MaxyJR1
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Illinois has the potential to be a great job - a job just below that elite Alabama, Texas, Ohio St., USC, etc. level. It is secluded enough that it has a passionate fanbase, yet close enough to major population centers with a ton of great football players. It is in a football-crazy state. The right coach at Illinois could hand-select the top prospects from both Chicago and St. Louis and have a perennial Big Ten-contending team.
The last time they were a perennial Big Ten contending team was in the 10s and 20s.
Three BT titles since Minnesota's last one (44 years ago) puts you just above Minnesota, not just below Alabama, Texas, Ohio State, etc.
Illinois is a job that can provide a year or two of good/great success (Zook to Rose Bowl/Turner to Sugar Bowl/Mackovic went 7-1 in year two then 4-4 in year four before leaving)....then it's over.
Passionate fan base? Memorial holds 60,000+. Illinois has averaged that three times in the last 20 years. Averaged 43,000 the year before the last Rose Bowl. 39,000 in the late 90s.
Crap town, crap stadium, good job if you take a better one at the first sign of success.
Perhaps you didn't take note of the fourth word in my post:
Potential
When's the last time Illinois had even a decent, let alone good, coach? Sound like anyone else you know?
Crap town, crap stadium, good job if you take a better one at the first sign of success.
Former head coach of the Toledo Rockets, Tim Beckman, appears to have taken the coaching vacancy at Big 10 school University of Illinois.
Beckman is 21-16 in his three years at Toledo with zero conference championships, or even a MAC West division title to his name. You may know Beckman from such exciting games as a complete collapse in the 2010 Little Caesar's Pizza Bowl to Florida International. It's too bad we couldn't have watched Beckman faceoff this Bowl season against Air Force in the Military Bowl Presented by Northrop Gumman. Rockets vs. the Air Force, YEEHAWW.
2009 was the first year for Beckman as the Rockets head coach and was most famous for coaching the team that put a dirty hit on Chandler Harnish, injuring his knee, but also changing him from Bruce Wayne to Batman. After that incident, Chandler put a picture of Beckman on his wall, motivating him for the rest of his career. He hasn't looked back since.
The next year Chandler would get his revenge, putting up 65 points and absolutely demoralizing the Rockets. For the former defensive coordinator at Oklahoma State, Beckman decided this was about average and moved on with the season.
Not so fast. 2011 was supposed to be the year for the Rockets to take the MAC Championship or at least win their division. Even Phil Steele thought so, and he is a person that knows things. But no, they were denied in a 63-60 shootout and also couldn't get his hands to form a T-shape as time was winding down. Considering Illinois projects never to be in the lead at ends of games, they ignored these oversights during the interview process.
When contacted for reasoning for taking the job at Illinois, Beckman exclaimed, "I just came to the realization that I could never beat NIU again as head coach of Toledo. I tried to take out their QB, but he just came back out of nowhere and I can't even sleep now because he haunts my dreams at night.
Now I will take my experience as a winner of zero postseason games as a head coach and will spread my coaching prowess to the Fighting Ilini. The best part about this deal is that I won't have to face NIU in the near future. They almost beat the Orange & Blue in 2010 and we'll duck them as much as we can under my watch."
Let the MACtion spread. Let it spread.
Here's the list of schools who are:
a) within 200 miles of two top-20 metropolitan areas;
b) are BCS schools; and
c) both of those metropolitan areas turn out a large number of DI-A football prospects on an annual basis (thus meaning that being close is actually a bonus in that there are a lot of players to choose from)
1. USC (LA and San Diego)
2. UCLA (LA and San Diego)
3. Notre Dame (Chicago and Detroit)
4. Texas (Houston and Dallas)
5. Texas A&M (Houston and Dallas)
6. Baylor (Houston and Dallas)
7. Illinois (Chicago and St. Louis)
That's it. That's the list. Outside of Baylor and Illinois, all of those schools have been elite powers at one point or another, and what we are seeing at Baylor is evidence that it can happen for Illinois with the right coach.
How is Baylor going 9-3 with an Alamo Bowl berth evidence that Illinois can be an elite power? Seems much more likely that this good year by Baylor (with a certain quarterback) will match Illinois' history of a very good/great season followed by going into the tank and firing its coach soon after.
