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College Football Coaches Almost Always Struggle to Replace Legends

HERO Sports by HERO Sports
June 16, 2017
College Football Coaches Almost Always Struggle to Replace Legends

History is not on the side of Lincoln Riley.

The 33-year-old Riley — the youngest coach in the FBS — was named Oklahoma head coach following Bob Stoops' abrupt retirement earlier this month. He's replacing a man who averaged nearly 11 victories over 18 seasons, won 10 conference titles and one national championship. 

“To coach and his family — shoot,” an emotional Riley said during his introductory press conference, before pausing for more than 30 seconds. “He gave me a chance a few years ago that I’ll never forget. His guidance has been incredible, and to be the guy to take over for him is an incredible honor. So thank you.” 

Clearly Riley knows the gravity of the situation. He's stepping into the shoes of a legend. And waiting for him on the other side will either be Ron Prince and Ron Zook or Jimbo Fisher and Urban Meyer. The former pair stumbled through a combined six seasons, failing to replicate the success of Bill Snyder and Steve Spurrier. The latter pair are first-ballot Hall of Famers who have somehow managed to outdo Bobby Bowden and Jim Tressel.

The Fisher-Meyer duo might be more powerful, but Zook and Prince have more friends. A lot more friends, ones that also failed to replace legends. 

Here are the top 16 college football coaches who have departed their programs in the last 25 years, along with their replacement:

 
Coach Team Years Replacement Years
Lou Holtz Notre Dame 1986-96 Bob Davie 1997-2001
Tom Osborne Nebraska 1973-97 Frank Solich 1998-2003
LaVell Edwards BYU 1972-2000 Gary Crowton 2001-04
Steve Spurrier Florida 1990-2001 Ron Zook 2002-04
Bill Snyder* Kansas State 1989-2005 Ron Prince 2006-08
Barry Alvarez Wisconsin 1990-2005 Bret Bielema 2006-11
Lloyd Carr Michigan 1995-2007 R-ich Rodriguez 2008-10
Philip Fulmer Tennessee 1993-2008 Lane Kiffin 2009
Bobby Bowden Florida State 1976-2009 Jimbo Fisher 2010-present
Pete Carroll USC 2001-09 Lane Kiffin  2010
Urban Meyer Florida 2005-10 Will Muschamp 2011-14
Jim Tressel** Ohio State 2001-10 Urban Meyer 2012-present
Joe Paterno Penn State 1966-2011 Bill O'Brien 2012-13
Mack Brown  Texas 1998-2013 Charlie Strong 2014-16
Chris Petersen Boise State 2006-13 Bryan Harsin 2014-present
Frank Beamer Virginia Tech 1987-2015 Justin Fuente 2016-present

*BIll Snyder retired in 2005 before returning in 2009.

**Luke Fickell was interim head coach for the 2011 season following Tressel's resignation.

Of those 16 replacements, only four are still head coach. Nine were fired (all within six years) and three voluntarily left for other jobs — though one of those, Lane Kiffin at Tennessee, was eventually fired at the other job (USC).

Four replacements had or have a higher winning percentage than their predecessors. Bret Bielema is the only one of the four to voluntarily the leave. The other three — Justin Fuente, Urban Meyer and Jimbo Fisher — are still with their programs. Those four are also the only replacements with a higher frequency of 10-win seasons. For example, Bobby Bowden had 18 years with at least 10 wins in 34 seasons, or 1.9 years. Fisher has six such seasons in seven years, or one every 1.2 years. 

Here's a breakdown of each coaching change and how the replacements have fared in replacing coaching legends. 

[divider]

Notre Dame — Lou Holtz to Bob Davie

It didn't take Lou Holtz long to eradicate the stench of Gerry Faust's five-year run at Notre Dame. After Faust averaged 5.6 wins from 1981-85 (28-26-1), Holtz averaged 9.1 wins over 11 years (100-30-2), had five 10-win seasons in six years and delivered the program's first title since 1977.

He resigned in 1996 and was replaced by defensive coordinator Bob Davie, who crawled through five seasons.

 
Coach Total Seasons Win. Pct. 10-Win Seasons Conf. Titles National Titles
Lou Holtz 11 .765 5 N/A 1
Bob Davie 5 .583 0 N/A 0

Holtz averaged fewer losses and more wins and had more 10-win seasons and national titles than Davie. He won at least 10 games every 2.2 years.

 
Coach Avg. Wins Avg. Losses 10-Win Frequency Conf. Title Frequency National Title Frequency
Lou Holtz 9.1 2.7 2.2 years N/A 11.0 years
Bob Davie 7.0 5.0 N/A N/A N/A

[divider]

Nebraska — Tom Osborne to Frank Solich

​No one was going to replace Tom Osborne. At best, someone may hold the same title and try to replicate even a fraction of the success he had in 25 years. That man was longtime Osborne assistant Frank Solich, who took over in 1998.

Despite a 58-19 mark — including 33-5 between 1999-2001 — Solich was fired after the 2003 regular-season finale.

 
Coach Total Seasons Win Pct. 10-Win Seasons Conference Titles National Titles
Tom Osborne 25 .836 15 13 3
Frank Solich 6 .753 3 1 0

Solich captured just one conference title and didn't win a national championship in his six seasons. He did, however, average 9.7 wins and had a 10-win season every two years. 

