We might’ve expected John Jancek to get a little raise beyond what was announced last weekend after South Florida offered him the defensive coordinator position.
If there’s one coach towards the Willie Martinez end of the fan appreciation scale, it’s Jancek. Part of that naturally has to do with the “he’s not VanGorder” factor. But also linebackers have only occasionally been a bright spot since he took over. The debate over talent / injuries / coaching can rage elsewhere, but the perception of a dropoff is there.
The obvious question is, “what does Rodney Garner think?”. He’s been on staff for over a decade and produced truckloads of NFL talent. He’s interviewed for the Auburn head coaching job, got offered the defensive coordinator position at LSU, and passed up a high-paying gig at Tennessee. It’s true that he holds the title of “Assistant Head Coach.” But for someone who’s heart is on the defensive side of the ball, he’s been passed over here, at least in title, in favor of a questionable position coach who interviewed with a flash-in-the-pan Big East school.
If the promotion is just to give wiggle room for a raise, does a flirtation with USF really merit anything above the increase already announced? We already know that a) Martinez will still make the defensive calls, b) Jancek will still report to Martinez, and c) Jancek doesn’t “anticipate a whole lot of change at this point” in terms of duties. The coordinator title seems about as ceremonial as Neil Callaway’s offensive coordinator role, but it still sends a signal. If it’s intended in any way to deflect fan criticism of Martinez, it’s not likely to work that way.
Your mission: find a Georgia fan over the next day who understands/wholeheartedly supports this move. Mark Richt will supposedly have a press conference on Wednesday, and surely he’ll go into more depth about these events then. As for now, it’s a complete headscratcher.
Yesterday
I mentioned (again) the Mark Richt factor in keeping Rodney Garner at Georgia
despite overtures from Auburn and Tennessee. That theme came up again in John
Jancek’s decision to turn down the opportunity to become a defensive coordinator
at South Florida.
Jancek
told Marc Weiszer that "we love it here. We love coach Richt and the
staff." I grant that coaches in this position often say things that sound
like the Bull Durham "I’m just happy to be here and hope I can
help the ballclub" babble. Garner didn’t yell "cha-CHING!" after
turning down Tennessee and Auburn though he got a nice raise out of it.
Still, you get the sense that there is some sense of loyalty to Richt beyond
what you usually see in a very necessarily mercenary business. It’s not that
Georgia has zero turnover. More than half the staff has turned over. It’s even
encouraged sometimes. When Garner considered leaving for Auburn this past December,
Richt seemed anything but obstructive.
"I’m definitely rooting for Rodney," Richt said. "What a wonderful
opportunity to be considered at your alma mater in the Southeastern Conference
at a wonderful program like Auburn. I think it’s a tremendous honor
for Rodney, and I think it’s a great compliment for Georgia, too."
"…You encourage and try to help in every way. Rodney’s been open with
me in every opportunity he’s ever had, and this one, I’m more of a cheerleader
right now. I want him to realize his dream if that’s possible."
Keep in mind that he was facing the possibility of losing not only a productive
position coach but also his recruiting coordinator to a century-old conference
rival. But that kind of encouragement and reinforcement to make the right decision
is what builds loyalty among those who choose to stay. It’s the
same way in which Richt approaches recruiting, and it’s been a consistent
and successful approach.
Contrast that with the environment in Tampa. Jim
Leavitt sent his offensive coordinator packing for considering a job with
Florida. "I’m not going to have my offensive coordinator out visiting with
other schools," huffed Leavitt. As the
Wiz notes, "assistants have no doubt taken a look at how Leavitt treated
Greg Gregory in January."
I’m not going to pretend that everything is always rosy in Athens and that
there aren’t occasionally conflicts among the staff. We’ve even seen some of
it spill over onto the sideline. Again, coaching is ultimately just a job. We’ve
all had those professional conflicts in even the best of situations. Once you
separate out the stuff that comes with the territory, you’re still left with
people that would rather work with Mark Richt than take more money or a promotion
elsewhere.
