Tag Archives: Bob Stoops

Hlas Column on New Iowa State Football Coach Paul Rhoads

Paul Rhoads, when he had facial hair and a job at Auburn

Paul Rhoads, when he had facial hair and a job at Auburn

In December 1967, new Iowa State head football coach Johnny Majors didn’t make enough money to feel comfortable buying a house in Ames, so he rented one for his first year in town.

In December 2008, new Iowa State football coach Paul Rhoads has a contract guaranteeing him $1,150,000 per year for five years.

But envy was the furthest thing from Majors’ mind Saturday afternoon. For one thing, he made pretty good coin before finishing a 29-year career as a head coach that began with five seasons and two bowl trips at ISU, and included a national title at Pittsburgh and seven bowl wins at Tennessee.

For another, Rhoads is a good friend of his. No one from Iowa State called Majors to get his thoughts on candidate Rhoads, but they would have gotten an earful of encouragement had they done so.

Majors retired after coaching at the University of Pittsburgh in 1996, but lived in Pittsburgh almost the whole time Rhoads was the defensive coordinator at Pitt from 2000 through 2007.

“I saw many of their practices when he was defensive coordinator,” Majors said. “I watched film and talked a lot of football with him. He called me today to tell me he got the Iowa State job. It was a complete surprise to me. After I hung up, I was very enthused and very excited, like a little kid.”

At his introductory news conference in Ames later in the day, Rhoads said, “Coach Majors was a little excited. I think if I’d tossed him the ball, he would have carried it all the way across the goal line.”

We can list all sorts of statistics of how Rhoads’ defenses ranked at Pitt and in the season that just ended at Auburn. The numbers look good, but nothing an assistant has done tells us how he’ll produce once he runs his own program. Anyone who says they know is deluded.

But a learned football man like Majors kept using the phrase “time and place” Saturday, saying he thinks Rhoads is the right coach at this time for Iowa State.

“In my opinion, he’s extremely well-prepared,” Majors said. “Only time will tell what the end result will be. But this, I think, is an ideal fit. They could have spent a year researching and had all sorts of search committees, but for time and place, school and man, I don’t think they could have done better.

“I’m not trying to paint a dream world. I just think here’s a young man who I think has excellent character, is very sociable, and is someone I think is a great connector. He knows Iowa and the Iowa people, he speaks their language, and he’s also worked at Iowa State, which I think is very beneficial.”

Ames isn’t some distant memory to Majors. He said he has returned to Iowa State yearly since he left the school to become coach at Pittsburgh after the 1982 season.

“Iowa State people are resilient and loyal,” he said. “They respect competitive spirit and intense play. With the right type of coaching and recruiting, you’ll be able to win at Iowa State even though it’s very challenging as a job.”

Majors knows what it’s like to win at ISU, and so does Northern Iowa assistant football coach Atif Austin. Rhoads helped recruit Austin to Iowa State from Tampa, Fla. Rhoads was Dan McCarney’s secondary coach from 1995 through 1999 before becoming defensive coordinator at Pittsburgh in 2000.

“I think Jamie Pollard made a great decision hiring Paul Rhoads,” Austin said. “I have no doubt he’ll put his heart and soul into it as Dan McCarney did. I know Iowa State fans are looking for a turnaround, and I think Paul Rhoads will be the guy who can get that done.”

Austin described Rhoads the coach as demanding, but fair.

“Every player has the opportunity to get on the football field and prove himself,” Austin said. “I liked that about him. He’s a lunch pail, blue-collar kind of coach, a guy who works his butt off. What I remember about Coach Rhoads is he coached 100 miles an hour with passion.”

Granted, close friends and his former players who are in the coaching profession are going to give Rhoads ringing endorsements. But when Majors, who professed his undying love for Iowa State and Iowans repeatedly in a phone interview, was so happy about Rhoads becoming the Cyclones’ coach, it means something.

When Austin, a former player of Rhoads’ who now coaches in UNI’s highly successful program, says ISU got its man, it means something.

Can this 41-year-old lifelong defensive coach hire the right person to orchestrate the Cyclones’ offense? Can he assemble the total organization needed just to compete in the Big 12, let alone win in it?

Can he inject a winning attitude in a program that has gone 3-21 in the Big 12 over the last three years and get ISU football out of the basement and back into bowl games?

Couldn’t tell you. As Rhoads said Saturday, “Words really don’t mean anything at this point.”

Still, in this case it takes a fire to get a spark. Rhoads demonstrated Saturday in his news conference that he comes from the Dan McCarney school of intensity.

His fervor will be fun at Cyclone Club banquets come spring.

“We will hit you coming off the bus,” Rhoads said Saturday.

But what about during the games? We’ll wait to see, just as we waited on Gene Chizik to show us he could win before he skipped out on ISU without leaving behind evidence he could.

