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Updated Tennessee Head Football Coach Hot Board

Sought-After Assistants

(Photo via CBS Sports)

Georgia took a risk on Kirby Smart prior to the 2016 season and hired him away from Alabama despite his lack of head coaching experience. So far it’s worked out for them just fine. Just about every year there are at least one or two coordinators on Power Five staffs who get the call to make their debuts as head coaches. These are the assistants most likely to draw Tennessee’s eye.

Greg Schiano

Quick Bio: Greg Schiano is one of the more interesting names on this hot board. He has head coaching experience in both the collegiate and NFL level, but he’s currently an assistant head coach and defensive coordinator for Ohio State. He was an assistant at Penn State, moved on to be an assistant for the Chicago Bears in the NFL, and came back to college to be the defensive coordinator for Miami before taking the head coaching job at Rutgers. He then left Rutgers to be the head coach for the Tampa Bay Buccaneers in the NFL, and then he was let go from there and joined Urban Meyer’s staff at Ohio State.

Pros: Schiano has seen just about everything a coach can see. He had major success at Rutgers, a place that had largely been a wasteland since the mid-1980s. Schiano led Rutgers to an 11-win season in 2006 and helped them win four consecutive bowl games from 2006-09. In fact, in his 11 seasons with Rutgers, he took them to six bowl games. They had made it to a grand total of one bowl game in the 30 years prior to Schiano taking over.

Cons/Questions: Though he had success at Rutgers, that’s been Schiano’s only head coaching stop in college. He was a major failure in his two seasons with Tampa Bay in the NFL, but he’s also come back and been successful as Ohio State’s defensive coordinator. But can he succeed as a head coach at a big time school?

Brent Venables

Quick Bio: If you’re looking for one of the hottest names in the assistant coaching ranks, look no further than Brent Venables. He’s been Clemson’s defensive coordinator since 2012, and he’s helped the Tigers win a national title and appear in two consecutive championship games.

Pros: Venables’ defenses have been some of the best in the nation at Clemson. He also made Oklahoma’s defense something to be feared from 1999 to 2011.

Cons/Questions: No head coaching experience should raise a lot of eyebrows, but if you’re going to take a risk on someone who is an assistant without head coaching experience who doesn’t have Tennessee ties, Venables is about as good as you can get.

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Comments

3 Responses

  1. My opinion is: Be careful who you wish for, you might get them! We all know Jon Gruden knows a lot about football but how much does he know about being a College Football Coach? We need a person who is a dynamic coach that will take these recruits to the next level. We already have the talent in place, we just need to have a coach that knows how to develop them. So, Mr. Currie, please be careful and choose the right coach this time! I love Tennessee Vols football and just want it back to the glory days. Go Big Orange!

  2. I don’t get the reluctance to welcome Jon Gruden back to The Hill. Any leader making anything much more complicated than meat loaf has to delegate much of what gets done to assistants. Does Jon Gruden know how to win football games? I think he does. Will elite players flock to K-town to play for him? I think they will. Can Coach Gruden attract good assistants? He must have to win a Super Bowl.

    He is the guy if the university will finally show it cares about winning.

  3. Bobby Petrine, T. Martin, new ideas, more disciplined better connected to the players. Able to instill Tennessee volunteers traditional into the game .and bring us back where we belong. I think recruting will still be good with either one of these as coaches?

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