Husker Max Asked by Husker Max
12/10/2014

Should head-coaching experience be required for NU's next coach?

36%
Yes

3

64%
No WINNER

8

36%
Yes

3 Comments
Josh Smith
2
Josh Smith

Let's put the money on the table to get somebody that has a proven track record. Stop going after these guys that MIGHT be a bargain or MIGHT have a bright future. We just fired a coach that won at least 9 games each year so he better be replaced with someone that we KNOW is going to be able to do the same.

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Cody Petersen
0
Cody Petersen

Why take a chance hiring a Coordinator that MIGHT be a good head coach and end up right where we are now in another 7 years? Find someone with a proven track record of winning/recruiting at a high level and fork out the cash for them.

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Faye Cook
0
Faye Cook

Learning on the job doesn't work. An experienced head coach already has staff he wants to bring along with, and some he might want to replace. A coordinator brings along friends to also learn on the job, and it's proven in tihis case, it just doesn't pan out..

Reply

64%
No

8 Comments
Daniel L Ellison Sr.
1
Daniel L Ellison Sr.

There are to many options to limit yourself in this way. WAY to many of the top coachrs today came from coordinators and lower level divisions. Bring Frosty home.

Reply
Keith Petrie
0
Keith Petrie

stats of the current teams in the top 10 FBC bracket support NO. I agree!

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Stephen Johnson
0
Stephen Johnson

What matters are results and character.

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Christian Bengel
0
Christian Bengel

At some point a Coordinator needs to make the move to HC. It's the coordinator that can find the right assistants to compliment their systems and ideas that'll make them successful. Some assistants never have the aspiration, but being an HC as a prerequisite seems unnecessary.

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Brandon Kosek
0
Brandon Kosek

Many great coaches have been hired with little or no head coaching experience. On the flip side, many head coaches with experience fail at bigger programs (Hoke). It all just depends on the individual. If you find the right guy then go for it. No one really knows if you're getting a good coach until a few years in unless you're hiring an Urban, Saban, etc which we won't get.

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Bart Burroughs
0
Bart Burroughs

not as long as he hires successful coordinators and to a lessor degree, assistants.

Reply
Brian Hayes
0
Brian Hayes

While it is always a risk (Muschamp, Kingsbury, Pelini), there also is high upside - see Bob Stoops, Chip Kelly, and obviously Tom Osborne. It's a worthy gamble over hiring a proven-but-mediocre head coach.

Reply