Look at it this way: Bob Stoops, Mike Leach and Mark Mangino got their first head coaching jobs at their current Big 12 schools. They’ve done pretty well.

Chizik’s first head coaching opportunity was in the Big 12, too. He’s also made out quite nicely. For himself, anyway.

The Cyclones basically traded their head coach to Auburn for the Tigers’ defensive coordinator. Won’t it be rich if Iowa State gets the better of that deal?

The Hlist: America’s Most-Craved College Football Roundup

By Mike Hlas
Photo

Illinois head football coach Ron Zook, left, talks with linemen Jeff Alle (rear) and Jon Asamoah during Saturday’s 23-17 loss to Western Michigan at Ford Field in Detroit. (AP photo)

Opening kickoff

“We are at about 19,000 feet. The mountain is at 26,000 feet, and the air is changing a little bit. The air is a little rarer.” — Alabama Coach Nick Saban after his team improved to 10-0 with a 27-21 overtime win at LSU

First downs

1. The Wait is On: There is no Game of the Week this week. Which is all right, because next week’s is good enough for two weeks.

It’s 10-0 Texas Tech at 9-1 Oklahoma. Both are idle this week. Both got even more revved up Saturday. Tech routed No. 8 Oklahoma State, 56-20, and Oklahoma obliterated Texas A&M, 66-28.

“We can stop ourselves, and that’s what we try not to do,” said stellar Texas Tech receiver Michael Crabtree. “But I think probably that’s about the only people who can stop us.”

“We seem to surprise a lot of people other than our team,” added his coach, Mike Leach.

The Red Raiders have scored 479 points. Oklahoma tops even that, with 514. The Sooners held a 66-21 lead over A&M after three quarters in College Station, then released their feet from Aggie throats.

“There are still sportsmanship issues that you do your best to handle,” Oklahoma Coach Bob Stoops said. “I just think that’s important. We played hard for three quarters.

“You just have to choose sportsmanship over BCS points. To me, in the end, it’s the right way to play it.”

OU running back Chris Brown didn’t have the same sentiment after his three-touchdown effort.

“You know how the BCS is going right now,” Brown said. “You just can’t win by a nail-biter, unless it’s a very great team you’re playing against. You can get up on a team 35-0 in the first half and fell like, well, the game’s over. Not with us. We want to keep pouring it on.”

2. Dancing in East Lansing: Did you see this coming? Did anyone? The first-place team in the Big Ten on Nov. 11 is Michigan State.

The Spartans are 6-1, a nose in front of 5-1 Ohio State and 5-1 Penn State. They have this week off, then play for at least a share of the Big Ten title Nov. 22 at Penn State. MSU is virtually assured its first January bowl in nine years

Michigan State beat Purdue, 21-7, to set up its showdown in State College.

“We’ve been through a lot together, but I think our greatest moments are ahead of us,” said Spartans senior quarterback Brian Hoyer. “We have an opportunity to do something here that hasn’t been done in a long time.”

MSU head coach Mark Dantonio: “I said last year that we have an opportunity to win every single football game that we come out to. Everything we do — the 80 hours a week you work as a coach — that’s to win, that’s not to stay close.”

3. Bucking Broncos: Can anyone in the Big Ten defeat Western Michigan?

The Broncos of the Mid-American Conference handled Illinois in Detroit, 23-17. WMU quarterback Tim Hiller completed 28 of 40 passes for 301 yards and two touchdowns.

You may remember Hiller torching Iowa for 367 yards and three TDs in Western’s 28-19 win in Iowa City last November.

“He’s a great player, an NFL player, with unbelievable accuracy,” said Illinois Coach Ron Zook.

“My grandfather (Dan Sabino) played for Illinois in 1952 when they won the Rose Bowl,” Hiller said. “He had his jersey and ring in his office. I learned all about Illinois football. That’s why this was so special.”

4. Campbell Mmmm Mmmm Good: The Hlist normally holds pickpockets in the same regard it does Pick ‘Ems.

That’s The Gazette’s Saturday Pick ‘ems, a weekly collection of bizarre predictions and even less stable commentary. The Hlist is one of the participants. The Hlist may be a self-Hloather.

But KCRG-TV’s John Campbell predicted this score: Iowa 24, Penn State 23. And that’s no fish tale.

FUMBLES

1. Penned In: Penn State’s loss to the Hawkeyes wasn’t welcomed only in Iowa.

“Let’s face it, the majority of the country did not want to see Penn State in the BCS title game,” wrote Stewart Mandel of sportsillustrated.com.

It’s hard to get too down on Penn State. That’s still the best team in the Big Ten, and will be the league’s Rose Bowl representative. Plus, Joe Paterno was more than generous after Saturday’s game.

“I don’t want to take anything away from Iowa,” Paterno said. “The Iowa kids stayed tough, played hard. Their quarterback played a heck of a game for them. . . . And when they turned the ball over for us, we didn’t get the job done. Don’t take anything away from Iowa, OK?”

