snuffy
10-31-2008, 08:01 AM
Texas Tech coach Mike Leach would be out-of-box pick for Huskies
Coach Mike Leach and the Huskies? Don't laugh. Word on the street is Leach is ready to get out of Texas Tech and would be highly interested in the UW job.
Texas Tech head coach Mike Leach could be a good fit at UW but he's got more important things to worry about right now: his team faces No. 1 Texas on Saturday.
http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/budwithers/2008332945_withers31.html
By Bud Withers, Seattle Times college football reporter
Listen up, Washington fans. Got the perfect next football coach for you.
He's got a law degree. That's not a deal-breaker, is it?
He's a little, uh, different. Not like jump-on-stage-and-jam-with-Jimmy-Buffett different, more like this: His office is festooned with pirate paraphernalia, owing to one of his life's fascinations.
Oh, and this coach in 2007 lambasted his conference's officials for a "complete travesty" of a performance in a big game, earning him a $10,000 fine, double the previous record in the league. Then he said he didn't regret saying it. Think he wouldn't have some similar opportunities with Pac-10 zebras?
Thing is, Mike Leach has other fish to fry right now. His Texas Tech football team, No. 6 in the country, is about to host top-rated Texas. All it is, is the biggest football thing ever to hit Lubbock.
As for Leach and the Huskies, don't laugh. Word on the street is Leach is ready to get out of Texas Tech and would be highly interested in the UW.
The bigger issue is whether Washington would be interested in him. Its last experience with sort of a nontraditional coach got them a sweater-vest-wearing, job-coveting, NCAA-pool-playing guy, five weeks in a courtroom and the loss of a couple of million bucks for it.
If you're looking for somebody espousing Washington's historically staunch, Northwest-woodsy persona — somebody to run the ball and emphasize defense — this might not be it. Mike Leach is way different, right down to the card tricks he does when recruits come to his office.
He never played college football, one of four such coaches in Division I-A. He said this week he coached Little League baseball for several years, high school through college at Brigham Young, always figuring he'd be an attorney. But nearing the end of law school at Pepperdine, he began to realize he had a coaching itch to scratch.
So he got a master's degree at the U.S. Sports Academy in Daphne, Ala., in sports science and coaching, and hooked up in 1987 with passing fanatic Hal Mumme at Iowa Wesleyan.
"We traveled all over the country drawing up ideas," Leach said, referring to the passing game. "Just anything we thought that packaged well."
He mentioned the BYU pass attack under LaVell Edwards, some of Bill Walsh's West Coast offense tenets, even a little run-and-shoot.
Eventually, Leach spent 1999 at Oklahoma in Bob Stoops' first year, then was hired at Texas Tech, where the Red Raiders splash all sorts of gaudy passing numbers on opponents. Since the start of the 2001 season, Tech has thrown for 314 touchdown passes. Last year, it completed exactly 500 passes. Think about that.
Some of those come when Tech is ahead by 50 points. Probably no coach in America gets more scrutiny for running it up on opponents, which Leach sees as simply doing what the Raiders do. Ahead of Nebraska 42-10 entering the fourth quarter in 2004, Tech threw 16 passes the rest of the way — including three straight when it was up 70-10.
Said Mumme this week, "He makes this analogy about baseball. What if you had a 10-run rule in [pro] baseball, where everybody was supposed to go up there and strike out? Everywhere we've been, we've never asked for any quarter and never given any. You get on both ends of that deal a lot of times."
Of course, that will not apply Saturday night in what shapes up as a sumptuous matchup of a Tech offense that scored nine touchdowns last week at Kansas, against Texas' superlative athletes — "It's almost a yearly statement, how fast they are," Leach says — coached on defense by another potential UW candidate, coordinator Will Muschamp.
For Texas, it's the last game of a fearsome-four gauntlet that has included Oklahoma, Missouri and Oklahoma State. This one might be the most exhausting.
The Longhorns can do some offensive damage of their own, with Heisman front-runner Colt McCoy completing a celestial 81.8 percent of his passes. It's something of a homecoming for McCoy, who grew up in Tuscola outside Abilene in central Texas, about 160 miles from Lubbock.
"Half my high school goes to school there," McCoy said. "It's going to be fun."
NFL scouts are likely to be trained on the trenches, where one of the season's superhuman matchups will take place. Tech has a 27-year-old, minor-league baseball expatriate, Rylan Reed, at offensive tackle. He has a mind-blowing, 625-pound bench press, shaming the mere 510 bench of Brian Orakpo, Texas' defensive end, who, with nine sacks and 21 quarterback pressures, might be the college defender of the year to date.
Previewing Texas Tech early this week, Orakpo said, "It's a different brand of football. The [line] splits are wide. They've got all these five- and four-receiver sets, guys running all over the place and making plays."
Oh, and as for that pirate thing? In a New York Times Magazine piece in 2005, writer Michael Lewis explained, "Each offseason, Leach picks something he is curious about and learns as much as he can about it: Geronimo, Daniel Boone, whales, chimpanzees, grizzly bears, [painter] Jackson Pollock."
