Do his parents still live in Nebraska? Not that it really matters, just curious.
What a great question. I've asked before, how much is too much?Since we're not supposed to start any new Scotty Frost threads, I'll ask the question here & hope it doesn't get lost in the shuffle...
What would contract offer would you consider fair... AND....
What contract offer would you offer Frost in order to try and get him here in Lincoln? (assuming that's the coach you want)
How many years would you offer? How much base salary per year(guaranteed cash)? How many bonuses, and for what?
Feel free to throw in other coaches, too... I just finished midterms, and I'm bored.
I listened to the Carol Frost interview with Dirk Chatelain. They spoke briefly about Scott's recruitment in high school. Carol said that Scott and his dad were blown away by Bill Walsh, and that's the main reason Frost ended up at Stanford. I'm sure Walsh sold him on being a future NFL QB.Yeah. It might matter. Speculation was always that Larry and Carol Frost held some kind of grudge against Osborne and NU during Scott's recruitment, and viewed Stanford as revenge. Especially Larry, a bit of a d!(k according to some.
Some serious parental a$$-kissing couldn't hurt.
I have said this numerous times. You don't pay for the candidate/person, you pay for the job. If NU wants to be a top ten team, NU needs to pay in the top ten salary range, of all of college.What a great question. I've asked before, how much is too much?
FIFYWe've been through a few coaching searches now. I have yet to hear anything about us offering top dollar to guys.
I listened to the Carol Frost interview with Dirk Chatelain. They spoke briefly about Scott's recruitment in high school. Carol said that Scott and his dad were blown away by Bill Walsh, and that's the main reason Frost ended up at Stanford. I'm sure Walsh sold him on being a future NFL QB.
Agree with everything. I am sure Larry thought he was hot sh*t in Wood River, and he was one of a few coaches at the time who threw the ball a ton in high school. He probably didn't want Scott to go to NU and hand off to the RB all game and throw the ball 10-15 times a game.Honestly, if Bill Walsh comes to your kitchen in Wood River and wants you to play at one of the finest and most expensive universities in America, you'd be kinda crazy to say no.
But some of the bad blood rumors might still be true, and I don't think Carol would discuss them on the radio.
Yeah. It might matter. Speculation was always that Larry and Carol Frost held some kind of grudge against Osborne and NU during Scott's recruitment, and viewed Stanford as a bit of revenge. Especially Larry, a bit of a d!(k according to some.
Some serious parental a$$-kissing couldn't hurt.
When Scott was coming out of high school, he was touted as the best pro-style QB available. He was a high school All-American who was throwing the ball all over the place in his dad's offense. I think it's understandable when he went to Stanford to play for one of the best NFL QB minds of all time.I had never heard this (bolded), but I had heard a rumor with regards to TO being the OC when Larry played RB/WR or didn't play I should say. Plus, I'd always heard Larry was grooming Scott more for the NFL than for college ball. I believe he still holds a passing record or two for Nebraska high school football. No matter how one slices it, it would have been difficult/possibly stupid to turn down a full ride scholarship to Stanford to play QB for a coach who had won three Super Bowls.
What a great question. I've asked before, how much is too much?
When Scott was coming out of high school, he was touted as the best pro-style QB available. He was a high school All-American who was throwing the ball all over the place in his dad's offense. I think it's understandable when he went to Stanford to play for one of the best NFL QB minds of all time.
My biggest fear is we're going to go offer Frost a low ball contract that he literally has to refuse. Then, we'll hire another mediocre coach with the thought that we really are becoming a doormat in college football.