I agree......but even stretching the criteria to include averages or to not include early coaching years, it doesn't add that many more coaches.....name 'em........If you changed the stat to be coaches who have AVERAGED 9+ wins in their first 7 years, or if it was coaches who have had 9 or more wins in their first 7 years at a top school with top resources, just as two examples, then you would add a whole bunch of coaches to the list.
Mack Brown had 12 straight 9+ win seasons at Texas, but struggled at North Carolina with little resources or history.
Nick Saban averaged over 9+ at LSU and has had 10+ every season at Bama except his first, yet he had to cut his teeth getting started at Michigan State.
Bob Stoops went 7-5 in his first year but then rattled off 5 straight seasons with 12 or more wins.
Pete Carrol went 6-6 his first year but then went 7 straight seasons with over 12 wins.
Chip Kelly only coached 4 years in college but had over 10 wins and averaged about 12 wins in his first four.
Steve Spurrier had 12 straight seasons with 9+ wins at Florida but he coached at Duke a few years before that.
I don't care enough to give you any more examples but the point is amply proven that the only reason Bo is in exclusive company is because the statistic is a technicality.
Once again, guess what the difference is between Bo and all those coaches?
National Championships.
Conference Championships.
Top 5 and Top 10 finishes.
Less losses.
You name it.
I agree......but even stretching the criteria to include averages or to not include early coaching years, it doesn't add that many more coaches.
...minus the MNC appearance, Heisman winner, and conference championship.The team is exactly where it was when Solich was let go. A wasted decade.
I agree......but even stretching the criteria to include averages or to not include early coaching years, it doesn't add that many more coaches.
It adds plenty more.
I think the people that support him believe exactly that. That it does put him on that level.People like Mack Brown, Nick Saban, Les Miles, Bear Bryant, Urban Meyer, Bobby Bowden, Joe Paterno, Bob Devaney, etc. etc. etc., are far and away better coaches than Bo Pelini and nobody can argue against that with a clear conscience, and it doesn't mean anything whatsoever about their ability that they don't happen to fall into this narrow technicality statistic.
In other words, just because Bo is one of the few to do it doesn't mean that he is good.
Oh, but "9 wins in each of the first 7 seasons..." is the talking point. How can Pelini's friends and family control the conversation if you bring up something relevant like this?I agree......but even stretching the criteria to include averages or to not include early coaching years, it doesn't add that many more coaches.
It adds plenty more.
In fact, 92 coaches in college football history have a winning percentage of 75%+ with a minimum of 10 years coaching, which is exactly what a 9-3 record is. I don't have the numbers for coaches that haven't coached 10 years or more, but it would just grow.
92 of them.
As people have said, Bo has reached his ceiling, and I truly believe that.What this says is simply that Bo is a good enough coach to keep your program from completely collapsing, but not good enough to take it anywhere.
That means he's done all he can do. He kept the program from collapsing thanks to BC. But, there's nothing more he can get done.
I don't want to sound like I disagree with your point, LOMS, because I agree with it. But 92 is still a tiny fraction of coaches in college football history. We're talking 120 years or more.
Even if you ramp that back to the last 50 years, and it only cuts that number in half, there's what, 80-120 teams in D1A alone in that span. Just say it's 80 (we know it's more), that's 4,000 coaches. Even presuming all 92 coaches coached in the last 50 years, and there were only 80 teams in D1A, that works out to two percent.
That's pretty rare air.
Say what you will about Bo - his tenure here has been unique. Not necessarily "good," but unique.
Actually, my math is flawed - many of those coaches coached for X number of years at those schools. I'm counting them as 4,000 unique coaches and that isn't correct.I've been saying that last bit for the last two seasons - Bo Pelini is an anomaly; nothing more.I don't want to sound like I disagree with your point, LOMS, because I agree with it. But 92 is still a tiny fraction of coaches in college football history. We're talking 120 years or more.
Even if you ramp that back to the last 50 years, and it only cuts that number in half, there's what, 80-120 teams in D1A alone in that span. Just say it's 80 (we know it's more), that's 4,000 coaches. Even presuming all 92 coaches coached in the last 50 years, and there were only 80 teams in D1A, that works out to two percent.
That's pretty rare air.
Say what you will about Bo - his tenure here has been unique. Not necessarily "good," but unique.
In regards to the first, I realize and acknowledge everything you're saying, but it's obvious that the majority of coaches don't have the resources that Bo does. I don't know how to quantify that though - maybe shrink the list to coaches at schools in the top 25 all-time in terms of wins? idk... I know there is a way to show statistically that it isn't very impressive, but I'm not sure how and I'm not sure hwo much work I want to put into it.