Shama: Kill: 12 or 13 Plays to Determine Game; Kiffin Didn’t Come Close to U Job

BleedGopher

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 11, 2008
Messages
62,891
Reaction score
20,407
Points
113
http://www.shamasportsheadliners.com/

Kiffin Didn’t Come Close to U Job

Although media and fans may believe otherwise, Lane Kiffin wasn’t a finalist for the Gophers job after Glen Mason was fired on December 31, 2006.

Kiffin, then 31 and USC’s much acclaimed national championship offensive coordinator, was an intriguing candidate despite his age. The former Bloomington Jefferson athlete had lived in Minnesota when his well-travelled coaching dad, Monte, was an assistant with the Vikings.

Becoming head coach of the Gophers would have been not only a homecoming but a first opportunity for young Kiffin to show what he might achieve as a football boss. Kiffin had an extraordinary reputation for recruiting and college football observers were curious to see what he could do on his own, without the resources of USC and assistance of Trojans head coach Pete Carroll providing him support.

There were media reports in January of 2007 that Minnesota was close to hiring the personable Kiffin. That wasn’t correct and although Kiffin was considered by Minnesota, he was never a finalist for the job that went to Tim Brewster.

Who knows what the record would show if Kiffin had been hired as Gophers coach? He would have faced pressure to succeed here, but he’s also under scrutiny at USC — perhaps more than anyone could have imagined almost five years ago.

The Trojans are on NCAA probation for violations that occurred when Kiffin was at USC as an assistant coach. Although Kiffin isn’t blamed for the violations, he did have NCAA rules violations (characterized as “minor”) while being head coach at Tennessee.

With the Trojans already facing a ban on post-season play and reduction in scholarships, the scrutiny on Kiffin and the program has to be serious. The program can’t have additional problems.

Mike Garrett, the athletic director who hired Kiffin, has been replaced by Pat Haden, a former national championship USC quarterback and lawyer. Haden has long been an advisor to the school and the new athletic director made his intentions known over a year ago when he was hired.

“We want to compete ferociously — but do it ethically and within the rules,” Haden said in a story posted online in July of 2010 by USC News. “We want to have the best compliance program in the country.”

Don’t think Kiffin, though, isn’t facing pressure to win during the probation period that ends in 2014. The fan base, accustomed to routinely winning conference titles and competing for national championships, is demanding. The L.A. media pays a lot of attention to Trojans football, too.

Kiffin would have faced a difficult job as Gophers coach but being boss at USC is no stroll on the beach right now either.

Kill: 12 or 13 Plays to Determine Game

How do the Gophers defeat a USC team that is a three touchdown favorite tomorrow at the Los Angeles Coliseum? Just ask Gophers quarterback MarQueis Gray and coach Jerry Kill.

“We can’t have turnovers against a team like USC,” Gray said. “...The less mistakes we make — the more they make — and good things happen for us.”

Kill expects the game against No. 25 ranked USC to be decided by a dozen or so significant plays. “I don't know how many plays on Saturday, but there will be 12 or 13 of them that will determine the game,” he said. “That's why you can't take a play off.

“…We try and make it (coaching) complicated but it really isn't. It's just getting people to play hard all the time. They (the Gophers) can't take plays off. I don't know if we're there or not, I really don't. But we'll get a chance to find out before long.”

Kill’s team will need to play with the discipline that Gray referred to above. “Missed assignments and misalignments will beat you long before mismatches,” the coach said.

Kill is continually trying to improve the team, a group that finished 3-9 last season. In an example of his thoroughness, he will have the sideline behavior of his players monitored on Saturday. He said he might be the only coach in the country that will “video” the sideline.

“I want to see how people handle themselves,” Kill explained. “I want to see who's throwing that helmet down, I want to see who's losing their cool. I evaluate the coaches (too) because everybody is accountable on game day.”

Whether Kill is evaluating a win or loss on Saturday night, could depend, too, on how much the Trojans’ defense is improved from a year ago. Seven starters return from a 2010 defense that allowed 400 yards per game and ranked 84th in the country. USC ranked 109th nationally in pass defense, giving up 259.5 yards a game.

The Trojans were particularly vulnerable in the fourth quarter of games, yielding 118 points. USC, 8-5 a year ago, lost three times in the final minutes, including back-to-back losses on field goals in the closing seconds.

Kill has to be hoping for Trojans miscues in the fourth quarter or anytime before then, too.

Go Gophers!!
 

Despite Kiffin's personality and what he did to Tennessee, which is indefensible, he has experienced a meteoric rise. It will be interesting to see if he and Monte can hold the Trojans together during probation.
 




Top Bottom