College football is all about
recruiting and don't let anyone tell you anything different.
Texas didn't fire Charlie Strong because of his tactics or demeanor —
he was fired because his players didn't cut it in Austin.
Nick Saban is a defensive genius — the man
invented arguably the best pass coverage system the sport has ever known
— but he's the best coach in college football because he's had the No. 1
recruiting class in football the last six years.
But the need to recruit top talent into a
program is a top-to-bottom principle, and Texas needed to recruit a new head
coach after three straight 7-loss seasons under Strong.
There will be second-guessing and parsing and
naysaying about losses to SMU and Memphis, but make no mistake, Tom Herman is
at the top of his class of coaching prospects — he's a five-star recruit — and Texas reportedly landed him as its next head coach
Saturday morning.
It seems as if Texas did everything it could
to botch this logical, straightforward hire. Disorder in the house of Bevo
delayed Strong's inevitable firing and gave Herman's camp time to play
nice with LSU and perhaps even Oregon.
But Herman clearly wanted Texas — it
appears as if it took less than 12 hours for this deal to be made (it's never
that easy, but that's how it looks to the outside).So what is Texas getting in
the 41-year-old former offensive coordinator?
The Longhorns landed a coach whose meteoric
rise through the coaching ranks was no accident. You don't go from Sam Houston
State's wide receivers coach to Ohio State's OC in eight years without earning
a reputation for being whip-smart (he's a Mensa member) and innovative (his
Smashmouth Spread offense is potent, but more importantly, dynamic).
Coaching is a macro game that is determined in
the micro. It's cruel that way — just ask Strong. It's clear that Herman
understands that.
Herman won't have to do much housecleaning at
Texas — he can thank Strong for doing a lot of that thankless dirty work — but
his experience under Urban Meyer and as the head coach at Houston shows that he
understands the lifeblood of a modern college football program is equal parts
hype and discipline.
That's a hard balance to pull off, but it's
hard to argue that in two years, Herman wasn't able to get Houston to punch
above its weight. He landed a five-star recruit to play in the American, and it
wasn't because of academic failure or extenuating circumstances. He beat both
Oklahoma and Louisville — two College Football Playoff-contending teams — this
year. The depth of talented players wasn't necessarily there (yet), but when
Houston played its A-game, there were few teams in the nation who could beat
the Cougars this
season — they were that good. There was massive momentum behind that program.
He made it cool to go to Houston and play in a Group of Five conference in the
span of a year. That's incredible.
One could only imagine the successes he could
have had at the school had he stayed. Houston well could have been the next
Boise State, but inside of one of the nation's best talent-producing cities.
Perhaps Howard Schnellenberger's Miami would
have been the better comparison.
But Herman had to leave — especially after the
drama of the past 48 hours. He burned the bridges when his agent clearly played
the Power Five schools to the east and west.
Also, it's Texas. When Texas comes calling,
you answer. It doesn't matter if you're a high school senior or a football
coach.
And when Texas waits far too long to call and
you're Tom Herman, you sit by the phone and wait for it to ring. You might even
give the Longhorns a bit of a passive-aggressive push.
Will Herman be a success at UT? That's for him
to decide over the next few years. Not every five-star recruit reaches their
potential. But they have five-stars next to their name for a reason: they're
elite.
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