Here's the list of schools who are:
a) within 200 miles of two top-20 metropolitan areas;
b) are BCS schools; and
c) both of those metropolitan areas turn out a large number of DI-A football prospects on an annual basis (thus meaning that being close is actually a bonus in that there are a lot of players to choose from)
1. USC (LA and San Diego)
2. UCLA (LA and San Diego)
3. Notre Dame (Chicago and Detroit)
4. Texas (Houston and Dallas)
5. Texas A&M (Houston and Dallas)
6. Baylor (Houston and Dallas)
7. Illinois (Chicago and St. Louis)
That's it. That's the list. Outside of Baylor and Illinois, all of those schools have been elite powers at one point or another, and what we are seeing at Baylor is evidence that it can happen for Illinois with the right coach.
I think you could add these schools to your list:
1) Maryland (Balt and DC)
2) Virginia (Balt and DC)
3) Rutgers (NYC and Phil)
4) Connecticut (Boston and NYC)
5) Boston College (Boston and NYC)
6) West Virginia (Balt, Wash DC, Pitt - all fringe)
None of New York City, Boston, Baltimore, or Washington, D.C. turn out very many DI-A football players, especially not on a per-capita basis. Basketball players, yes - tons. That is why I added rule #3 - it doesn't do very much good to be near huge population centers if they don't turn out many players.
You serious?? You may want to check some recruiting data bases before ruling out hotbeds of Baltimore, Wash DC, Philly, and NY/NJ. Those markets produce TONS of D-I talent, way more than St. Louis. Not even close.
A search of the Rivals database within 50 miles of each of the markets shows St. Louis is way, way behind. In fact, Baltimore/DC produce more BCS recruits than Chicago. New Jersey, Virginia, Pennsylvania, and Maryland are all in the Top 20 for states producing BCS football recruits. All more than Missouri (which also includes Kansas City).
In addition, many Big Ten teams have fringe Top 40 markets like Indianapolis, Cleveland, Columbus, Cincinnati, Milwaukee. Adding those metro areas (many hotbeds) reduces any perceived advantage Illinois might have by being close to St. Louis, IMHO. I would argue Indiana or Purdue actually have the same or better advantage than Illinois with Indy, Chicago, St. Louis, Detroit, Cincinatti all within 4-5 hours of campus. Obviously that hasn't helped those schools much. Michigan and MSU are each within 4-5 hours of Chicago, Detroit, Indy, Cleveland, Pittsburgh.
In addition to Balt/DC, many of those ACC schools also have Top 40 markets like Charlotte, Jacksonville, Orlando, Pittsburgh, to choose from, in addition to Miami and Atlanta being nearby.
I just don't see Illinois being anything that special. Apathetic fanbase, middle of downstate Illinois in arguably the worst of all Big Ten markets to live in, still a long way from Chicago, and competing against Notre Dame, Michigan, Wisconsin, Iowa and many others for recruits in Chicago/STL.
The last time they were a perennial Big Ten contending team was in the 10s and 20s.
Three BT titles since Minnesota's last one (44 years ago) puts you just above Minnesota, not just below Alabama, Texas, Ohio State, etc.
Illinois is a job that can provide a year or two of good/great success (Zook to Rose Bowl/Turner to Sugar Bowl/Mackovic went 7-1 in year two then 4-4 in year four before leaving)....then it's over.
Passionate fan base? Memorial holds 60,000+. Illinois has averaged that three times in the last 20 years. Averaged 43,000 the year before the last Rose Bowl. 39,000 in the late 90s.
Crap town, crap stadium, good job if you take a better one at the first sign of success.
I stand corrected on St. Louis and Baltimore-DC (not technically the same metro by MSA stats, but pretty much are for all intents and purposes). I thought St. Louis produced more, and the Baltimore-DC area produced less. NYC, though, especially for being the largest metro (by far) in the U.S., doesn't produce very much. In 2011, areas within 50 miles of Manhattan produced 45 DI-A signees. For comparison's sake, the Miami metro area (within 50 miles), with a population a little more than a quarter of the NYC metro, produced 112 DI-A signees in 2011.
The track coach was just being loyal to his institution. Illinois should be a good gig for the right coach.
Washington D.C. turns out a large number of DI-A football players, but overall I agree with you.None of New York City, Boston, Baltimore, or Washington, D.C. turn out very many DI-A football players, especially not on a per-capita basis. Basketball players, yes - tons. That is why I added rule #3 - it doesn't do very much good to be near huge population centers if they don't turn out many players. I don't know exactly why the Northeast corridor doesn't turn out very many quality football players, but if they did, the Big East wouldn't be such a joke in football.