Every Buccaneers head coach’s all-time record against the Saints

Three different Buccaneers coaches have hit .500 against the Saints, and one has a winning record. But Bruce Arians is 1-5 since 2019:

At risk of acknowledging the Tampa Bay Buccaneers as a serious rival of the New Orleans Saints, I’ll start this off by reminding everyone that it’s a series the Saints own handily, having gone 38-22 against Tampa Bay. That’s dating back to 1977 with a six-game winning streak from 1983 to 1988 (before they shared a division) and a seven-win run from 2012 to 2015.

It hasn’t seemed to matter who the Buccaneers hire as head coach, who they start at quarterback, or who was owning the team — the Saints have beaten them in every era they’ve met.

Still, it’s a good time to run through the timeline. Here is how every coach in Buccaneers history has fared against New Orleans (including the playoffs), from Bruce Arians to John McKay:

Tommy Rees: ‘I wanted to fight for Notre Dame’

This could have gotten ugly real quickly if not for Tommy Rees

The way things went down with Marcus Freeman being hired by Notre Dame less than a week after Brian Kelly up and vanished it’s becoming more clear just how close the entire coaching staff was to being blown up.

Freeman spoke during his press conference about how close

We know how it all turned out now but how close was Rees to joining Kelly at LSU?

Does Rees think Kelly could have handled things differently in order to talk to his team?

Rees joined The Ryan Russillo Podcast and spilled the beans on how everything went down, just how close he was to being LSU’s offensive coordinator.

“I was all in, the GA (graduate assistant) is single and he was all in, the girlfriend was all in,” Rees said, “I had Zillow’d Baton Rouge!”

Rees eventually compared the Notre Dame situation to feeling like he was in a sense, protecting the Alamo.

“I wanted to fight for Notre Dame” Rees added.

It’s worth listening to the entire interview to hear more about everything that went down after the Stanford game and how Kelly acted in the hours leading up to the decision.

The biggest takeaway to me is how if Rees wasn’t proactive in telling Notre Dame athletic director Jack Swarbrick that he needed to meet significantly sooner than Swarbrick planned that all hell could have broken loose.

There is a ton more to take away from here as Rees wasn’t nearly as certain to return to Notre Dame as we may have previously believed.

Take a listen to the interview in full by clicking play below:

 

Related:

Everything Marcus Freeman said at his Notre Dame introductory press conference

Marcus Freeman already out visiting five-star recruits

Best images from Marcus Freeman’s introductory press conference at Notre Dame

Tommy Rees talks all things Notre Dame football and Fiesta Bowl

Winners and losers from the college football coaching carousel

Which teams hit home runs and which teams got hurt the most in the coaching carousel so far?

The 2021 coaching carousel has been one of the more wild ones in college football history.

We have seen a little bit of everything this offseason. Successful coaches at premier jobs bolted to other major programs, Miami publicly looked to hire Mario Cristobal while the position was still filled and TCU hired Sonny Dykes from rival SMU from right down the road.

This year’s coaching carousel has already almost doubled the number of coaching changes we saw in 2020. There have been 28 coaching changes made with more likely to come after the bowl season.

All these coaches on the move have made a big impact on the transfer portal and recruiting. More and more players have entered the transfer portal to explore their options for the upcoming seasons.

Much of the future of college football will be defined by the decisions made during this offseason. Take a look at some of the winners and losers of this years coaching cycle:

Watch: Brian Kelly debuts sudden new southern accent

Oh dear lord this is cringe-worthy

Brian Kelly and his family haven’t even unpacked their bags yet in Baton Rouge but there has already been a massive change for the former Notre Dame head coach.  After speaking at his introductory press conference on Wednesday afternoon, Kelly stopped by the LSU men’s basketball game that evening.  It was there he debuted his new southern accent while addressing the crowd at halftime.

Related: Notre Dame coaching staff tracker

Take a peek at the video below and start it at roughly the 30 second mark.  A fair warning to you that things are about to get really uncomfortable and awkward.

Who is that guy?

I’ve listened to Brian Kelly press conferences and interviews for more than a decade and never heard a single hint of an accent whatsoever.  Now all of a sudden he spends ten minutes in Louisiana and he belongs on the cast of “O Brother, Where Art Thou?”

