EDIT: Baffling journalism professors everywhere, the headline asked a question that could be answered “Yes.” Aggies pulled the trigger.

Just happy that at least one fanbase believes they have it worse than mine. I do have to wonder if the 51 points yesterday changes anything, or if that was an undercover “interim bump”.

  • @ToasterOverlordM
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    131 year ago

    Oh snap, this moved fast. Clicked on the article and the headline has been updated to:

    Texas A&M fires Jimbo Fisher: Sixth-year coach owed more than $75 million in record college football buyout

    From the article:

    “After very careful analysis of all the components related to Texas A&M football, I recommended to President [Mark] Welsh and then Chancellor [John] Sharp that a change in the leadership of the program was necessary in order for Aggie football to reach our full potential and they accepted my decision,” said athletic director Ross Bjork in a statement. “We appreciate Coach Fisher’s time here at Texas A&M and we wish him the best in his future endeavors.”

    Aggies associate head coach Elijah Robinson will serve as the team’s interim coach for the remainder of the season.

    Something tells me they don’t really “appreciate Coach Fisher’s time here at Texas A&M”

    • ManibusanM
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      111 year ago

      Don’t worry Aggie bros, you will always have the 20-- National Championship. No one can take that away from you.

  • @MaroonMage@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    The buyout will get all the headlines here, understandably so because of how big it is. But the payout is structured as x% over a certain number of years (I’m too lazy to google it right now), so it really shouldn’t have too much of an impact overall. A&M’s boosters have famously deep pockets.

    My postmortem take is that while it’s earlier than I expected, it feels like the right call. A&M paid a ton of money for essentially no improvement over our previous coach (Jimbo’s SEC record was 56%, Kevin Sumlin’s SEC record was 52%). Too many times I was watching games this season and I had to remind myself that this was Year 6 in Jimbo’s tenure, not Year 1 or 2…every season feels like a rebuilding season, every game feels like we’re playing for the moral victory, and the mantra always feels like we’re waiting for next year. Those that follow the A&M program know this is the same old story it’s always been, and Jimbo was hired specifically to change that and he hasn’t. Sure we’ve had bad luck with injuries and other teams in our division are good, but at some point those excuses have to start going away if you want to be a good football program.

    We’ve got some really talented players that I’m sure are disappointed and frustrated right now. It will be interesting to see how many of them light up the transfer portal and how many stick it out. Either way, we’re probably stuck in rebuilding seasons again for the foreseeable future.

    • g0d0fm15ch13fM
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      41 year ago

      So I guess I’ll bring this up here. As a coach for a different sport, I also see coach turnover. For scandal, office politics, age, coaching carousel etc. But one thing that large and ingrained (read successful) programs often manage is a transition coaching period. Where either a standing coaching staff member or a brand new replacement comes in and over the course of a few seasons (up to a a year or two) things are handed off behind the scenes before the old head coach leaves. Would that be possible in NCAA DI football? Would it be helpful?

      • @MaroonMage@lemmy.world
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        21 year ago

        That’s interesting. So instead of being fired on the spot, the old coach would stay on during the year-long transition? I feel like that would take a pretty large change to how D1 football works now but it’s definitely an interesting thought. Does the old coach stay on as an analyst or something? And what if after being fired they want to find a new job and move on?

        • g0d0fm15ch13fM
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          31 year ago

          So it certainly doesn’t always happen. A big club in my current area just let go of a coach for embezzling somewhere in the millions? of dollars via a real estate front using the team’s funds? And they let him go immediately. But they have been shaky since as a result. But normally the last year or so the old head coach is kind of a lame duck coach while the new coach starts to get integrated with the board, the boosters and the season, that way when the transition happens everybody is ready. I guess the equivalent here would be if Bobby becomes the new hc next year. I think ideally the translation to cfb would be something like: year 1 new hc becomes coordinator, year 2 they’re the new hc and if you’re lucky you can do something like keep jimbo but with a different title, maybe something with recruiting.

          • @MaroonMage@lemmy.world
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            21 year ago

            That is interesting, although I don’t know how that would work in the “fire, ready, aim” world of D1 football coaching. It seems like it would require a structural change to how contracts are written, or at least people in charge with cooler heads.

            • g0d0fm15ch13fM
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              1 year ago

              I don’t know that it would, but I believe that our nearly 2 decades of dysfunction stem from not having a plan after Fulmer. While his old school ways may have led to his demise we still could have righted the ship with Kiffin, but he bolted and we were without a paddle for a while afterwards. We knew Fulmer was not the future for 3 seasons before we finally pulled the plug. Surely we could have embedded someone into the culture in that time. Kiffin was not at a point in his career where he wanted to settle down anywhere outside of a hc gig in ca. And his rushed hiring mirrored his hasty departure. Would it have been unorthodox? You betcha. Would it have saved us? ¯\(ツ)

              • wjriiOP
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                31 year ago

                The problem being everybody has to be on board. “Other UT” thought that having Mack wind down with Muschamp in waiting was the perfect scenario, but it seemed like nobody was on the same page, particularly Mack and whoever decided that Mack was indeed winding down. One should never underestimate how long a CEO coach will keep CEO’ing.

                • @ToasterOverlordM
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                  31 year ago

                  Another concern is that fans/boosters clamor for the HC change the minute things start to go sideways and there seems to be a capable replacement already on the staff.

                  Sticking with Texas as an example: Gary Patterson seemed to be a good analyst for us and I’m glad he got a soft-landing into retirement, but whenever things went sideways, the mob wanted Patterson to take the reins. It can be a huge, dumb distraction.

                • g0d0fm15ch13fM
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                  21 year ago

                  And I think this is why it won’t work for cfb, but especially not in this case. Coaches don’t care if the program burns after they leave, fans won’t want a coach around any longer than absolutely necessary to collect the last check. Both parties claim they care about the competitive environment or future of a program but the reality is fuck you so long as I am having mine right now.

    • @MaroonMage@lemmy.world
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      31 year ago

      It would be funny after all the highly public shit talking Kiffin lobbed at Jimbo this season if Kiffin essentially sold out and became the very thing we was against. Personally I don’t see it happening…Kiffin’s got a great thing going in Oxford and the A&M job doesn’t feel as appealing right now. But I’ve been wrong before, so who knows.

      • wjriiOP
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        31 year ago

        I have to think that at this point, Lane is kind of in the Leach-zone where the top programs just don’t want to deal with him, but he’s going to continue to throw press conference bombs and win more games than he should.