 
Coach Avg. Wins Avg. Losses 10-Win Frequency Conference Title Frequency National Title Frequency
Tom Osborne 10.2 2.0 1.7 years 1.9 years 8.3 years
Frank Solich 9.7 3.2 2.0 years 6.0 years N/A

[divider]

BYU — LaVell Edwards to Gary Crowton

​One of the most underrated coaches in sports history, LaVell Edwards transformed BYU from a little-known WAC program into a national power. An assistant under Tommy Hudspeth from 1962-71, he took over in 1972 and won 19 conference titles and one national championship in 29 years.

Chicago Bears offensive coordinator Gary Crowton replaced him in 2001, and following a 12-2 mark in 2001, struggled mightily. He went just 14-21 in the next three seasons, never finishing above third in the conference.

 
Coach Total Seasons Win Pct. 10-Win Seasons Conference Titles National Titles
LaVell Edwards 29 .716 10 19 1
Gary Crowton 4 .531 1 1 0

Edwards averaged nearly nine wins and won at least 10 games every 2.9 years. He also won a conference title every 1.5 years.

Coach Avg. Wins Avg. Losses 10-Win Frequency Conference Title Frequency National Title Frequency
LaVell Edwards 8.9 3.5 2.9 years 1.5 years 29.0 years
Gary Crowton 6.5 5.8 4.0 years 4.0 years N/A

[divider]

Florida — Steve Spurrier to Ron Zook

​Steve Spurrier quickly returned the Gators to national relevance after they went 26-21 the previous four seasons. The 1966 Heisman winner dominated in 12 seasons at his alma mater, winning six conference titles and the 1996 national championship.

He left for the Washington Redskins in 2002 and the Gators tapped New Orleans Saints defensive coordinator Ron Zook as his replacement. That was a bad idea.

 
Coach Total Seasons Win Pct. 10-Win Seasons Conference Titles National Titles
Steve Spurrier 12 .817 9 6 1
Ron Zook 3 .622 0 0 0

Zook didn't have any utterly disastrous seasons — winning at least seven games each year — but he never topped eight wins, went just 4-4 in the SEC in 2004 and never sniffed a national title.

 
Coach Avg. Wins Avg. Losses 10-Win Frequency Conference Title Frequency National Title Frequency
Steve Spurrier 10.2 2.3 1.3 years 2.0 years 12.0 years
Ron Zook 7.7 4.7 N/A N/A N/A

[divider]

Kansas State — Bill Snyder to Ron Prince

​Kansas State won 29 total games between 1976-1988 and were coming off back-to-back winless seasons when Bill Snyder took the worst job in college football in 1989. Not only did Snyder make the Wildcats competitive, he won at least 10 games seven times and captured two conference titles. When he retired (for the first time) in 2005, Virginia offensive coordinator Ron Prince was hired. 

There's a reason many fans don't know who Ron Prince is.

 
Coach Total Seasons Win Pct. 10-Win Seasons Conference Titles National Titles
Bill Snyder 17 .649 7 2 0
Ron Prince 3 .459 0 0 0

Despite a 1-10 mark in 1989, Snyder still averaged 7.4 wins over 17 seasons, while Prince never won more than seven games in a season, going 17-20 in three years.

 
Coach Avg. Wins Avg. Losses 10-Win Frequency Conference Title Frequency National Title Frequency
Bill Snyder 7.4 4.0 2.4 years 8.5 years N/A
Ron Prince 5.7 6.7 N/A N/A N/A

[divider]

Wisconsin — Barry Alvarez to Bret Bielema

​Wisconsin football sucked when Notre Dame defensive coordinator Barry Alvarez was hired as head coach in 1990. And that's being kind.

After the Badgers went 9-36 between 1986-89, Alvarez powered through a one-win season in 1990 before returning the Badgers to respectability. He left in 2005 after 119 wins, four 10-win seasons and three Big Ten titles.

Alvarez's replacement, Bret Bielema accomplished the latter two feats in just seven seasons while winning nearly 74 percent of his games.

 
Coach Total Seasons Win Pct. 10-Win Seasons Conference Titles National Titles
Barry Alvarez 16 .615 4 3 0
Bret Bielema 7 .739 4 3 0

Though Bielema did leave abruptly in 2012, his success in Madison is undeniable. He averaged 9.7 wins and won a Big Ten title every 2.3 years.

 
Coach Avg. Wins Avg. Losses 10-Win Frequency Conference Title Frequency National Title Frequency
Barry Alvarez 7.4 4.6 4.0 years 5.3 years N/A
Bret Bielema 9.7 3.4 1.8 years 2.3 years N/A

[divider]

Michigan — Lloyd Carr to Rich Rodriguez

​Longtime Michigan assistant Lloyd Carr — under Bo Schembechler (1980-89) and Gary Moeller (1990-1994), was finally given his first head coaching shot in 1995. Just three years later, he won the program's first national championship in 49 years.

In all, Carr went 122-40 in 13 seasons, a winning clip of .753. His replacement, West Virginia head coach Rich Rodriguez, had a clip of .405 in three seasons before getting canned.

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