Related: 5 reasons to love the Marcus Freeman hire

My level of discomfort sitting through those couple minutes was limitless.  Perhaps whatever the heck that voice was is why Kelly’s assistants at Notre Dame all decided to stay at Notre Dame.

Related:

See It – Brian Kelly arrives in Baton Rouge

 

Notre Dame Football Coaching Staff Tracker

What Notre Dame coaches are coming and going in wake of Freeman hire?

When Brian Kelly left Notre Dame for LSU the fear among Fighting Irish faithful was that he’d be taking a good amount of assistant coaches with him.  By doing so that would sting Notre Dame both in the present and in the future as not only coaches would theoretically leave and then current players and recruits would perhaps follow the coaches they have close relationships with as well.

That may have been the fear but so far it’s certainly not the case as to what has happened as one by one more Notre Dame assistants have been reported to be staying on the coaching staff as we await the University to confirm the reports of Marcus Freeman being the next head football coach.

If Kelly thought he’d be able to bring a good amount of the staff with him, so far it’s gone for him about as well as it did for Jerry MaGuire when he left to start his own agency.

Here are what we know so far in regards to Notre Dame’s staff and who is returning and who we do not yet know:

Brian Kelly to return to Notre Dame in 2022. Also: water = wet

Stunner.

There has been a lot of shuffling in college football’s head coaching offices already this fall as 14 head coaches have been fired or resigned since the start of the season.  That number will certainly grow as plenty remain on the hot seat late in the year, and eventually some up-and-comers will leave head posts for bigger jobs and will leave vacancies behind.

One place there will not be an opening for a head coaching position this off-season is at Notre Dame.  You laugh (so did I, honestly) but someone felt the need to release that information as if it was some kind of breaking news over the past few days.

Other news to report at this time includes water remaining wet, the sky being blue, and Thanksgiving being the best holiday of the year.

And yes, I saw the “big boys” comment and will choose to ignore it, simply saying Kelly has headed one just five programs to appear in the College Football Playoff more than once.

(Kirby Smart will be making this six in two weeks)

There are certainly some prime openings and even if recruiting may be slightly easier at some of the programs that have openings, did anyone actually think Brian Kelly would be interested in leaving Notre Dame, where he’s spent the last 12 years and turned a major corner in recent years, to go rebuild a program elsewhere?

Related – 2021 College Football Head Coaching Change Tracker

I just hope Kelly was able to milk a little more money for his assistants with any of the silliness that may have come from this.

Related:

College Football Playoff projections following Oregon loss

Kirk Herbstreit’s new top-six after Oregon loss

Notre Dame’s all-time winningest football coaches

Latest Coaches Poll – Week 9

The latest USA Today Sports AFCA coaches poll has been released. Wake Forest moved into the top ten at No. 9. N.C. State moved up to No. 22. Pitt fell to No. 25 in the latest rankings. The top five remained the same. 1 Georgia 8-0 1600 64 1 – 1/5 2 …

The latest USA Today Sports AFCA coaches poll has been released.

Wake Forest moved into the top ten at No. 9.  N.C. State moved up to No. 22.  Pitt fell to No. 25 in the latest rankings.  The top five remained the same.

