The words were strongly prophetic, but considering who was speaking them, they were also sopping wet with irony.
"We need to build stability here, instead of changing coaches every gosh darn three or four years."
The speaker was former MSU football coach John L. Smith. And he spoke them to me, over a telephone, for a preseason, published profile prior to the 2006 season.
Well, here it is 2007, and right on schedule, the Spartans have a new football coach -- as they do every gosh darn three or four years.
Stability, Smith's word, has been hard to come by in East Lansing ever since George Perles hung them up after the 1994 season. Nick Saban, awash in rumors he was NFL-bound, lasted from '95-'99, but they were five distracted years -- with annual speculation about his fleeing to the pros. Then, after all was said and done, he took his whistle and chalkboard to LSU. The NFL would have to wait. Bobby Williams was a disaster from 2000-02. Then Smith, despite a denial on national TV, was named coach in early 2003. His reign lasted four seasons, but they were pock-marked with player behavioral problems and, in bottom line fashion, more losses than made alumni and administration comfy.
So here comes Mark Dantonio, a former Spartans assistant and fresh off three relatively successful years at Cincinnati. And here's hoping he's given more than the token 3-5 years to turn things around.
If you look at the history of college athletics, success is rooted in there not being a revolving door in the coach's office. Unlike the pros, where "quick fixes" can be attained via free agency or trades or high draft picks, it takes time to build at the college level. There's recruiting and teaching and weeding out the problem children, and more recruiting, and momentum that needs to be gained and support that needs to be garnered. It just doesn't happen in two or three years.
Now, this isn't to say that MSU erred in releasing Smith, who at times acted the fool and was mocked more than he was respected by the media, often times. But if the powers that be, i.e. AD Ron Mason and his bosses, feel that they've learned from past transgressions and gotten it right with Dantonio -- and so far college football observers think that they have -- then give the man time. REAL time. Not four years. Not five years. Barring scandal or frequent court appearances by players, give Mark Dantonio a full six years before properly evaluating his performance.
In Ann Arbor, the University of Michigan has employed three head coaches since 1969. Three. The Spartans do that in a decade. Let's flip it around. In basketball, MSU has stability. Tom Izzo has been there for over ten years. Meanwhile, the Wolverines have struggled on the court, and coaches have come and gone frequently since Steve Fisher was fired in 1997. Which program do you suppose has been the one going to Final Fours and getting the best recruits?
Ahh, recruiting. Today's high school athletes aren't hayseeds. They know what's going on. And many of them have folks advising them who also know what's going on. And a recruit commits not to a school as much as a coaching staff. So when they see the silver whistle being passed to and fro, like a hot potato, it may be off-putting.
I have no idea if Mark Dantonio is the right guy for MSU, though there's evidence to suggest that he is. But I'm not paid to make that decision. The due diligence has been done, the interviews were carried out, and the hire was made. MSU has secured their next football coach. Now let him be.
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