We learned over the weekend that the football coaches, some more than others,
got
a bump in compensation. The key word is "value" – we get a quality
staff for a reasonable amount. Georgia is by no means playing on the leading
edge of compensation, but they are competitive and capable of paying to keep
the top assistants around.
Coaching is ultimately just a job. There are employees, bosses, meetings, paperwork,
and all of the fun stuff that everyone else deals with in the working world.
The bizarre
saga of Mike Leach is a reminder of that. A loose cannon employee who happens
to be a high producer doesn’t get along with his boss. It happens in coaching,
creative work, programming, sales, you name it. This time it’s just out in the
open and those who have the benefit of impartiality can only shake their heads.
These coaches certainly notice the escalating pay scales, but they also have
families, and a spot on a stable staff in a positive environment can be a rare
and valuable thing (though it must never be allowed to decay into complacency).
Last week we pointed
to Rodney Garner’s comment about turning down a higher-paid position at
Tennessee.
"The attraction of Georgia to me is Mark Richt," Garner
said. "I’m going to be honest with you, I love the community
and I love the institution, but I work for a great man and that’s the
main reason I stayed."
Academic discussions about motivation will inevitably get into Herzberg
and his satisfiers, and salary is only part of the picture (and is often
not a motivator itself). Of course you’re not going to get away for long nickel-and-diming
the coaches; this isn’t exactly volunteer work. But given that Georgia’s compensation is competitive and in light
of Garner’s comments, working for Mark Richt seems to carry a significant value that
you’ll never see on these compensation reports.
UPDATE: Garner and Searels weren’t the only Georgia assistants
to turn down overtures from other schools. According
to FootballScoop.com, linebackers coach John Jancek recently turned down
the opportunity to become the defensive coordinator at the University of South
Florida.
One of the MGoBlog commenters, a Michigan fan living in Columbus, confirmed the authenticity of the billboard. Though if you’re a Michigan guy in Columbus, aren’t you more or less just crying yourself to sleep every night anyway?
Michigan fans looking for an alternate, though far less potent, beverage might want to consider VitaminWater. The Coca-Cola-owned beverage company is filming a commercial that should go over really well in the heart of Maker’s Mark country.
According to a KSR source, Vitamin Water is producing a new television ad featuring Christian Laettner and Rick Pitino which is likely to run throughout the NCAA Tournament. According to the source, the advertisement was shot yesterday in Louisville and will show Laettner following Pitino around his house making “the shot” over and over to torment him.
Comment: At first glance, this isn’t the conversation
one wants to hear when hoping that Georgia will aim high for its next basketball
coach. On the other hand, Calhoun’s right. How many other state employees have
the ROI of a successful major sport coach?
Item:The Music City Bowl’s decision to invite hometown
feel-good story Vanderbilt contributed
to a $17 million decrease in the local economic impact of the game. "It
was really a worst-case scenario," said Scott Ramsey, Music City Bowl president.
Comment:It’s refreshing to see Vandy draining money
from someone other than the SEC for once.
Comment: We’ll miss both at times, but I agree that
Moreno is the slightly bigger loss. Georgia has had some good seasons without
a standout tailback (2003, 2005), but the Georgia offense really clicked in
2002 and 2007 when Smith and Moreno got it going. The point about the offensive
line is worth noting. Even though Searels and his troops did very well under
the circumstances, Stafford and Moreno often made the line look better than
it was. There were plenty of scary moments over the past two years. Now the
tables are turned and the linemen will have more experience than the guys they
are protecting and blocking for. A good line can make even a serviceable quarterback
look like an all-conference candidate (right, JPW?).
Item: North Carolina is
facing questions about its ability to present competitive counteroffers
after three assistant coaches departed the program within a month. "There
is a dollar difference, I can’t deny that,” AD Dick Baddour admitted.
Comment: No one is immune from the pressures of the
marketplace, but Georgia twice dodged that bullet during the offseason. Rodney
Garner showed that sometimes
factors other than money come into play.