1 Georgia 8-0 1600 64 1 1/5
2 Cincinnati 8-0 1460 0 2 2/10
3 Alabama 7-1 1453 0 3 1/5
4 Oklahoma 9-0 1423 0 4 2/5
5 Ohio State 7-1 1336 0 5 3/12
6 Michigan State 8-0 1325 0 7 1 6/NR
7 Oregon 7-1 1198 0 8 1 3/12
8 Notre Dame 7-1 1095 0 11 3 7/13
9 Wake Forest 8-0 1051 0 13 4 9/NR
10 Michigan 7-1 1050 0 6 -4 6/NR
11 Oklahoma State 7-1 922 0 15 4 9/23
12 Texas A&M 6-2 910 0 14 2 5/NR
13 Baylor 7-1 815 0 18 5 13/NR
14 Auburn 6-2 802 0 21 7 14/NR
15 Mississippi 6-2 680 0 9 -6 9/25
16 Iowa 6-2 512 0 10 -6 2/18
17 Kentucky 6-2 497 0 12 -5 11/NR
18 Texas-San Antonio 8-0 401 0 22 4 18/NR
19 Houston 7-1 349 0 NR 10 19/NR
20 Brigham Young 7-2 310 0 NR 6 10/NR
21 Coastal Carolina 7-1 301 0 24 3 15/24
22 NC State 6-2 265 0 25 3 18/NR
23 Penn State 5-3 215 0 17 -6 4/23
24 Southern Methodist 7-1 192 0 16 -8 16/NR
25 Pittsburgh 6-2 162 0 19 -6 19/NR
No. 20 San Diego State; No. 23 Iowa State.
UL Lafayette 156; Fresno State 73; San Diego State 65; Arkansas 65; Minnesota 29; Wisconsin 26; Mississippi State 20; Utah 10; Appalachian State 10; Air Force 9; Liberty 4; Iowa State 4; Clemson 4; Arizona State 1.

 

College Football Head Coach Salaries

Who is the most overpaid and underpaid on this list?

Each year the USA TODAY compiles the salaries of current NCAA FBS football coaches and the 2021 edition came out this week.  Atop the list you’ll be anything but surprised to find Nick Saban who is set to earn $9.753 million in 2021.

Related: The winningest college football coaches of all-time

Ed Orgeron at LSU is second on the list as he’ll make $9.012 from LSU this year.  Also worth noting with the LSU head coach is that his buyout is listed at $17.150 million dollars after December 1, something that appears to be headed into play in Baton Rouge.

Third on the list is a bit of a surprise in David Shaw of Stanford who $8.924 million while Dabo Swinney of Clemson ($8.37 million) and Lincoln Riley at Oklahoma ($7.672 million) round out the top five.

Notre Dame’s Brian Kelly is listed all the way at 60th as his total earnings amount to $2.670 according to the report which can be viewed in full here.

Related:

FiveThirtyEight handicaps College Football Playoff odds 

Kirk Herbstreit’s college football top six entering week seven

Latest bowl projections see various blue bloods in Notre Dame’s future

Why Turning to Caleb Williams doesn’t make sense

A deep look at why turning to Caleb Williams makes no sense for the #Sooners.

Norman, Oklahoma was on pins and needles the entire way last night as Oklahoma faced off against West Virginia. The Sooners would win the game by a score of 16-13. It was not easy and it included a roller coaster of emotions. It’s fairly obvious to point out that the center of their issues was the Sooners’ offensive woes.

The offense mustered an un-Oklahoma like 313 yards. They only had a single turnover which came when quarterback Spencer Rattler threw a very ill-advised ball into double coverage while targeting slot receiver Drake Stoops. After the interception to West Virginia’s Jackie Matthews, a loud chant of “We want Caleb!” — referring to backup true freshman quarterback Caleb Williams started.

This would occur a few more times when the offense as a whole would stall out or the Sooners had an incompletion. There are a few things to unpack here but the first is the booing itself. Optics matter in everything and recruiting is no different. The fans of the Oklahoma Sooners were booing their team’s starting quarterback on national television of a primetime night game because  of the collective struggles of the offense(coaches included.) The Sooners had many recruits in attendance that heard what went down. You could not pick an easier way for teams to recruit against yours than to have the starting quarterback of a (still) undefeated booed as the entire country watches.

Dean Blevins, a former Sooners quarterback, weighed in on the booing.

 

To compound that, the fans asked for his replacement and made it loud and clear on multiple occasions. There’s a lot wrong with thinking that is the solution and we’ll break down why it doesn’t make sense. Benching Rattler for Williams is an idea in theory if you only think that Spencer is the single issue with the Sooners’ lack of offensive cohesion.

After watching the likes of Dante Stills, Akheem Mesidor and the rest of the West Virginia Mountaineers defensive line bully the Sooners, they should not get a pass and directly played a part in why the offense looked bad. The offensive line couldn’t get a push in the running game and, on no less than ten passing attempts, was beaten so badly that Rattler didn’t have enough time to make reads and had to bail out of the pocket.

