all of its fans leave Husky Stadium and never return.
Only
a very inexperienced chief administrator or a broke fool would think
that fans and boosters will open their pockets to fund a new or
remodeled stadium for a losing team. People with money do not invest
their hard-earned dollars in organizations that continually lose, and
that look like losers, talk like losers and walk like losers.
People
with money are more apt to give their money to an organization or
charity that is upscale and already has something going on. The reason
is simple-winners want to run with winners or organizations they
perceive, with some cash input, will become winners soon.
Sanity
keeps me from actually talking about Washington's performance against
the Fighting Irish of Notre Dame. Oh, all right, if you must know here
are the Husky offensive statistics for the game: 26 yards rushing, 98
yards passing, 124 yards of total offense. That is all you need to know.
If
we were in Biblical times, the players and coaches probably would have
been dodging rocks before they left the stadium. If you think I
exaggerate, you have not seen the Huskies play since their franchise
quarterback Jake Locker was injured earlier in the year.
By all
accounts Ty Willingham is a stand up guy. He works hard, he is honest,
he is straightforward, he has integrity, he is not looking for
shortcuts or handouts. He wants to get on in this world by the sweat of
his own brow, lifting himself up by his bootstraps to become successful
in today's competitive world of coaching on a national stage.
As
a big time coach at Washington, he simply could not win more games than
he lost, and a whole lot of paying customers (fans and boosters)
thought he could not coach victories at Washington if his life depended
upon it. His record at Washington was 11 and 32 (11 wins and 32 losses)
after seasons of 2-9, 5-7, 4-9 and 0-7 so far this year.
His
backers say that no one could have turned the program around at
Washington quickly. There is too much evidence to the contrary, and it
explains why his backers are so few and jumping ship like passengers on
the Titanic.
Mark Dantonio took over a program at Michigan State
that was 4-8 and went 7-6 his first year and to a bowl game, he is
currently 7-2 this year and ranked No. 22 in the AP Top 25 Poll.
Current Minnesota head coach Tim Brewster went 1-11 in his first season
last year and is 7-1 this season and currently ranked No. 20 in the Top
25 Poll.
When Mike Price went to UTEP, he took over a team that
had won only 2 games in each of its last two seasons. In his first
year, Price went 8-4 and to a bowl, in his second year he went 8-4 and
to a bowl game. Do not waste your breath telling me the head coach does
not make a difference. The head coach can make all the difference in
the world.
Speculation is rampant on the Washington campus in
Seattle and really all around Western Washington about who will replace
Ty Willingham. It is very likely that the Washington powers to be will
set their sights on a high-profile coach meaning, among other things,
that a successor may not be announced until the current bowl season is
over.
Until then, they would be interviewing more losers than winners, like we don't know what that's about.
Copyright © 2008 Ed Bagley
Read my other detailed, knowledgeable, interesting articles on Washington Husky football, including:
"It Is Not a Good Idea to Have a Football Team Anywhere Near Seattle, Washington"
"College Football's First Controversial Call of 2008 May Have Cost Washington a Huge Upset"
"College Football - It Is Going to Be a Very Long Season for Washington's Football Program"