What becomes a legend most? Grace in a difficult moment, that’s what.

2. Orange Slush: Let’s say you’re the Motor City Bowl, and Illinois finds a way to win one of its last two games to finish 6-6. Do you want the Fighting Illini in your game?

Who is the Motor City Bowl to be picky? Who is the Motor City Bowl to turn up its nose at a team that was in the Rose Bowl last season?

Well, Illinois played in Detroit Saturday, losing to Western Michigan in front of a reported gathering of 12,785. The actual crowd was about half that at 65,000-seat Ford Field, the site of the Motor City Bowl. It is believed to be the smallest crowd to see an Illini game since they hosted Pittsburgh before 9,962 fans in 1945.

“We could have played them naked in a gymnasium (and still lost), said Illinois defensive coordinator Dan Disch.

“We want our seniors to go out with a bang,” said Illinois receiver Arrelious Benn, “but they’re not going out with the bang they expected.”

3. Gophers Burrow Downward: Minnesota was nationally ranked and 7-1. Then it lost successive home games to Northwestern and Michigan, which aren’t exactly Texas Tech and Oklahoma.

“You could tell they didn’t take us seriously,” said Michigan defensive end Brandon Graham after the Wolverines’ 29-7 win at Minnesota. “They weren’t expecting us to smack them in the mouth. They questioned our toughness. They must have thought that we just stopped caring about playing.”

The Gophers stop playing their home games in the Metrodome for good after their season-finale against Iowa. Michigan (3-7) closed its Metrodome history with 12 wins in 12 visits. That’s a dozen times it left the Dome with the Little Brown Jug traveling trophy.

“Michigan needs to get the Little Brown Jug, fill it with cognac, and forget this whole season ever happened.” said Chris Fowler on ESPN’s College Gameday.

Final gun

“Okay, this time I really mean it: Since Notre Dame clearly can’t hold up its end of the football rivalry, BC really is going to have to drop them from our schedule the way we did Holy Cross.” — Mike Lupica, New York Daily News and Boston College grad.

BC beat Notre Dame, 17-0, for its sixth-straight win over the Irish.

Photo

(AP photo of Michigan State’s Javon Ringer)

Stoops: Oklahoma Was Better Opportunity Than Iowa

In three months, it will be 10 years since Hayden Fry retired as Iowa’s football coach. One myth will turn 10 years old at that time. That’s the one saying Bob Stoops’ first choice in late 1998 was to become Fry’s successor, not the head coach at Oklahoma.

OK, the Iowa-didn’t-make-it-happen part is true, at least according to Stoops.

“I’ve got to be honest,” Stoops told The Oklahoman newspaper of Oklahoma City, “I felt all along that business-wise, this was the best opportunity. And fortunately for me it’s worked out really well.”

Yes, a national-championship, 97 wins, and a team favored to win another Big 12 title this fall could make a coach feel secure in his decision. For a long time – at least until Kirk Ferentz started peeling off the first of three straight AP Top Ten finishes and two Big Ten co-championships, Iowa fans weren’t secure in Bob Bowlsby’s decision to hire Ferentz.

Many felt Bowlsby and his school bungled the interview process and let Stoops slip away to Norman. Some insist to this day that Bowlsby’s first choice was then-Northern Iowa Coach Terry Allen, but came to realize that would have gone over with a thud in Hawkdom.

Stoops does confirm that Iowa didn’t exactly come at him with single-minded determination. Bowlsby and Iowa’s search committee wanted to interview other people, including Ferentz. Oklahoma wanted to talk to just one person, the young hotshot defensive coordinator to Steve Spurrier at Florida.

But ultimately, Bowlsby’s slow-playing of the situation didn’t matter. Stoops said he interviewed at Iowa out of a courtesy to his alma mater. Now maybe he’s saying what he’s saying now because that is what will play best to his Oklahoma base. But it sounds totally plausible.

“Deep down, I truly felt as well that I had done the Iowa thing,” Stoops said. “I felt, though my wife’s from there, I had spent 10 years there. Sometimes, that’s enough. And I loved it. I loved the people.

“But it’s almost like you’re always that kid. It was just time for something different is what my feeling was. And you know what, my wife was supportive. She felt the same way. It’s time for something new.”

There’s no guarantee Stoops would have done any better than Ferentz over the last nine seasons. If he’d had a run similar to Ferentz’s from 2002 through 2004, he’d probably be gone now anywhere. For something new.

But this remains one of the great soap operas in Iowa football history. For more on what led Stoops to Oklahoma:

http://newsok.com/firing-to-hiring-9-days/article/3286061

http://newsok.com/stoops-philosophy-captivated-ous-joe-c./article/3286063

http://newsok.com/stoops-saw-ou-as-better-opportunity-than-iowa/article/3286065