Originally Posted by
SoonerDave
Odd story about Muschamp....one fairly lengthy post I read from (I can't remember which) CFB board was that Muschamp was, "head coach in effect" during the 2010 season...that Mack had pretty much become a figurehead, and he was going to retire at the end of that year more or less on his own terms. Then, something, somewhere, that year went crosswise, Brown changed his mind, took the reins back from Muschamp, and that hacked Muschamp off and opened the door to his eventual hiring at Florida.
Right now, and I suspect it's been true for decades, the biggest problem within Texas football is, well, Texas football. Tons of politicking. Tons of BMD (Big Money Donors) competing to see who has the biggest....donation....and influence. And some of those influences have, well, too much influence, to the point of possibly even influencing decisions about personnel and recruiting..."y'all go after THAT boy ovah in Childress...", which ties in at least loosely with some of the inexplicable talent assessments that have been made in Austin in the last few years....such as RGIII originally wanting to play QB at Texas, but Brown wanted him to play corner, if memory serves. And that's not the only such story. Protection of players not as good as their press clippings, a la Chris Simms, magic transformations of players out of HS that go from two or three stars up to four or five stars once they "commit" to UT, just all manner of things that make you just scratch your chin and go, "huhh???" How much Brown's desire to "clap the kids" into performing against the stated concerns from within his own staff that the team is too soft and too coddled makes me wonder how much is Mack and how much is "outside influences."
Texas has every reason and resource to expect to be a dominant college football power every year. Yet, for decades, they've been good, at times very good, but with only a single national title since the 60's, and lots of internal coaching turmoil between then and now. The meltdown in Austin is eerily reminiscent of the end of the John Mackovic era, and heck, as I recall, the end of the Fred Akers era was only somewhat less acrimonious.
I'm not even sure a Nick Saban would want to dive into all those "good ol' boy" politics, considering he's essentially king of the CFB world down there in 'Bama, although the rumblings I've read indicate there is at least "listening interest" on his part based on the alleged "feelers" that have been sent out. Who knows how much of that is true, but either way, it makes the observation of Texas football an interesting pastime if you're a fan of the sport of CFB in general.
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