Jeff82;430259 said:
Maybe Rivera can do it, maybe he can't. I'm just saying that it's speculative. Anything we do short of bringing in a coach who has had demonstrated success in a BCS conference school is a risk, which may at this point be worth taking, but a risk.
I follow LSU football because that's where our kids are located. Les Miles runs a defense oriented program with occasional offensive stars taking it to the next level. He would meet your criteria, however there are zero candidates that meet the requirement of demonstrable success at a school like Cal. Again looking at LSU and comparing
1. Cal is an academic institution, LSU and most of the SEC is not.
2. Cal has high almost Ivy League admissions standards, LSU is a 4 year community college.
3. Cal is impacted by state budget cuts, long time sports, like baseball are being eliminated. LSU is cutting dozens of professors but big time sports like Baseball and football are fully protected.
4. Cal has a limited local talent base, LSU is in the middle of a deep talent pool, supplying top prospects to LSU, Florida, Texas, and even USC.
5. Cal has a modest fan base (we do look good compard to Furd and SD State). LSU has a big time fan base, amazing considering the economic demographic differences.
6. Cal football is not a religious experience. LSU the coach is a 'football saviour'.
In terms of desirability, the Cal HC position likely ranks in the top 50. Considering that there are probably less than 20 succesfull, long term (4+ years) HCs in BCS conferences and to get that high a number you have to include coaches who have never won a conference championship, just had winning records. A highly successful BCS HC is not going to head to Cal unless he's been recently fired or blacklisted, AKA Mike Leach. That won't be a source for a new Cal head coach. Perhaps the best source of a new HC would be from a FCS school where the Cal position would likely be a step up.
I suspect Ron Rivera is not political enough to be successful as a HC in the NFL and most colleges. His ouster at Chicago demonstrated the. The Chargers hired him as a linebacker coach, mainly because he was available. He had just missed on a couple of head coach positions and coming in as a coordinator would make him a threat to the current HC. San Diego had a horrible defense to start the season, the HC, an offensive guru, sacrificed the defensive coordinator to save his job. Rivera was a temporary fix. Winning 11 straight games to close the regular season let him keep his job. He is in an odd position, SD got him for a bargain price, then promoted him on an interim basis, and being in "Cheap diego" means that he is likely not being paid a commensurate salary. I would ponder his loyalty to the NFL world; maybe the college world would look good to him.