Leipold

TilloDwg

Member
Aug 25, 2012
99
110
33
Last edited:

Leeshouldveflanked

Well-known member
Nov 12, 2016
11,144
4,907
113
Star Wars Doom GIF
 

OG Goat Holder

Well-known member
Sep 30, 2022
7,671
7,250
113
Never understood the 'hot name' stuff. What does that mean, besides the chance for the coach to get a big payday? And they likely got one from their current school anyway. Being a hot name means next to nothing when it comes to whether or not they will be a good coach. I suppose it can excite some sheep fans. But specifically:

Lance Leipold is 60 years old....he may just not want to move.

Matt Campbell is going to make some B2 program a damn good coach. He strikes me as the type of guy that would be perfect for Wisconsin or Penn State. He needs to be careful and not be like Mullen and take the wrong job.

Cignetti is 60 too, and holy hell, that's the energy MSU needed last year. Instead, we got Laid Back Leb Bro
 

The Cooterpoot

Well-known member
Sep 29, 2022
4,172
6,768
113

bulldoghair

Active member
Jul 9, 2013
779
396
58
The type of Coach we need here at State is someone who has been dominant and successful at a lower level or a much lower tier conference for sure. Mullen translated here to me because of what he had done at places like Bowling Green and Utah. These coaches listed are the perfect type of coach we need here.

Liepold- won 6 Division 3 three championships and had 5 undefeated seasons in his seven years at the University of Wisconsin-Whitewater, before coaching where he is now.

Campbell- won 2 Division 3 championships as an offensive coordinator in his only two seasons at Mount Union. Then as head coach at Toledo went 36-15 and had them in the top 20 at one time.

Cignetti- at the Division 2 level, IPU was 4-10 in conference before he got there. Cignetti finished 53–17 at IUP with three NCAA playoff appearances and two conference championships. Then at the FCS level he took over a losing Elon squad and turned them into national contenders immediately. Then took over at then FCS level James Madison and took them to the national championship game, and helped transition them to the Division 1 level.
 

The Cooterpoot

Well-known member
Sep 29, 2022
4,172
6,768
113
Correct, which was even worse. Salmon had his mind made up before the search started.

SALMON SHOWTIME
Not really, the guy is retirement age already, you might have him 5 more years if you're lucky and you're looking around again about the time you should be hitting your stride. I don't have a problem bypassing him.
 

OG Goat Holder

Well-known member
Sep 30, 2022
7,671
7,250
113
The type of Coach we need here at State is someone who has been dominant and successful at a lower level or a much lower tier conference for sure. Mullen translated here to me because of what he had done at places like Bowling Green and Utah. These coaches listed are the perfect type of coach we need here.

Liepold- won 6 Division 3 three championships and had 5 undefeated seasons in his seven years at the University of Wisconsin-Whitewater, before coaching where he is now.

Campbell- won 2 Division 3 championships as an offensive coordinator in his only two seasons at Mount Union. Then as head coach at Toledo went 36-15 and had them in the top 20 at one time.

Cignetti- at the Division 2 level, IPU was 4-10 in conference before he got there. Cignetti finished 53–17 at IUP with three NCAA playoff appearances and two conference championships. Then at the FCS level he took over a losing Elon squad and turned them into national contenders immediately. Then took over at then FCS level James Madison and took them to the national championship game, and helped transition them to the Division 1 level.
Add Chris Kliemann to that too.

You're absolutely right though. In this new era, our answers are found, in many areas (coaches and players), by looking down into the G5 and FCS. We also can't abandon JUCOs and blue blood P4 transfers, since they are so convenient for us.
 

OG Goat Holder

Well-known member
Sep 30, 2022
7,671
7,250
113
Not really, the guy is retirement age already, you might have him 5 more years if you're lucky and you're looking around again about the time you should be hitting your stride. I don't have a problem bypassing him.
Nope, many coaches are hitting their prime years from 55-70. That's a key advantage of getting a coach to stay for a while, you get them in the upper 50s, they are seasoned, wiser, and aren't looking to make another move.

You are ignorant like Salmon.
 

MSUDC11-2.0

Well-known member
Sep 29, 2022
6,751
9,885
113
It does raise the question of how much of Leipold’s success should be attributed to Andy Kotelnicki, who was his OC for the last decade until he took the Penn State OC job before this year.
 

MSUDC11-2.0

Well-known member
Sep 29, 2022
6,751
9,885
113
Curt Cignetti was our swing and miss.

Cignetti was my preferred choice as well. I think it freaked people out that he’s the same age as Leach and we weren’t a year removed from losing Leach.
 

The Peeper

Well-known member
Feb 26, 2008
12,090
5,299
113
Nope, many coaches are hitting their prime years from 55-70. That's a key advantage of getting a coach to stay for a while, you get them in the upper 50s, they are seasoned, wiser, and aren't looking to make another move.

You are ignorant like Salmon.

How many of these would you say are hitting their prime?

1728311058420.png
 

OG Goat Holder

Well-known member
Sep 30, 2022
7,671
7,250
113
How many of these would you say are hitting their prime?

