What's new
AllBuffs | Unofficial fan site for the University of Colorado at Boulder Athletics programs

This is a sample guest message. Register a free account today to become a member! Once signed in, you'll be able to participate on this site by adding your own topics and posts, as well as connect with other members through your own private inbox!

  • Prime Time. Prime Time. Its a new era for Colorado football. Consider signing up for a club membership! For $20/year, you can get access to all the special features at Allbuffs, including club member only forums, dark mode, avatars and best of all no ads ! But seriously, please sign up so that we can pay the bills. No one earns money here, and we can use your $20 to keep this hellhole running. You can sign up for a club membership by navigating to your account in the upper right and clicking on "Account Upgrades". Make it happen!

The future of CU football

Duff Man

Club Member
Club Member
Junta Member
Even if we had landed Jones, I have always viewed this coaching hire as more of a stopgap for 5-7 years. Some stability, multiple bowl games, and a coach selling the rebuilding job he does here for a bigger job.

Fast forward 5-7 years and we have: better facilities, a new AD, a new president, and a new chancellor. This job should look much more attractive.

This is not to say I have low expectations for the new coach. If the next coach is here for five years, I expect three bowl games and consistent top 40 classes. I just will view a trip to the Rose Bowl as a bonus.
 
Even if we had landed Jones, I have always viewed this coaching hire as more of a stopgap for 5-7 years. Some stability, multiple bowl games, and a coach selling the rebuilding job he does here for a bigger job.

Fast forward 5-7 years and we have: better facilities, a new AD, a new president, and a new chancellor. This job should look much more attractive.

This is not to say I have low expectations for the new coach. If the next coach is here for five years, I expect three bowl games and consistent top 40 classes. I just will view a trip to the Rose Bowl as a bonus.

With better facilities and if we will pay the "going rate" for a CFB coach then CU would be looked at as an attractive job. Never a destination job but would be solid.
 
Even if we had landed Jones, I have always viewed this coaching hire as more of a stopgap for 5-7 years. Some stability, multiple bowl games, and a coach selling the rebuilding job he does here for a bigger job.

Fast forward 5-7 years and we have: better facilities, a new AD, a new president, and a new chancellor. This job should look much more attractive.

This is not to say I have low expectations for the new coach. If the next coach is here for five years, I expect three bowl games and consistent top 40 classes. I just will view a trip to the Rose Bowl as a bonus.

Rose bowl, don't talk about Rose Bowl. Are you kidding me? Rose Bowl... I just hope we can win a game.
 
Even if we had landed Jones, I have always viewed this coaching hire as more of a stopgap for 5-7 years. Some stability, multiple bowl games, and a coach selling the rebuilding job he does here for a bigger job.

Fast forward 5-7 years and we have: better facilities, a new AD, a new president, and a new chancellor. This job should look much more attractive.

This is not to say I have low expectations for the new coach. If the next coach is here for five years, I expect three bowl games and consistent top 40 classes. I just will view a trip to the Rose Bowl as a bonus.
Funny. I thought the great thing about Butch was the guarantee that he could deliver (if he stayed) exactly that scenario. Nothing great, but solid results to get us back to respectability.
 
Just get the facilities in place. Most important thing about this whole coaching search.
 
Rose bowl, don't talk about Rose Bowl. Are you kidding me? Rose Bowl... I just hope we can win a game.

3qmop4.jpg
 
Even if we had landed Jones, I have always viewed this coaching hire as more of a stopgap for 5-7 years. Some stability, multiple bowl games, and a coach selling the rebuilding job he does here for a bigger job.

Fast forward 5-7 years and we have: better facilities, a new AD, a new president, and a new chancellor. This job should look much more attractive.

This is not to say I have low expectations for the new coach. If the next coach is here for five years, I expect three bowl games and consistent top 40 classes. I just will view a trip to the Rose Bowl as a bonus.

Forget that. Live in the now. Win now. Tomorrow is 100% uncertain. The right coach will make it happen quickly. You can have awesome facilities and blue chip players and get nothing. Look at SC and Texas this year.
 
Even if we had landed Jones, I have always viewed this coaching hire as more of a stopgap for 5-7 years. Some stability, multiple bowl games, and a coach selling the rebuilding job he does here for a bigger job.

Fast forward 5-7 years and we have: better facilities, a new AD, a new president, and a new chancellor. This job should look much more attractive.

This is not to say I have low expectations for the new coach. If the next coach is here for five years, I expect three bowl games and consistent top 40 classes. I just will view a trip to the Rose Bowl as a bonus.

There's still coaches avail that can do that this year
 
Forget that. Live in the now. Win now. Tomorrow is 100% uncertain. The right coach will make it happen quickly. You can have awesome facilities and blue chip players and get nothing. Look at SC and Texas this year.

No one questions USC or Texas in their desire to be elite football programs. Losing at USC or Texas does not potentially torpedo a coaching career. The same cannot be said for CU.

There's still coaches avail that can do that this year

No doubt about it.
 
i think we are underestimating the cu job... pay is good , pac 12 conf, facilities comittment?, .... i know food cart turned us down but after the putz took the tn job that picture cleared up.... maybe its someone not on our radar?
 