Williams is a true freshman quarterback who has not played enough meaningful football in game situations to justify throwing him out there behind the play of this offensive line as it currently stands.

Yes, he’s more of a dual threat than Rattler. Are the 50-60 yards he gives you from scrambling and designed runs worth it?

He doesn’t help open up lanes on the ground to add balance and keep teams from pinning their ears back and rushing and blitzing the quarterback. Will he even have time to scan the field and make the right reads?

What does Lincoln Riley do if he makes the switch and Williams struggles? Does he then go back to his quarterback in Rattler, whose confidence is broken? We’re not talking like bench him for a series to calm him down as Riley did to Rattler in the Red River game in 2020. We’re talking move him to second string. That’s a dangerous game with disastrous results that only a team clinging to its playoff hopes should be doing. That’s not the case here.

It’s borderline unreasonable to throw a true freshman out there in the conference part of your schedule while undefeated because of what he may bring. He’s not a known commodity and the Sooners very much have a lot to play for considering how shaky everyone not named Alabama looks over the course of this season so far.

The years of Baker Mayfield, Kyler Murray, and Jalen Hurts, plus the Heisman expectations yearly, have jaded the Sooners fans. We’ve reached the point where we assume that level of play is sustainable but people fail to realize they weren’t playing that level because of just themselves. They (Baker and Kyler) had elite offensive line play, which made calling plays that much easier.

Rattler has not played great at all. He’s not even played to his 2020 level aside from the Western Carolina game. He’s admitted as much to the media the week. However, he still offers you more than what Williams can offer you presently if only because he’s played more games and has success at this level.

Williams is ultra-talented and will have the keys to this car as early as next year. He will have his time to shine. In order for the 2021 Sooners to navigate and find themselves into the College Football Playoff, this offense led by Rattler needs to find its rhythm.

When the team needed him most, Rattler went 7 for 7 to orchestrate a game-winning drive. His offensive line showed up when they had to and they got the job done. There’s stuff to take from that and build from and Lincoln Riley will have to do just that.

Riley offered some thoughts postgame that show he’s aware of the level of accountability that needs to happen in order for this offense to get moving in the right direction:

Accountability needs to happen from top to bottom, starting with Lincoln Riley and then trickle down through the other offensive position coaches and all through the players. It’s a collective effort when it’s going right and it’s a collective effort when things look wrong like they did last night.

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Boston Celtics finalize Ime Udoka’s coaching staff

The Boston Celtics announced the 11 members of its coaching staff for the 2021-22 season, including four new assistant coach hires under new head coach Ime Udoka.

The Boston Celtics have finalized their coaching staff for the upcoming season, hiring six assistants and five player enhancement staff, according to a team release.

The new assistants that have been added to head coach Ime Udoka’s staff are Will Hardy, Damon Stoudamire, Ben Sullivan, Joe Mazzulla, Aaron Miles and Tony Dobbins.

The Celtics have also added Evan Bradds, Garrett Jackson, DJ MacLeay and Steve Tchiengang to its player enhancement staff as well. They also hired Matt Reynolds as a special assistant to the head coach.

Hardy has spent his entire coaching career with the San Antonio Spurs, including the last six seasons working as an assistant coach. He came on for them as a basketball operations intern and worked his way up. He also helped Team USA at the Tokyo Olympics in 2021 and served as the Spurs summer league head coach in 2017 and 2018.

Stoudamire has been the head coach of the University of Pacific men’s basketball team since 2016 after spending 13 years in the NBA. The No. 7 overall pick in the 1995 NBA draft is also a former Rookie of the Year.

Sullivan has been with the Milwaukee Bucks for the past three seasons, including their NBA title-winning 2021 season, and brings seven years of assistant coaching experience to Boston.

Miles will don the title of assistant coach for the first time at the professional level with Boston – he spent two years as an assistant for Kansas and Florida Gulf Coast, though. He has been the Golden State Warriors player development coach, a type of assistant coach but more focused on player development, and their G-League affiliate’s head coach before.

Dobbins and Mazzulla are set to return to Boston for their second and third seasons, respectively.

This post originally appeared on Celtics Wire. Follow us on Facebook!

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