College Football News ranks SEC head coaches: Where’s Kirby Smart?

College Football News ranked the top SEC head coaches. Where is Georgia football’s Kirby Smart?

Pete Fiutak of College Football News recently released a list ranking the SEC head coaches heading into the 2020 season.

Checking in at No. 3 on the list is Georgia’s Kirby Smart, who trails only Nick Saban (1) and Ed Orgeron (2).

At No. 4 is Dan Mullen and at No. 5 is Gus Malzahn.

As much as I’d love for Smart to be in that No. 2 spot, I do not disagree with Fiutak here.

Smart’s time will come, and within the next five years he may very well occupy that No. 1 spot.

For now, he’s sitting at No. 3 on Fiutak’s list, likely right on the verge of taking over that No. 2 ranking. As long as he keeps winning the SEC East, beating rivals and putting his team in striking distance for the College Football Playoff…he’ll be considered a top-five coach in America.

Orgeron or Smart at No. 2 was likely a somewhat difficult decision. Fiutak went with Coach O since he accomplished something Kirby hasn’t yet, a national championship.

I’ve heard it all – “Anyone could win with that roster.”

Sure, Smart probably would have won it with that roster LSU had last year. But, at the end of the day, he didn’t have that roster. No other way around it.

Also, how can you not love Coach O?

As for Saban, there’s no arguing that one.

Ranking SEC head coaches heading into 2020 CFB season

We ranked all the SEC head coaches, from Georgia football’s Kirby Smart, to Arkansas’ Sam Pittman, to Florida’s Dan Mullen.

The SEC is loaded with head coaching talent as we head into the 2020 college football season.

You have your usuals – Nick Saban, Kirby Smart, Gus Malzahn, Ed Orgeron, etc.

But then you have your familiar, or in some cases not-so-familiar, yet new faces: Lane Kiffin, Mike Leach, Sam Pittman, Eli Drinkwitz.

Ranking the SEC head coaches heading into the 2020 season is as hard as it’s ever been, and that’s because of all these new hirings. But it’s also because Jeremy Pruitt waited until October to start winning games in Tennessee last year. It’s because Ed Orgeron took a loaded roster and won a national title. Because Gus Malzahn and Auburn always have the talent but can’t seem to win the big ones. Or because, despite a 4-8 season, Will Muschamp was able to knock off Kirby Smart and Georgia.

Related: 2020 Georgia schedule with game-by-game score predictions

14. Sam Pittman, Arkansas

I would have loved to get Pittman into a higher spot on this list, but what is there to go off of? His last head coaching job came in 1992 and 1993 when he led Hutchinson Community College to an 11–9–1 record over two seasons.

I am 100% rooting for Pittman to succeed in his first season as head coach of the Arkansas Razorbacks. It won’t be easy, and this is a team that will likely finish with at least five losses for the first few years, but that’s not necessarily a terrible thing as long as they play hard.

Arkansas may not field the most talented teams in the SEC, but if there’s one thing I’m certain of it’s that the former UGA O-Line coach will make sure his guys fight harder than anybody.

13. Eli Drinkwitz, Missouri

Drinkwitz gets the No. 13 spot because of what he was able to do at App State last year. In his first season as a head coach, he led the Mountaineers to a 12-1 record and a Sun Belt championship.

But that’s not the SEC. It’s going to be a rocky road ahead for Drinkwitz, as Mizzou will definitely not be one of the more talented teams in the league for a few years.

12. Derek Mason, Vanderbilt

I often find myself rooting for Vanderbilt and Mason.

He took over at Vandy when James Franklin left for Penn State, and though it’s been tough at times, you get the feeling that Commodore fans actually look forward to their seasons.

11. Will Muschamp, South Carolina

If Muschamp had not beaten Georgia last year, he maybe would not even be on this list at all.

But he won and that probably saved his job. He coaches up a good defense, but South Carolina will need to crank up its recruiting efforts if it wants to start contending in the SEC East. Another season with no bowl game may put an end to Muschamp’s head coaching career with the Gamecocks.