"The attraction of Georgia to me is Mark Richt," Garner said. "I’m
going to be honest with you, I love the community and I love the institution,
but I work for a great man and that’s the main reason I stayed."
Richt’s approach and way of doing things seems to work as well in
the volitile world of recruiting as it does in retaining his best assistants.
If you’re one of the Georgia fans who used the three-game packages from Georgia Tech to get tickets for the game in 2003, 2005, and 2007, you’re either going to have to dig deeper this year or look to the secondary ticket market.
The Georgia Tech vs. UGA home game is ONLY available as part of the season ticket or as an additional request from GT season ticket holders. There will be NO 3-pack option or other packages that include the Georgia Tech vs. UGA game.
Tech season ticket packages start at $260. A total cumulative score of 30,000 Hartman Fund points is required to be eligible to order Georgia Tech game tickets through UGA. Somehow I imagine there will still be plenty of Georgia fans in there.
We already knew that Oklahoma State has a similar policy. If you don’t get tickets through UGA, you’ll have to buy OSU season tickets or scalp your way in.
The story of Georgia track freshman Torrin Lawrence is spreading quickly, but Lawrence could probably outrun even his own hype. In just his sixth college meet Lawrence posted an incredible split of 45.1 seconds in the anchor leg of a 4×400-meter relay race to come from behind and knock off #1-ranked Florida.
The video says it all.
And before you ask, no, he isn’t going to play football.
Carvers Bay (S.C.) lineman Kwame Geathers will sign with Georgia over Tennessee and Central Florida. The 6’6″ 320 lb. Geathers is the brother of former Georgia defensive end Robert Geathers and of current South Carolina defensive lineman Clifton Geathers. Tennessee became a late player after Geathers eliminated South Carolina. With Marlon Brown’s Signing Day decision, Georgia has now been successful against the new Tennessee staff in two head-to-head recruiting battles in the class of 2009.
Geathers plans to play, or at least start out, as a defensive lineman. Some schools, including South Carolina, recruited him for the offensive line.
The ping means spring! The weather doesn’t agree, and that always seems to be the case, but it’s opening weekend for the Diamond Dogs. The odd-numbered years have often meant valleys this decade in between some great seasons, but hopes are high for this year’s squad. Several key players return, and a great incoming class mostly survived the MLB draft. I’ll just settle for a consecutive trip to the NCAA Tournament – something that has only been done once (2001, 2002) at Georgia.
Georgia’s women’s basketball team lost
57-46 to LSU last night. If you’ve seen the team much this season, there’s
no need to go into the details of the game. It’s been the same story all year.
If you thought the men struggled on offense Wednesday night (and they did),
you should have stuck around.
In a little more than a week, Andy Landers will be inducted into the Georgia
Sports Hall of Fame – deservedly so. It’s one of those cruel coincidences
of timing that his program just lost four consecutive games in a season for
the first time in his 30 years of coaching at Georgia. Without a win at Auburn
or Kentucky (who just beat Tennessee) in the next week, he could head into the
Hall of Fame ceremony with an unprecedented 6-game losing streak.
That this is the first time a Landers team has had to deal with a prolonged
losing streak speaks to the consistency that has led him to 700+ wins and enshrinement
in the Women’s Basketball and Georgia Sports Halls of Fame. But every time the
Georgia starters run out on that red carpet listing the championship and Final
Four seasons, it’s a reminder that the droughts between SEC championship and
Final Four teams continue to grow.
It’s been that kind of year where the team just doesn’t have the pieces to
take advantage of some great opportunities. The SEC has no dominant teams; even
LSU and Tennessee are down. Georgia will host the NCAA Tournament opening round
in a few weeks, but odds are now that they won’t be among the field for only the third time in tournament history. The future
seems brighter with only one graduating senior and a solid incoming class, but
it’s still going to be a long way back to the top of the SEC.
A semi-related question: after two more losses this week, will the voters have
the guts to drop 18-8 Tennessee out of the Top 25?