CU was facing some pretty stiff competition in the job market this year. Some good slots were open. CU is not at the top of the peckign order, but there are very few coaches who are in a position to turn down $2m coaching gigs playign in the p12. And, typically, the only reason they turn them down is to get one that pays more.

I don't think people appreciate what a big change has occured at CU. CU went from bush league to major league in terms of compensation package CU is willing to pay the head coach.
 
I stated a couple of days ago that none of the candidates out there get me very excited.

At this point I want something that looks like a major college football team. Beat the teams we are supposed to beat and at don't embarass ourselves against the teams we aren't supposed to. No first and 10 QB sneaks, no 70 point blowouts to MWC teams, no Arizona and Washington players laughing at us on the field.

Recuit guys who belong in the PAC, run offenses and defenses that belong in the PAC, don't be everybodies homecoming opponent.

From that foundation we can then look to where we go afterwords.
 
Yes, the pay is going to be great for whoever comes, and thank god our administration finally is giving us a fighting chance. But I think we vastly underestimate the career risk that someone is taking to come here, even if they're an up and comer and hungry to prove themselves at the next level. We were, objectively speaking, probably the worst BCS team in the country last year and somewhere in the bottom 10 among all FBS schools. Yes, we'll be better next year but any coach that comes is taking a major chance. CU offers unique challenges of which we're all aware (stigma, facilities, asst. coach contracts, alumni and admin apathy, etc.) Anybody that takes this gig has to know in the back of their mind that if it doesn't work out, they might end up where Hawkins, Barnett, Embree did ... out of football.
 
I would have given Embo a third year, replace Brown and EB. Get more experienced play callers in.
 
Yes, the pay is going to be great for whoever comes, and thank god our administration finally is giving us a fighting chance. But I think we vastly underestimate the career risk that someone is taking to come here, even if they're an up and comer and hungry to prove themselves at the next level. We were, objectively speaking, probably the worst BCS team in the country last year and somewhere in the bottom 10 among all FBS schools. Yes, we'll be better next year but any coach that comes is taking a major chance. CU offers unique challenges of which we're all aware (stigma, facilities, asst. coach contracts, alumni and admin apathy, etc.) Anybody that takes this gig has to know in the back of their mind that if it doesn't work out, they might end up where Hawkins, Barnett, Embree did ... out of football.

Which is different from most other schools how? What is the last coach at Texas doing these days? Alabama? Washington? Truth be told, I'm getting a little annoyed at the characterization of the CU job being a career killer. It only kills your career if you suck.
 
Valid points Boulder Buff. In the end this hire is not that important. If facilities are built and commitment to football demonstrated, we can do better on the next go around.
 
Which is different from most other schools how? What is the last coach at Texas doing these days? Alabama? Washington? Truth be told, I'm getting a little annoyed at the characterization of the CU job being a career killer. It only kills your career if you suck.

Completely different comparisons. John Mackovic, Texas coach before Mack Brown, was at the tail end of a long fairly successful career anyway. Mike Shula rebounded from Alabama just fine, in the NFL. Franchione and Price landed at lesser schools but still head coaching jobs. Willingham at UW, I'll give you that ... he's out of football. But on our end, Hawkins, Barnett and Embree will never be head coaches again. Neuheisel, maybe. That's our track record.

My point is that a coach's success at CU are more influenced by the unique challenges than a lot of other places. Bellotti, Barnett, Tedford and others have enumerated that. So even if a coach doesn't "suck", they may still have a tough time here. Of course, upper tier compensations and facilities upgrades will hopefully bend the curve.
 
CU has some deep problems in the AD and the Football program. We are now following a typical pattern of a company that finds itself failing...they are starting to throw money at the problem. Great but that is usually short sited...the CUAD needs a strong leader and we do not have that with Mike Bohn (primarily) and that is why we need to replace him. The formula for success is simple to state and hard to achieve. You need a plan, you need to stick to that plan and have fanatical execution of your plan.

Everyone is focused on the coaching hire but I hope you realize that we probably will not see results for several years...what is going to happen after next year if the team goes 4 and 8 or worse. We will lose more ticket sales and we will continue to try to consolidate around an ever shrinking core of fans.

We desperately need a leader that can start building a foundation for the program and make the athletic success sustainable.
 
But on our end, Hawkins, Barnett and Embree will never be head coaches again. Neuheisel, maybe. That's our track record.

Really? If Neuheisel never gets a gig again you'd pin that on CU? I'm with Sackman on this issue. Barnett isn't in coaching due to the baggage surrounding his dismissal, Hawk was terrible for the latter years, and Embree was worse than terrible. I don't see how that's on CU.
 
I bet Embree gets another gig someday. He'll probably go back to the NFl, and thn get a mid major job. Even D II is getting considered for jobs last year and this. He'll be back too, just no son to play at QB...
 
This hire is about getting someone who knows how to run a football organization. That's why an experienced HC is at the top of the wish list. It may end up being a hire who stays 3 or 4 years, using a rebuild into a 7-win program with a stocked talent cupboard as a stepping stone to his next job.

And that's ok.

CU is developing a rep for being a "coaching career killer" job. We need to become a "stepping stone" job before we can hope to become a "destination" job.
 
Back
Top