Clay Helton Fired By USC, 5 Possible Coaching Candidates

USC fired Clay Helton two games into the 2021 season. Who are 5 possible candidates to replace him?

USC fired Clay Helton two games into the 2021 season. Who are 5 possible candidates to replace him?


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Clay Helton was fired by USC. Now it’s time to shoot for the stars.

There’s no excuse whatsoever for USC to be anything but in the College Football Playoff chase every single season.

It might be asking too much to replicate the Pete Carroll era, but USC should be an automatic preseason top ten program with the ability to hang with anyone in the nation – it shouldn’t be getting hammered by Stanford.

Clay Helton was okay.

He won a Pac-12 title and a Rose Bowl, and his 2020 team would’ve had a theoretical argument to be in the College Football Playoff had it beaten Oregon for the Pac-12 championship.

Even so, there was a 5-7 season in there, 2020 was the only time he lost fewer than three games – and that’s mostly because it was a shortened campaign – and it doesn’t help that the UCLA program up in Westwood is starting to look like a thing under Chip Kelly.

Helton is a likable guy – it’s partly why he was given every shot to make USC into a powerhouse again – but 46-24 isn’t okay if you’re in charge of that program.

The recruiting has been fine, and Kedon Slovis is an NFL prospect, but – for example – was USC able to keep DJ Uiagalelei in the state? No. Was it able to keep Bryce Young to his commitment? No. Losing JT Daniels was inevitable, but that goes to an overall issue that it all just didn’t work like it was supposed to.

And now Helton is done, Donte Williams will take over in the interim, and USC has to find a new head man.

First, let’s start with this. No, Urban Meyer isn’t leaving Jacksonville for the USC job.

And no, Pete Carroll isn’t leaving the Seattle Seahawks to come back.

And no, Ed Orgeron isn’t an option.

And no, Lane Kiffin isn’t going to return, even if he’s the perfect fit and a far, far better coach than he ever got credit for.

But USC can’t hire just anyone. It has to reach out to the elite of the elite because it really can get almost anyone – it’s that big a gig.

Here are five possible candidates who at least need to get a phone call.

5. Luke Fickell, Cincinnati head football coach

Everyone loves him right now after winning 31 games in three seasons as he turned Cincinnati into a Group of Five powerhouse.

This would be a huge jump in every way, but considering his Ohio State background – and the lessons learned from a 6-7 2011 season as the head man with the Buckeyes in a strange transition year – he’s hardly a stranger to big programs with massive expectations.

At 48 he’s entering his prime, he proved he could coach up okay recruits and turn the team into something great, and he certainly knows how to recruit the five-star types after his ten years in Columbus.

He checks all the boxes, including being the hot coaching prospect the fan base would gush over.

NEXT: Chris Petersen, FOX college football studio analyst

Will Muschamp Fired By South Carolina, 5 Possible Coaching Candidates

South Carolina fired Will Muschamp in his fifth season. Who are 5 possible candidates to replace him?

South Carolina fired Will Muschamp in his fifth season. Who are 5 possible candidates to replace him?


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That Will Muschamp got a fifth year was a minor miracle.

The South Carolina gig is really, really tough.

How many conference championships does the program have? One, and that ACC – not SEC – title was all the way back in 1969 when the team went 7-4 and never beat a team with a winning record.

The program went 4-6-1 in 1970.

Not only does the South Carolina head coach have to contend with the SEC, but it has to deal with that Clemson thing 130 miles up the road.

Will Muschamp was everyone’s hot head coaching prospect back in 2011 when he took over the Florida gig, but he went 28-21 in his four years and way let go before latching on with South Carolina.

He took the Gamecocks to bowl games in his first three seasons, but he went 4-8 last year and was 2-8 in his last ten games. He was able to beat Florida and Georgia once, but his teams were annihilated by Clemson in each of the last four seasons – that’s a no-no for the Gamecock head man.

There’s no ill-will, he’s a likable guy, and he’s very rich, walking away with just over $13 million in a buyout. Assistant coach Mike Bobo – the former Colorado State head man – will fill in for the rest of the season, and now the search is on.

Here are five coaching candidates who athletic director Ray Tanner will at least need to think about.

To begin, let’s start with the one big name being thrown around.

Hugh Freeze, Liberty head coach

No. Just … no.