A rough accounting of the Hartman Fund contributions reveals that the total will be off by about 11%, or about $3 million, from last year’s record high. Blame the economy, the “disappointing” 2008 season and comparatively low expectations for 2009, or any other factor you like. The athletic department should be just fine – ticket and TV money aren’t going anywhere (yet), and there are strong cash reserves built up just in case.
Just from anecdotal evidence, people I’ve talked to are more likely to have donated the minimum necessary for their season ticket renewal. In years past many people would add to their contribution in order to build up their cumulative total for out-of-town tickets. I wouldn’t be surprised to learn that reduction or elimination of that extra donation is behind a good bit of the lower bottom line this year.
For those hoping that the downturn will free up some more season tickets, there will still be competition. Associate AD Alan Thomas expects a return to a more normal season ticket turnover of about 2 or 3%. Over a season ticket base of 53,000, that’s only about 1,000-1,600 season tickets that will come available.
It’s official: Team Tornado is no more. As sirens sounded across the UGA campus,
we hoped that the stars were aligning for the first SEC winning streak since
that amazing weekend last March. It didn’t
turn out that way of course. It might seem pointless to really dwell much
on this team with the season all but over, but I might as well get it all out
after a game like last night. When one of the highlights was the crowd singing “Happy Birthday” to Mark Richt, you know there wasn’t much else to cheer about.
This morning Billy Donovan woke up next to a bottle of scotch and tried
to reassure himself that his team didn’t just get lit up a few days ago by
a team that didn’t break into double figures Wednesday until five minutes
remained in the first half.
It is c-r-i-m-i-n-a-l that Travis Leslie sat on the bench for the first
33 minutes of the game. I understand that there might be attitude and off-court
issues with him. If that’s the case, suspend him, and I doubt anyone would
have a problem with that. But if you’re going to play him, play him. He came
into the game and had the energy that had been missing from the floor for
the first 75% of the game. He rebounded and finished with as many offensive
boards as anyone on the team in just seven minutes of action. He made things
happen in the transition game. He’s not perfect by any stretch, but you
can’t convince me that he shouldn’t be one of the first players off the bench.
Trey Thompkins is probably the best post player to come through Athens in
the 20 years I’ve been watching Georgia basketball. He needs to reexamine
his love affair with the three-point shot. It’s not that he can’t hit it,
and it’s good that he has that range in his game. It’s just that he’s come
to lean on the shot a bit too much, and it’s creating some bad habits in his
offense. It’s almost as if he’d rather settle for the outside shot sometimes
instead of working for position inside. That’s a habit that the new coach
needs to address early on.
As if Georgia didn’t have enough trouble scoring in the first half, at one
point midway through the half, Georgia had a lineup on the court that included
Swansey, McPhee, Brewer, Barnes, and I believe Jackson. If you can find the
go-to guy on offense within that group, you know something the rest of us
don’t.
This is a generic comment about basketball in general – there is a special
place in basketball hell for a post player under the basket who brings a ball
from chest level down to the floor. If he takes a dribble in that position,
snipers should be involved.
I do credit the guys for the comeback and the fact they didn’t pack it in.
When Auburn opened the door by shutting down on offense, Georgia responded.
That said, there is no reason for the lack of effort and intensity in the
first half. Defense was Swiss cheese, and the offense was lazy: it’s bad enough
to start the game 2-for-18 shooting, but it’s ridiculous that half of those
18 attempts were from behind the arc.
Dustin Ware had 10 turnovers a few weeks ago at South Carolina. In the three
games since the freshman has had 15 assists to just four turnovers. He’s scored
in double figures in the past two games. He’s more than earned the starting
job, and his progress has been a bright spot. It’ll be fun to watch him over
the next few seasons as he continues to gain confidence and improve his defense.
We knew coming into this season that offense, particularly from the guard
position, would be spotty. What’s been disappointing has been the defense.
