Ski-U-Ham
Who hates Iowa?
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It adds up to 100%, so it's good enough for me43% dumb luck. 32% coaching. 25% $$$
Shut the thread down
It adds up to 100%, so it's good enough for me43% dumb luck. 32% coaching. 25% $$$
Shut the thread down
Almost no one is arguing that. Coaching, development and money all played a part. Places like MN and Indiana need all three to be highly successful in today's game.In Cignetti's 1st year his assistant pool was smaller than Fleck's. Look it up.
Most of his assistants are long time staff. He got them paid when he had the power.
People writing this off as only money are just blind to reality.
That is definitely a big thing Fleck struggles with. At least some continuity would be beneficial.He is fortunate to have the same OC and DC in all his stops. Apparently it is hard to beat this continuity in staff.
That is definitely a big thing Fleck struggles with. At least some continuity would be beneficial.
Cignetti has a bit of Jerry Kill in him.He is fortunate to have the same OC and DC in all his stops. Apparently it is hard to beat this continuity in staff.
Same ageCignetti has a bit of Jerry Kill in him.
they know how to recruit, coach to no end. what a staff.Before Cignetti, they had 2 winning seasons since the 2000 season!
Now they have two seasons of 11-2 and 13-0! Number 1 ranking and the top dog in the playoff! This is like NCAA video game stuff!
Did Mark Cuban and Little Pink Houses give the football team all of their money?
Why can’t Minnesota do something like this?
I think that’s our best bet, to have guys that have been with Fleck for awhile and are loyal so are willing to get paid less to stay.That's why I believe Fleck sticks with both Harbaugh and Collins. It allows them to grow into the role (with major bumps in the road) and hopefully stick around like a Phil Parker at Iowa. Fleck had KC on his staff for a long time and it showed. Same with Rossi to a lesser extent.
Ick.Cignetti has a bit of Jerry Kill in him.
Cignetti would have fired Matt ....Cignetti has a bit of Jerry Kill in him.
Apologist.It helps when Cignetti knows that the school/donors will pay whatever he needs for NIL and coaching staff salaries.
PJ sees the writing on the wall. He knows there aren't big donors coming out of the woodwork to magically bolster our NIL. He knows the administration will not pay competitive salaries to attract and keep talented assistants.
Two different worlds.
Great summary. Had a business trip in Indianapolis a few months ago and my host was also on a high school football coaching staff. Actually, Dillon Thieneman (Purdue -> Oregon transfer) played on his team. He expressed how big college sports were in the region and how popular high school football was. Apparently, there are plenty of kids from those parts in the NFL.We have to zoom out. Indiana is, culturally, a huge sports school. There is more buy-in from the admin, alumns, etc. Even if they have not won big in NCAAB recently, their past success has helped instill that into IU sports culture. Indianapolis and the surrounding regions love football and love HS football. They have notable alumni who are willing to throw money at the program.
Cignetti was the home run hire of home run hires. He's like prime NDSU Craig Bohl on steroids. He knows exactly how to build a winning program down to a science. Indiana plays disciplined, clean, tough, and together in ways I haven't seen since prime Saban Bama Death Star years. He brought all of his good JMU kids with him (under-recruited or transfers from bigger schools) who knew the system so he could go 0-100 right away last year. Indiana is also close enough to recruiting hotbeds to absorb talent easier than Iowa State or Minnesota.
Basically, they had a once in a lifetime coaching hire, pre-existing sports-obsessed school/state culture, and donors waiting in the woodwork to pounce on an opportunity like this. They really hit the holy trinity of program turn-arounds.
The "just money" angle also happens to fit PJ's mantra of we can't win, and wishing won't make it so. Coaching to win has a lot to do with Indiana's success as well.Nope. Money isn't the answer.
He has operated without money in his previous stops, and he didn't get the Cuban money until year 2.
Even with the Cuban money they're not just buying players. The 2026 Indiana recruiting class is similar to Minnesota's. Even rated a couple spots lower on 247. He brought 13 players with him from JMU, and he didn't get he highest rated transfers in either year so far. Hell he brought 13 players in from JMU. That's not money. That's talent evaluation and coaching.
Writing this off as "just money" is shallow reasoning at best. Likely more jealousy than reasoning.
The guy can evaluate, and coach.
He is fortunate to have the same OC and DC in all his stops. Apparently it is hard to beat this continuity in staff.
Interesting. I know 2 different people from Indianapolis and they hated it there and love it here.Great summary. Had a business trip in Indianapolis a few months ago and my host was also on a high school football coaching staff. Actually, Dillon Thieneman (Purdue -> Oregon transfer) played on his team. He expressed how big college sports were in the region and how popular high school football was. Apparently, there are plenty of kids from those parts in the NFL.
Another thing is the fact that combined population of Indianapolis, Cincinnati, Columbus, Louisville, and Lexington collectively quite large (circa 8 MM+?).
As an aside, I was somewhat embarrassed by how Minneapolis (outside of North loop) compared to Indianapolis overall.
Interesting. I was last out there in like spring of 2017. Some cool neighborhoods that make you forget you're in the city.As an aside, I was somewhat embarrassed by how Minneapolis (outside of North loop) compared to Indianapolis overall.