Huh? Aside from your other terrible takes in this thread, this opinion is laughable. NO ONE at Stanford was impressed by hiring a former NFL QB with two consecutive 11-win seasons at the Division I level? NO ONE at Michigan St. was impressed by hiring a sitting NFL DC with a 9-win season in his one year as a HC? NO ONE? To even compare either to the Chizik hire (let alone Barry frickin' Switzer) is among the most absurd things I've seen on this site.
As usual dpodoll68 has chosen to narrowly, and hyper-critically focus to closely on the specific wording, rather than consider the overall, broader point.
Now I will concede that my rambling comments were poorly written, sloppily constructed, with limited, if any focus on what some of the posters prior actually wrote, so yes my post was not exactly elite. Maybe I should stop typing posts when watching TV, texting and taking calls.
The overall alternate positions I was pushing, which clearly was not coherently conveyed to anyone,
was really just that hiring football coaches is a total crapshoot, especially with MAC Coaches, low level P5 coaches, and hot, or at least promising assistants. Timing, luck, boosters and internal politics often lead to a good coach failing, even borderline can't miss hires of proven winners. Hires that look great on paper turn to failure and oddball hiring decisions sometimes work out. (Mark Mangino for one, after all we know fat guys have no business being the face of a program)
Jim Mora, Lovie Smith, and others were considered safe hires, and very competent coaches, and both will be gone soon. (Mora before Smith) Brian Kelly probably would have been fired by now if not for all the massive payouts ND has had, and now he is likely back the mix for a Playoff appearance. As much as I like to be critical of Joel Maturi, I do realize that hiring a football coach is one of the hardest things a AD has to do.
Campbell, Fleck and Chizik were of interest to me due to some things they have in common, and the first two may be great some day. Chizik won a NC, and I just wanted to acknowledge that his accomplishment since it counts for a lot, considering Auburn has no legitimate National Championships other than his. The 1957 NC was for a 10-0 team on probation. Now I guess I overlooked the fact that the guy went 5-19 at Iowa State, so yes it was not a very good post.
About Saban, Harbaugh and Switzer:
-Saban was a dull, non-charismatic guy with a proven history of great Defense when MSU hired him, and it was a very MSU like hire, I am not sure if anyone was predicting such great things for him
-Harbaugh, one of my favorite coaches, was coming of a DWI, and coaching at non Scholarship FCS team that had recently been DIII, so although he had a good pedigree it was hardly a home run hire for Stanford that had been 16-40 in recent years pre-Harbaugh.
I am not sure that anyone expected those two guys to rise anywhere near where they ended up, and yes it was an huge stretch but sometimes on occasion wild card hires like Chizik rise to high levels. The guy did go 33-19, with a 14-0 year at Auburn, and probably could have kept the program (loaded with talent, few barriers to admission, resources) moving forward if they had not fired him, but they tend to give their coaches a very short leash. Gus Malzahn was on a hot seat not too long ago.
I mentioned Switzer for only one reason; he had all the advantages at Oklahoma, and is nothing like Gene Chizik except he won a NC and was not always given full credit by some detractors, who credited all those advantages Oklahoma used to have. Some implied he was just a idiot puppet for Jerry Jones and deserved almost no credit for winning a Super Bowl in Dallas. I do not share that opinion and Switzer is a coach that I rate near the top. My point was any coach that keeps the train on the tracks and gets all the way to a National Championship deserves a lot of credit, even if it had been Tim Brewster, assuming Florida State handed him the job in some bizarre world twist of fate, and they won a NC once.