So there's your out-of-the-box UW candidate.
Coach Mike Leach and the Huskies? Don't laugh. Word on the street is Leach is ready to get out of Texas Tech and would be highly interested in the UW job.
Texas Tech head coach Mike Leach could be a good fit at UW but he's got more important things to worry about right now: his team faces No. 1 Texas on Saturday.
http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/budwithers/2008332945_withers31.html
By Bud Withers, Seattle Times college football reporter
Listen up, Washington fans. Got the perfect next football coach for you.
He's got a law degree. That's not a deal-breaker, is it?
He's a little, uh, different. Not like jump-on-stage-and-jam-with-Jimmy-Buffett different, more like this: His office is festooned with pirate paraphernalia, owing to one of his life's fascinations.
Oh, and this coach in 2007 lambasted his conference's officials for a "complete travesty" of a performance in a big game, earning him a $10,000 fine, double the previous record in the league. Then he said he didn't regret saying it. Think he wouldn't have some similar opportunities with Pac-10 zebras?
Thing is, Mike Leach has other fish to fry right now. His Texas Tech football team, No. 6 in the country, is about to host top-rated Texas. All it is, is the biggest football thing ever to hit Lubbock.
As for Leach and the Huskies, don't laugh. Word on the street is Leach is ready to get out of Texas Tech and would be highly interested in the UW.
The bigger issue is whether Washington would be interested in him. Its last experience with sort of a nontraditional coach got them a sweater-vest-wearing, job-coveting, NCAA-pool-playing guy, five weeks in a courtroom and the loss of a couple of million bucks for it.
If you're looking for somebody espousing Washington's historically staunch, Northwest-woodsy persona — somebody to run the ball and emphasize defense — this might not be it. Mike Leach is way different, right down to the card tricks he does when recruits come to his office.
He never played college football, one of four such coaches in Division I-A. He said this week he coached Little League baseball for several years, high school through college at Brigham Young, always figuring he'd be an attorney. But nearing the end of law school at Pepperdine, he began to realize he had a coaching itch to scratch.
So he got a master's degree at the U.S. Sports Academy in Daphne, Ala., in sports science and coaching, and hooked up in 1987 with passing fanatic Hal Mumme at Iowa Wesleyan.
"We traveled all over the country drawing up ideas," Leach said, referring to the passing game. "Just anything we thought that packaged well."
He mentioned the BYU pass attack under LaVell Edwards, some of Bill Walsh's West Coast offense tenets, even a little run-and-shoot.
Eventually, Leach spent 1999 at Oklahoma in Bob Stoops' first year, then was hired at Texas Tech, where the Red Raiders splash all sorts of gaudy passing numbers on opponents. Since the start of the 2001 season, Tech has thrown for 314 touchdown passes. Last year, it completed exactly 500 passes. Think about that.
Some of those come when Tech is ahead by 50 points. Probably no coach in America gets more scrutiny for running it up on opponents, which Leach sees as simply doing what the Raiders do. Ahead of Nebraska 42-10 entering the fourth quarter in 2004, Tech threw 16 passes the rest of the way — including three straight when it was up 70-10.
Said Mumme this week, "He makes this analogy about baseball. What if you had a 10-run rule in [pro] baseball, where everybody was supposed to go up there and strike out? Everywhere we've been, we've never asked for any quarter and never given any. You get on both ends of that deal a lot of times."
Of course, that will not apply Saturday night in what shapes up as a sumptuous matchup of a Tech offense that scored nine touchdowns last week at Kansas, against Texas' superlative athletes — "It's almost a yearly statement, how fast they are," Leach says — coached on defense by another potential UW candidate, coordinator Will Muschamp.
For Texas, it's the last game of a fearsome-four gauntlet that has included Oklahoma, Missouri and Oklahoma State. This one might be the most exhausting.
The Longhorns can do some offensive damage of their own, with Heisman front-runner Colt McCoy completing a celestial 81.8 percent of his passes. It's something of a homecoming for McCoy, who grew up in Tuscola outside Abilene in central Texas, about 160 miles from Lubbock.
"Half my high school goes to school there," McCoy said. "It's going to be fun."
NFL scouts are likely to be trained on the trenches, where one of the season's superhuman matchups will take place. Tech has a 27-year-old, minor-league baseball expatriate, Rylan Reed, at offensive tackle. He has a mind-blowing, 625-pound bench press, shaming the mere 510 bench of Brian Orakpo, Texas' defensive end, who, with nine sacks and 21 quarterback pressures, might be the college defender of the year to date.
Previewing Texas Tech early this week, Orakpo said, "It's a different brand of football. The [line] splits are wide. They've got all these five- and four-receiver sets, guys running all over the place and making plays."
Oh, and as for that pirate thing? In a New York Times Magazine piece in 2005, writer Michael Lewis explained, "Each offseason, Leach picks something he is curious about and learns as much as he can about it: Geronimo, Daniel Boone, whales, chimpanzees, grizzly bears, [painter] Jackson Pollock."
So there's your out-of-the-box UW candidate.