I'd like to suggest that everyone reads the comments below. It is from a person that I interact with routinely. To be clear, these are not my comments so I won't personally respond to thoughts posted after. I'm not posting this because I'm trying to 'win' an argument here; rather, I think there are some really nice global thoughts here worthy of digesting. Enjoy.
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"For my personal processing of the current state of affairs, I'm glad this article came out. I've found myself starting to see the outline of some doubt on the horizon, all the while still ultimately trusting that this staff has things going the right way. Healthy scrutiny is important, but so is recalibrating. There are some major, fatal flaws in the logic in this article, but ultimately I think it's good to be able to see them. It reshapes the context of what, exactly, Mike Riley is doing as we sit here today:
First, Dirk's conceding that it's okay, because it's just how college football is now, to be stuck in a perpetual cycle of Solich (poor recruiting) to Callahan (good recruiting, but suffered from past recruiting) to Bo (who benefited immensely from BC's good recruiting) to Riley (who is suffering from Bo's poor recruiting and misses, even when he landed highly-ranked guys) just because you have only 3 years devoid of any context before judgment day. This context is precisely why my post is so long--we can't forget it if we're going to give Riley a fair shake. Under Dirk's theory, Riley goes 7-5 next year and gets fired in favor of a more "fiery hot" "fixer" who then takes the guys Riley secured with multiple P5 offers and goes 8-4 through a tough 2018 schedule. This all looks awesome to Joe Everyfan who was told repeatedly that "2018 is gonna be tough," and the next coach gets a free pass because "well, Riley couldn't even win 8 with his own guys and this guy did it with a top-20 SOS." And rinse, then repeat. You always hope the next hire is the right one, but the resulting effect of Dirk's theory is that a "fixer" will follow Riley the Builder. Here's the rub: the builders are there just long enough to, ironically, fix the foundational issues to then allow a "fixer" to come in and succeed up to their inherently lower ceiling. It'd be excusable for Dirk to think this way if we hadn't seen it twice already. Someone (maybe Dirk) needs to write THAT article, not this one. Follow the logic to its conclusion. Don't stop in the middle short of some real journalism just because, well, that's what CFB is these days.
Second, it's quite literally impossible to take Dirk's/Nebraska's cycle and find any sort of sustained success. The idea of a "fixer" versus a "builder" means the guys with no foundation building capabilities for sustained success but solid talent to work with (Bo) are ironically going to get more time to build (133% more, in the Callahan v. Bo v. Riley case) because of the mere perception of "success" right away. "Nebraska's back, baby" would never have been Riley's thought process if they had beaten Tennessee. There's a reason for that--he knows his talents as a coach, alone, aren't enough. Bo literally never thought that. Even if we assume his distinction between fixer and builder is accurate, it's ultimately much worse for a program because the guy who prolongs his own mediocrity by showing some immediate results with the last guys' talent can't parlay that into a strongly-built foundation for success. Plus, if you get a like Bo, it also creates enough hubris to bastardize recruiting. Then, the guy with the ability to turn things around will never get enough time to do it having been dealt the hand stained by the blood the last guy sucked out of the program. You're literally putting the guys with the lowest ceiling half-way up the staircase from the beginning and the guys with the highest ceiling in the basement. It makes no sense.
Instead, as we all know, the much more likely reason Bo appears to be a "fixer" is because he's had better talent than he would have left himself everywhere he's arrived. That is true to anyone who isn't trying to sell newspapers, including Shawn Eichorst and our entire staff. Keep in mind that they said out out loud in interviews last week that we need more talent--a somewhat risky proposition with 70+ guys on scholarship coming back next year who are now labeled by their own coaches and ADs as not having enough talent, or at least many of them could perceive that. While true, that's ballsy, but also exactly what needs to be said to turn Dirk's article back rightside up. In terms of Bo, his luck also extends to his DC stops (which I assume Dirk is counting when labeling him a "fixer"). You're not exactly slumming it at OU and LSU--and those and YSU are the only evidence that immediate results follow Bo's "fiery attitude." He's not like most other coaches who turned a D1 program around before coming to a historically blue blood program--thanks, Tom. Bo has subsequently lucked into this cycle again at YSU with transfers and other guys' talent, turning it into a championship appearance in his second year. Sounds a lot like 2009, no? Yet, who on here would bet on Bo winning it all over the next 5 seasons? Bo isn't a fixer so much as he is a product of incredibly fortunate timing and the players he's had to work with. For Dirk's argument to work, you must take it as a given that it's Bo's innate coaching talent, and not his circumstances of good fortune, which is why his teams show immediate "success." Otherwise his overall premise--that you need to develop talent at Nebraska better than being able to acquire it even if both are important--unravels. Bo won with good recruits and Riley won with bad ones doesn't fit the narrative. To concede that Bo won because of better talent and Riley matched him with worse talent--which is where the article started in truly self-defeating fashion--means there's hardly room for the "fixer" versus "builder" analysis. I don't remember these "we need more talent" articles after the 2009 season...because we freaking had it.
Again, even if we assume he has properly categorized coaches into these 2 camps, Dirk also fails to acknowledge the lingering mentality left by a "fixer" (who suggested his players transfer or harpoon Eichorst's program on the way out the door). Just look at the comments by coaches last year and this year (Riley and Banker) and the comments by players (Gates and Bando). The mental fragility left in Bo's wake is not value-neutral in the development vs. recruitment or "fixer" vs. "builder" analyses. What's worse is ignoring the compounding effect that mentality has on the admittedly poor talent to start the article.
Unsurprisingly, Dirk has penned an article sure to be gobbled up by Bo holdovers and even those who jumped back onto the bandwagon at 7-0. They're all feeling vindicated around water coolers in Nebraska after reading this, even though they were silenced or they outright turned to support Riley this year.
Here's the kicker for Dirk: Eichorst is a long-game player. You prove that when you fire a perennial #9win coach who won't apologize for losing 4 per year and winning only Holiday Bowls. It'll take a letdown of the variety I'm not sure Riley is capable of before Eichorst would fire him, or more likely, Eichorst would get himself fired firsts. I'm really, truly hoping that Miles and Erstad succeed even though I have doubts about both of them, because I think if we can get Riley and Eichorst 2 more full years and recruiting cycles, we'll be very happy we waited on Riley the Builder. I worry that articles like this have a butterfly effect on the guy's chances to succeed, which makes it even more disappointing."