Urban Meyer: ND Still "My Dream Job"

December 13, 2008 by feed · Leave a Comment 

A few weeks ago, I wrote an article for FOXSports.com about possible replacements for Charlie Weis if he resigned or was terminated from Notre Dame. Urban Meyer was at the top of my list- he had the best odds.

Gators fans ripped me and called me “clueless”- Urban would not leave Gainesville for South Bend. Florida is his dream job, and why would he ever leave sunshine for snow? Blah blah blah.

Flash forward to this week. On Wednesday, Meyer told a Florida radio show that Notre Dame is “still my dream job; that hasn’t changed.”

Uh huh. I thought so. Some things are so obvious, they will never change. Here comes the proverbial I-told-you-so. Gators fans are in complete denial about their coach.

When everything is said and done in fifty years, Meyer will not be remembered for what he has accomplished at Gainesville.

Like it or not, this is fact- Florida has only recently become a football force after a long hibernation from gridiron greatness. Quick, tell me who was a Notre Dame coach in the 70’s? Or Ohio State in the 60’s? Easy, huh? Now tell me Florida’s coach.

You cannot deny the obvious- some football programs have such a storied past, that their coaches are remembered fifty years later- they are immortalized. Notre Dame has that power. Michigan has that power. Oklahoma, USC, Nebraska and Alabama have that power. Florida, does not. Yet.

Eight conference championships and two National Championships- the first being in 1996, the second in 2006 – do not a dynasty in college football make. It’s trendy. The Gators are new to all of this. Ten years do not compare to ninety years. It’s not even close folks.

Notre Dame has won a National Championship in every decade, except for in the 50’s and 90’s- 1924, 1929, 1930, 1943, 1946, 1947, 1949, 1966, 1973, 1977 and 1988.

Winning a national championship at Notre Dame guarantees that coach eternal greatness and a probable throne behind the Pearly Gates. Notre Dame, whether you admit it or not, whether you’re in denial or not, is the most powerful football program in the country.

Urban knows that. NBC knows that. The bowls know that. God knows that.

So will he leave?

“Meyer is working on a second national title with a quarterback who is running a second Heisman Trophy campaign,” according to the Orlando Sentinel. “Meyer said he was already ‘in the 11th hour’ with Florida when Notre Dame called.”

Wait a minute- “when Notre Dame called”?

Did Notre Dame put out some “feelers” to Urban Meyer after the Fighting Irish’s loss to USC? (note- this author believes they did) It reads that way. And it makes sense. That one week period after the USC loss was quiet. Too quiet.

When Fighting Irish AD Jack Swarbrick finally confirmed that Weis would be the coach, everyone assumed it was over. “He, I and the others involved in leading our football program are committed to doing everything necessary to ensure a successful 2009 season,” Swarbrick said. “We are examining every aspect of the program and will make changes wherever we think they are needed.”

OK…that’s a little muddled. But here’s the thing- what if Meyer, after the January 8th BCS Championship Game, decides he is done? If he wins the title, and Tebow bails, Meyer is going to have to start from scratch.

Notre Dame, however, is a different story. A roster filled with juniors and seniors, and a perfect quarterback to run his beloved spread- Dayne Crist. Buh-bye Jimmy Clausen, hello Dayne Crist. Would this not be the perfect time for Meyer to take over the reins?

Wouldn’t the timing be perfect? Weis is running around recruiting while Meyer is getting ready for the Oklahoma Sooners. If no one says anything, then everything is status quo and no player goes mental with the prospect of losing their coach.

After the bowl games, Weis is let go, and Meyer takes over. It’s perfect.

Meyer will have accomplished everything he could have ever wished for at Florida, and Notre Dame, his dream job, would be there plump full of recruits who are just dying to be coached up.

Do you think Jack Swarbrick would say ‘no” to Meyer if he called up and said, “I’m yours”?

Do you think he’ll say “no” to a coach who is 2-0 in BCS Bowls (and has possibly two NCs by next month)?

Could it be that Meyer is dropping hints about where is deep love is? Drooping hints that this is it- after this BCS Bowl, don’t hate me if I bail because ND is my dream job?

Set-up? Laying down the foundation? Avoiding “a Saban” by letting folks know that he will eventually want to coach at Notre Dame, so get used to the idea, Gator fans?

Count on it.

 

*special thanks to Orlando Sentinel’s 12/12/08 article by Jeremy Fowler.

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Indiana’s hiring of lawyer Glass continues trend

October 28, 2008 by feed · Leave a Comment 

Posted by ESPN.com’s Adam Rittenberg

Indiana is expected to introduce Indianapolis attorney Fred Glass as its new athletic director at a news conference scheduled for 10:15 a.m. today.

An Indiana alum, Glass has been an integral part of the Indianapolis sporting scene. He served as the president of the Marion County Capital Improvement Board, which owns and operates Lucas Oil Stadium, Conseco Fieldhouse and Victory Field. He also served on the local organizing committee for the 2000 and 2006 Final Fours and chaired a committee that tried to get the 2011 Super Bowl to the city.

He lacks previous experience in collegiate athletics administration, but as we’ve seen lately in the Hoosier State, that doesn’t really matter.

Indiana isn’t the first school to tap into the legal world for its top athletics official.

Notre Dame hired Indianapolis attorney Jack Swarbrick to replace Kevin White in July. Longtime Purdue athletic director Morgan Burke has a law degree and spent 13 years with a steel company before entering college athletics.

So the three top athletic directors in the state are alums of their respective schools who have law degrees and spent much of their careers on the outside.

I wouldn’t be surprised if several up-and-coming athletic administrators are thinking about law school right about now.

Swarbick was a surprising choice — a source told me several major-conference ADs turned down Notre Dame — and Glass also seems somewhat unconventional. It seemed likely that Oregon State AD Bob De Carolis would get the job, but Indiana went with Glass, who succeeds Rick Greenspan.

Glass takes over a department still dealing with the fallout from the phone-call scandal involving former men’s basketball coach Kelvin Sampson. The NCAA accused Indiana of failing to monitor its flagship sports program and could level further sanctions against the school.

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