10. Lane Kiffin, Ole Miss

Kiffin is a good football coach, there’s no denying that. No. 10 is pretty low for an offensive genius like him. But this conference is simply loaded.

Kiffin did a great job at Florida Atlantic, but I still need to see him win consistently at a Power 5 school.

ESPN’s Booger McFarland names elite SEC coaches

ESPN’s Booger McFarland talks which SEC coaches are in elite status. Did Georgia football HC Kirby Smart make the cut?

While on the Paul Finebaum show, ESPN analyst Booger McFarland was asked about the job that Dan Mullen is doing at Florida.

In response, he said that Mullen deserves to be considered as one of the league’s elite coaches and then went on to name other SEC coaches who he’d put in that top-tier.

McFarland included Nick Saban, Kirby Smart, Ed Orgeron and Mullen as the coaches who are at the top of the conference at the moment.

“I think if I had to rank the top four right now,” McFarland said, “I would go Saban, and in some order, you can sway me in this order — it would be Saban, it would be Kirby, it would be Ed and it will be Dan Mullen, and I think there’s a line of delineation right there and then there’s a second-tier.”

Sorry Gus Malzahn and Auburn, Booger does not think you’ve done enough to be included in that top-tier of coaches. Three 8-5 seasons, one 7-6 year and one at 9-4 just will not cut it.

Also left off the list is former national championship winning coach Jimbo Fisher (Texas A&M) and Kentucky’s Mark Stoops, who has recently turned the Wildcats program into a headache for some of the league’s top contenders.

Kenneth Murray has ‘single greatest combine interview’ an AFC coach ever had, per report

Former Oklahoma linebacker Kenneth Murray impressed front offices more off the field than on the field at the NFL Combine this past weekend.

Former Oklahoma linebacker Kenneth Murray impressed front offices more off the field than on the field at the NFL Combine this past weekend.

Good Morning Football’s Peter Schrager talked to one AFC coach who said that Murray gave him and his team the “single greatest combine interview I ever had.”

Murray was quoted saying he wanted to be “Luke Kuechly and then some,” when it comes to patrolling the defensive side of the ball.

With 102 total tackles last season and 335 total tackles in his three years at Oklahoma, Murray is a force to be reckoned with at middle linebacker.

Murray simply told coaches that he was “born to lead,” when asked why he wanted to be in the NFL.

He even opened up to his prospective employers about his childhood, telling teams that he helped raise three special-needs children that his father adopted.

Murray has a chance to become a cornerstone of one lucky team’s defense for the foreseeable future when the 2020 NFL Draft gets underway on April 23-25.

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Former Oklahoma Coach Mike Stoops to join brother’s coaching staff, per report

Former Oklahoma defensive coordinator and secondary coach, Mike Stoops is joining Mark Stoops’ Kentucky staff.

Former Oklahoma defensive coordinator and secondary coach, Mike Stoops is joining Mark Stoops’ Kentucky staff.

Per FootballScoop, Mike Stoops will be in charge of the Wildcats’ secondary alongside current Kentucky special teams and secondary coach, Steve Clinkscale.

Previously an intern and analyst for Nick Saban’s staff at Alabama, Stoops had two stops at Oklahoma while his older brother, Bob was the head ball coach for the Sooners.

From 1999 to 2003 Mike was the associate head coach, co-defensive coordinator, and defensive backs coach at Oklahoma before taking the head coaching gig at Arizona, leaving before the Sooners’ national championship game against LSU in the Sugar Bowl.

Following eight seasons at Arizona, Stoops came back to Norman, Okla., to assume the defensive coordinator role alongside coaching defensive backs and being named associate head coach once again.

Stoops was retained by Lincoln Riley after Bob Stoops announced his retirement prior to the 2017 season, but was fired following the 2018  48-45 loss to Texas in the Red River Rivalry.

Kentucky finished 8-5 last season and kick-off the 2020 campaign against Eastern Michigan on Sept. 5.

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