With the firing of Pete Mangurian already a done deal, I urge the search committee to conduct and ethical and open hiring process this time.
Below is a list of seven head coaching candidates that I have discussed before. I have several sources that tell me just about every name below would be happy to come to Columbia. Some of my sources are these coaches themselves.
Start here if you want to achieve the dual goal of getting a better coach AND getting the justifiably angry alumni off your backs.
Start here if you want to achieve the dual goal of getting a better coach AND getting the justifiably angry alumni off your backs.
Hire some other no-name candidate and be prepared to suffer the consequences of more losses and more national humiliation.
Tom Gilmore
Tom is just as good a choice for Columbia as he
was three years ago, despite Holy Cross’ difficulties in that period. The truth
is, HC is deliberately not keeping up with its Patriot League opponents in the
new athletic scholarship financial race. And yet, the Crusaders are still a
very tough team. Gilmore turned this program around 7-8 years ago, but is now
better-suited to do his magic in the Ivies. He’s a tough coach, but someone who
has the deep respect and admiration from his former players. Mangurian does not
have that in case you hadn’t noticed.
Joe Moglia
Moglia would have taken the Columbia job in
2011 if CU had been smart enough to offer it to him. Now, it’s not so clear but
Joe would still get a step up in media attention and visibility if he came up
north. Right now, he’s still doing miracles with Coastal Carolina and probably
would like a shot at a big-time FBS team very soon. But I think he would still
entertain an offer from Columbia very seriously. A big bonus here is we
wouldn’t have to pay him.
Keith Clark
The Big Green’s offensive coordinator has
weathered the graduation of two once-in-a-generation quality RB’s in Nick
Schwieger and Dominic Pierre in the last couple of years and still has his
offense moving well. Clark was our O-line coach for our 1996 8-2 season and he
knows what Columbia is all about. He is more than ready to be a head coach.
Cortez Hankton
A totally outside the box choice, except he’s
not. The Big Green WR coach is universally acknowledged to be on the fast track
to stardom. He’s a killer recruiter, great teacher, and has the personality to
move mountains. No one at Dartmouth can believe he came back for a third year
there and they are thanking their lucky stars. He’s worth taking a very long
look at.
Mike Kelleher
The D-Coordinator at Brown. He was with CU for 4 years and has a great resume. Remember, Brown's defenses have been underrated for years.
James Perry
The Princeton OC and former Brown QB and asst.
coach was vehemently hated by Roger Hughes’ players when he came to the Tigers
with Bob Surace. Now he’s universally loved as he’s turned Princeton into a
scoring machine. And it didn’t take long.
Jim Margraff
Margraff has made Johns Hopkins into a consistent winner and has been on the CU head coaching radar for years. He has the admiration of the many players he coached as an assistant at Columbia under Ray Tellier and he also worked with the first few very good teams at Penn in the 1980's.
Chris Wilkerson
Wilkerson was at Dartmouth for nine seasons before going to the University of Chicago last year. He's made a quick turnaround for the Maroons and he certainly understands coaching in a tough academic, urban environment. He also recruits the NYC area.
Margraff has made Johns Hopkins into a consistent winner and has been on the CU head coaching radar for years. He has the admiration of the many players he coached as an assistant at Columbia under Ray Tellier and he also worked with the first few very good teams at Penn in the 1980's.
Chris Wilkerson
Wilkerson was at Dartmouth for nine seasons before going to the University of Chicago last year. He's made a quick turnaround for the Maroons and he certainly understands coaching in a tough academic, urban environment. He also recruits the NYC area.
13 comments:
It is conceivable, Moglia will have other opportunities. Coastal has a chance at a national championship this season. If they offer a comparable package what they gave Pete then maybe Moglia would listen. Interviewing him now would interfere with Coastal's playoff run.
As soon as CU plays Brown I will email Kelleher and say as much. He is no nonsense but at the same time can connect to his players. He would be a home run.
Played for him at URI. Great coach, outstanding person.
I may be wrong, but I have never seen a school hire a football coach before they hire the AD-
I know CU is currently in an uproar over the current loss streak, but Josh Martin CU13 is nominated for the 2015 ProBowl on special tieams. Please let everyone know and vote for him. He is a great example of what Columbia can do.
AD Murphy is a lame duck, resigned effective June 30 and could be removed earlier. We can't afford to stand on
ceremony these days. If necessary, the new AD can be hired anytime beginning now to take effect July 1st or earlier, and there's no reason the new AD-designate could not be in the process and make the final choice of a new coach. Murphy resigned what, a month ago or more?
Bollinger should be well into the process of finding her replacement.
I don't think Margraff would want to come back here.
Clark has been around the league, is a friendly guy and would definitely keep Alums informed. He is somewhat the opposite of what we have.
Gilmore is solid also.
However, almost everybody listed was interviewed last time and once they hear Mangurian was in the mix they all knew the deal was done and they were getting the process oriented interview.
real question is will any person be interested in the job?
50/ 50 that Pete gets fired- would need a new coach by mid-December to survive the recruiting season- With the search committee just being formed for the AD job, things look messy, as usual.
Jake, great write-up on the prospects, but how do you know for sure that Pete is done? (if so, either Clark or Kelleher sound real good to me, especially because of past association with the Lions).
Allie
I think coming to CU is coaching suicide IMO. Unless your REALLY desperate for a HC job, why come??? Maybe a younger assistant coach looking to prove himself might come. I just dont see a seasoned guy willing to come here unless hie's on his last coaching legs.....like Pete.
Can we at least share some good news here? 70-56 last night over a surprisingly scrappy-at-the-end Wagner team. (One not quite as thuggish as Wagner's seemingly usual sort of play.)
Good coaches win with what they have. Kyle Smith is a good coach, and won with a revamped lineup minus Grant Mullins (arguably our best) and Luke Petrasek. Freshman Kyle Castlin looked flashy and determined in his Levien debut.
We will most likely not challenge for an Ivy title without Alex Rosenberg, but it will be an interesting basketball season, one which with some luck will still have more wins than losses. Football under any new coach should only be half so good. And good basketball is the lately annual bone God throws to us after lousy football seasons.
The admin has poisoned the well so badly that I too worry
that no worthy coach, even a young assistant, will want to
leave his job for this. We could ask the coach of the Oakland Raiders but I doubt he'd come.
It's a shame, because there seem to be some talented
kids on this team to build on and take off from there.m
Richard I take offense to your description of wagner as thuggish.
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