I'm advocating for getting guys between 55-60, so you'll get a solid run of a decade out of them most likely, when they are at their wisest and most experienced. That's why I said 55-70 above. Sorry I didn't explain that to you in so much detail, I guess I expected you could draw that conclusion. That said, your list is wrong to begin with.

So first of all, M. Brown, Ferentz, J. Brown, Keeler, Whittingham, Poggi are all 65 and older, so they are out. Fritz is right on the line, but I'd have still given him a hard look simply because of his offense. Same with Cignetti obviously, for reasons already stated here.

Moving on, Kevin Wilson sucks and we'll see on Sam Pittman. The rest of those guys got their jobs when they were in their upper 50s, so while I wouldn't hire them now, they would have been decent hires a few years ago, depending on fit and other things. And you also want to look at trajectory. Some guys get jobs early and flame out.

I'm looking for the Malzahn types, specifically with niche offenses, for MSU.

Hey, you know another coach that got hired when he was 55? Nick L. Saban. Had a pretty good run I'd say. Would you hire (for many schools, not just MSU) Jeff Brohm? Mike Gundy? Ken Niumatololo? Hugh Freeze? Mark Stoops? Brent Venables? You really think these guys are over the hill?

But also, going specifically back to MSU, not many of those 40-year olds who are hot names will come here. You need a late 30s/early 40s seasoned coordinator (seasoned is the key word) who is a hard-asss and has that ambition/chip on the shoulder, or an older, wiser head coach who is a hard-asss and knows how shlt works, maybe even with a little baggage. I mean look at our best two coaches in the modern era - Kang and Danny -fit the mold to a T. Leach would have too had he lived.
 

RockyDog

Well-known member
Jan 2, 2023
915
1,081
93
I'm advocating for getting guys between 55-60, so you'll get a solid run of a decade out of them most likely, when they are at their wisest and most experienced. That's why I said 55-70 above. Sorry I didn't explain that to you in so much detail, I guess I expected you could draw that conclusion. That said, your list is wrong to begin with.

So first of all, M. Brown, Ferentz, J. Brown, Keeler, Whittingham, Poggi are all 65 and older, so they are out. Fritz is right on the line, but I'd have still given him a hard look simply because of his offense. Same with Cignetti obviously, for reasons already stated here.

Moving on, Kevin Wilson sucks and we'll see on Sam Pittman. The rest of those guys got their jobs when they were in their upper 50s, so while I wouldn't hire them now, they would have been decent hires a few years ago, depending on fit and other things. And you also want to look at trajectory. Some guys get jobs early and flame out.

I'm looking for the Malzahn types, specifically with niche offenses, for MSU.

Hey, you know another coach that got hired when he was 55? Nick L. Saban. Had a pretty good run I'd say. Would you hire (for many schools, not just MSU) Jeff Brohm? Mike Gundy? Ken Niumatololo? Hugh Freeze? Mark Stoops? Brent Venables? You really think these guys are over the hill?

But also, going specifically back to MSU, not many of those 40-year olds who are hot names will come here. You need a late 30s/early 40s seasoned coordinator (seasoned is the key word) who is a hard-asss and has that ambition/chip on the shoulder, or an older, wiser head coach who is a hard-asss and knows how shlt works, maybe even with a little baggage. I mean look at our best two coaches in the modern era - Kang and Danny -fit the mold to a T. Leach would have too had he lived.

What is your definition of "seasoned" ? The Hunchback was an under age 40 OC for 4 seasons with a generational talent at QB at a top 5 crooter all under a top 5 HC. He was NOTHING like the Kang and he absolutely learned on the job at MSU and failed many times while he also had some success.

Lebby has been an under age 40 OC for 3 different programs under 3 different head coaches both Power 5 and G5 and had top offenses at every one of them. How is his resume any worse than Danny 2 gloves at the time of their hires?

And not one person defined the hunchback as a "hard asss" prior to him BECOMING one at MSU. You have made your mind up that Selmon and Lebby are failures and holding them to a much different standard than Country Club Danny.
 

OG Goat Holder

Well-known member
Sep 30, 2022
7,671
7,250
113
What is your definition of "seasoned" ? The Hunchback was an under age 40 OC for 4 seasons with a generational talent at QB at a top 5 crooter all under a top 5 HC. He was NOTHING like the Kang and he absolutely learned on the job at MSU and failed many times while he also had some success.

Lebby has been an under age 40 OC for 3 different programs under 3 different head coaches both Power 5 and G5 and had top offenses at every one of them. How is his resume any worse than Danny 2 gloves at the time of their hires?

And not one person defined the hunchback as a "hard asss" prior to him BECOMING one at MSU. You have made your mind up that Selmon and Lebby are failures and holding them to a much different standard than Country Club Danny.
Mullen had a couple more years (8 total, as OC/QB coach), with a 4-year run under Urban, and Urban hated to lose him.

Lebby had about 6, and widely said that Lebby didn't mesh well with Venable's hard style.

So yeah, Lebby was becoming a seasoned coordinator, but wasn't quite there yet. Plus, it's pretty obvious he's not very good at discipline.

I'm pretty sure that you can see these things while interviewing someone, and talking to people who know them.
 
Get unlimited access today.

Pick the right plan for you.

Already a member? Login