OaktownBear;842612428 said:
Well, the minimum offer on the table is a 2 year contract at $2M per.
At the end of the day, I don't care that a coach looks around or plays some leverage in an extension negotiation. Both Braun and Tedford did it. Difference being that when they were in the situation, the stories, if there were any, were that there were programs interested in them, not the other way around. They essentially kept silent through the process and there was no indication that their agents were shopping them (in fact the indications were the agents were talking with Cal). The way Dykes' agent handled this was amateur time and damaging to the program and potentially the relationship. Even if Dykes is at a point where he wants to leave and even if that is Cal's fault, none of that needed to be a media story. You can see the difference in how Cal was responding as well. With Braun and Tedford the implication from Cal's responses was there were active negotiations going on. With Sonny it was - he has an offer, he hasn't responded. Faraudo stated that a Cal source told him twice last week that Dykes has not responded to the offer. They still haven't said that he has.
What is truly astounding to me is that they way this has played out makes the Rich Rodriguez situation smell really sweet. While it appeared that there was a program interested in Rich Rod, it also appeared that he was interested in them. The head coach apparently didn't just have another team knocking on his door where he politely listened and got offered a job and turned it down. No, it appeared that Rich Rod was definitely interested. Makes some sense, he hasn't been gangbusters at Arizona, he has coached in the state before. He gets offered the job and turns it down for reasons we won't really know. Then says he is SO happy to be a Wildcat. BEAR DOWN!!
It REALLY isn't going to make recruits think there is a stable situation when the head coach is interviewing for other jobs, especially when it isn't just "they came to me, so I listened to what they had to say." Rich Rod can spin it all he wants, there will still be a bit of a poor odor and concern about whether he'll bolt in the near future (especially since he hasn't exactly been a long term guy in the past).
But compared to Cal? Arizona looks like a model of stability. How did we get to that position? There is a perception that Sonny's attitude was, "I would rather be elsewhere, but if there are no other Power 5 schools that will hire me, I'll stay at Cal. It may be my last choice among Power 5 schools, but if it is my only choice, I'll stay." That is really bad.
This perception may be COMPLETELY unfair. But we know that in life, often perception is reality. And it appears that the perception that Cal was Sonny's last choice among Power 5 schools is Sonny's fault (or his agent's fault, but that is effectively the same thing). The perception that the first perception is Sonny's fault might be unfair, but it sure looks like Sonny's fault.
Whether it was amateur time or not, it was damaging to the program, and the relationship. Forget about "potentially" damaging to the relationship as you state, there is no "potentially" about it. Maybe the damage to the program and the relationship can be healed. Assuming the end of this story is that Sonny is the 2016 Cal football coach, I sure hope Sonny has a REALLY good story to tell. He definitely needs a good story to tell players and recruits. The damage, however, is there, and the question if Sonny stays is how to minimize the damage both in terms of intensity and duration.
I don't know how much Cal fouled up in this process, it isn't like Cal didn't know a year ago about some dissatisfaction and the desire for an extension, but without being part of the process, it is hard to say for sure what Cal could have done to help avoid the damage to the program.
Unfortunately, I'm not sure how this ends well. Maybe I get surprised and it does. A friend who died almost 5 years ago in his early 50's was somewhat at peace with dying relatively young not having seen Cal in the Rose Bowl, because he figured if he lived to be 100, he still wasn't going to live to see Cal go to the Rose Bowl. The more crap like this goes on, the more I am thinking he was right.