A big portion of the social media fan base wants him, considering what he’s doing to make Liberty a thing with a huge start to the 2020 season, and there was some success at Ole Miss, but … no.

There’s too much baggage and too many hoops to jump through to make him the South Carolina head man at this point. Besides, how many SEC titles did he win at Ole Miss?

Okay, so he really is a name to be discussed and he really is a good football coach. If Freeze isn’t the guy, he’ll be the baseline comparison for the new hire, making the already pressure-packed job that much more intense.

Again, here are five candidates who at least need to get a phone call.

5. Jamey Chadwell, Coastal Carolina head coach

In so many ways, he makes perfect sense.

Chadwell is young, he’s experienced, he’s been able to work his way up through the lower ranks before being an assistant at Coastal Carolina, where he then built the program up over the last three years from three wins, to five, to a 7-0 start and a likely Sun Belt title.

His teams are aggressive, with a defense that lives in the opposing backfield and an offense that’s Wisconsin-like in the way its able to control the clock and the tempo, only with a more spread-like style.

While his problems were hardly Freeze-level, there is some baggage. The NCAA handed down sanctions at Charleston Southern for violations around players who were supposed to be ineligible because they used scholarship money to buy things – it’s mostly NCAAish stuff that hasn’t mattered in his time at Coastal Carolina.

He’s the type of rising head coach who might need a little bit to get things going at South Carolina, but has a massive upside.

 

4. Scott Satterfield, Louisville head coach

A powerhouse head man at Appalachian State, he ushered in the program’s era to life in the FCS with 40 wins, three Sun Belt championships, and three bowl wins over his last four years before taking the Louisville job. 

The Cardinal program needed some refurbishing, and he stepped right in and turned it into a winner in his first season.

This year there’s a problem. The team is struggling through a 2-6 season with just one ACC win. The Cardinal program still needs work with the 2-10 2018 season not all that long ago, and the schedule is far rougher this season with an improved ACC. However, he’s got a great personality, he’s great around the right people, and he’s a rebuilding type who’ll bring an instant jolt for the offense.

3. Brent Venables, Clemson defensive coordinator

This would be a tough one on a whole slew of levels.

First, Will Muschamp was the superstar defensive coordinator who was destined to be a head coach, and that didn’t exactly work out – Venables might be a bit of a tough sell to parts of the base considering he’s never been a head coach.

Second, he’s been a hot head coaching prospect for the better part of a two decades, and yet he seemed like he found his groove as a star for Clemson after rocking at Oklahoma.

If he is thinking about becoming a head coach, it might be more attractive to think Clemson would be the job if Dabo Swinney ever moved on to the NFL or if and when the Alabama gig opens up.

But it’s worth a call to gauge his interest … and then he’ll stay at Clemson.

2. Duce Staley, Philadelphia Eagles assistant head coach

It’s hardly ever a sure thing when a school hires a former player to take over the coaching job – ask Nebraska and Michigan how that’s working out. However, landing the former Gamecock running back would be a great get for just about anyone, and that’s part of the problem.

Staley is on the short list for NFL head coaching jobs after spending the last few years as Doug Pederson’s right hand man with the Eagles, and took over this offseason when Pederson was positive for the coronavirus.

He knows running backs, he knows offenses, and he’s got the energy and personality to make the South Carolina job all his.

1. Billy Napier, Louisiana head coach

I spent several years begging for schools to hire Lane Kiffin. He was always better than he got credit for, and he was going to be an instant jolt for whatever program wanted to become immediately interesting on a national scale.

And then Ole Miss did it.

Kiffin was No. 1 on the list of coaches who’d rock again at a bigger gig, and Napier was No. 1A.

A high-riser in the assistant coaching world, he spent a few years as Nick Saban’s wide receivers coach before taking the Arizona State offensive coordinator job. A bit young, no head coaching experience, and with the Sun Devils going with Herm Edwards, Napier took the Louisiana job, and he’s been fantastic.

His teams go fast, they’ve had dominant running games, and they win, going 25-11 in just over two years with two division titles and a bowl victory.

Since losing to Mississippi State in a good fight in last year’s opener, his Ragin’ Cajuns have gone 18-3. The three losses? By three to this year’s amazing Coastal Carolina team, and last year twice to an Appalachian State squad that finished 13-1.

He’s just 41, he was an assistant for several years at Clemson, he went to Furman, he knows the area and he’s the Next Coach Up for all the openings that are about to come.

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