Even on his earlier teams with far less talent, you could count on a Dennis
Felton team to exhaust themselves on defense even if it came at the expense
of scoring. Somewhere along the line that message was lost, and there is nothing
special about the defense we’ve seen lately. When you have a weak offense
and can’t play man defense, you end up with a season like this.
It’s amazing to think that if Georgia could have only kept it within
20, they might have had a chance at the end.
The Stinchcomb brothers set the bar pretty high for academic achievement among Georgia offensive linemen, but incoming guard Chris Burnette will be coming to Athens with an academic profile every bit as impressive. If you followed recruiting, you probably know that the Troup County senior stands a good chance of finishing as his class’s valedictorian. If that happens, Mark Richt promised that he’d be there to hear Burnette’s graduation speech.
The AJC reports that an NCAA rule will prevent Richt from following through on that promise. Here we have a student-athlete who has already signed a letter of intent, and Mark Richt can’t be there to honor his future player’s academic accomplishment. If Richt were invited to speak at the football team’s banquet and honor athletic accomplishments, that would be fine – it’s done all the time, and it’s within the rules. So what is different about showing up at the graduation of a student-athlete for whom the recruiting process is over?
It’s doubtful that the rule will change or be waived, and both parties are resigned to the change in plans. Richt still plans to watch a recorded version of the speech if Burnette graduates on top. As a bright guy Burnette understands the world we live in, but that doesn’t make the outcome any less absurd.
Furman Bisher should have just stopped after admitting, "I
have no idea how a search firm operates." Far as I’m concerned, that
would have saved him from the unfortunate paragraphs that followed in another
attempt to stir the Bobby Knight pot.
If a veteran of sports journalism is unfamiliar with the use of search firms
in the hiring process, there’s no shame if someone reading this wonders just
how widespread the practice is. Hardly a sign of incompetence
or fear, the enlistment of outside help is
increasingly important as the salaries and stakes involved continue to grow.
Below is a very incomplete list of high-profile hires made with the assistance
of a search firm. You might have heard of one or two.
Paul Johnson, Georgia Tech football
Bruce Pearl, Tennessee basketball
Lane Kiffin, Tennessee football
Bob Stoops, Oklahoma football
Rick Neuheisel, UCLA football
Urban Meyer, Florida football
Mack Brown, Texas football
Butch Davis, North Carolina football
Randy Shannon, Miami football
Kevin White, Duke AD
Bo Pelini, Nebraska football. Bisher thinks that Vince Dooley would never
have used a search firm. Would it surprise him that Tom Osborne did?
John Pelphrey, Arkansas basketball
Les Miles, LSU football (same firm was used to bring Saban to LSU)
Bobby Petrino, Arkansas football
Gene Chizik, Auburn football
Scott Drew, Baylor basketball
June Jones, SMU football
Tom O’Brien, N.C. State football
Mark Dantonio, Michigan State football
The point isn’t whether those were all good hires. It’s that the use of a search
firm or consultant is so commonplace now in major college athletics that the
exceptional cases are when a search firm isn’t used. Here
is an example of the influence just one consultant can have on the career
of a coach and the landscape of a sport:
A Neinas search can vault a coach into the national spotlight overnight.
Take the meteoric rise of Florida’s Urban Meyer, who boosted his annual salary
12-fold after emerging as the winner of two Neinas-led searches. In 2001,
Bowling Green, without Neinas’ help, hired the former Notre Dame assistant
for his first head coaching post at an annual salary of $165,000. After a
Neinas search, Meyer jumped to a $500,000 salary with Utah in 2002. After
another, he landed his current $2 million-a-year job with Florida.
One final thing…Bisher wrote:
Could it be that when Vince Dooley hired Mark Richt to coach football at
Georgia he went through a “search” firm? Of course not.
The past two to three weeks we have conducted a national search for a new
head football coach. We talked to a lot of people and did hire Chuck Neinas
as a consultant, and it was very helpful to us. In any event, I am pleased
to announce that Mark Richt — offensive coordinator at Florida State, has
been offered and accepted the position of head football coach at the University
of Georgia.