But some schools have yet to pull the trigger, and it is for those wayward programs that Hey Jenny Slater Consulting p.l.c. is humbly submitting a series of suggestions for their ideal head honchos. And yes, after witnessing a consultant's branding presentation at my job earlier this week, I've decided that the whole "consulting" gig is definitely something I want in on. Six figures to tell people stuff they already know for a couple hours at a time? Sign my ass up, brother.
Anyway, we'll start with a big-name SEC program that's near and dear to my heart, partly because I have to drive right by it on my way to visit my parents in Georgia, partly because I've dated a string of alumnae from this institution that defies explanation.
Auburn University
Previous coach: Tommy Tuberville.
Fired because: He apparently did some mescaline round about the first week of December 2007 and decided "I'm going to switch to a spread offense," a decision whose randomness and myopia rivaled the Bush administration's hard-on for Iraq in the wake of 9/11. Proceeded to go 5-7 (2-6 SEC) and bring his 6-0 run against Alabama to a thunderous, Phantom-jet-into-a-concrete-wall halt, sending a clear signal to the world that the Auburn program was preparing to bend over for the Tide for years to come.
What they need:
• A splashy hire with enough celebrity oomph to steal a little bit of Nick Saban's thunder.
• Someone's who's willing to work, at least temporarily, in the shadow of another name-brand program.
• An innovator who will respect Auburn's run-first, defensive-minded tradition while modernizing it in a few critically needed areas.
HJS Consulting recommends:
Sarah Palin
An energetic, relatively young, outside-the-box leader who has made more out of being a second banana than perhaps anyone in the nation. Will immediately inject some excitement back into a struggling program; her off-the-charts Q rating amongst red-staters will immediately put Auburn back on a par with Alabama in terms of statewide, if not national, relevance. Strong on defense, or at least claims to be, and can deftly navigate the thorny tradition-vs.-modernization dilemma by publicly claiming to have said "thanks but no thanks" to the spread offense while secretly implementing a number of aspects of the spread in her offensive playbook. Also much hotter than Nick Saban.
Caveats: Will probably attempt to compensate for her near-total lack of experience by claiming that she's an offensive mastermind because she watched a New England Patriots game once. So-so at best in press conferences. A calculated risk for pursuing another higher-profile job after three seasons.
Next up: Mississippi State, who at this point will probably hand the office keys to the next able-bodied individual who crosses the Oktibbeha County line.
Will they add "Pit Bulls" to their ever expanding roster of mascots?
ReplyDeleteShe will be anti-playoff citing, "If the BCS was good enough for college football's founding fathers, it is good enough for me!"
ReplyDeleteShe will also trash talk Tide fans: "Those guys are jerks!"
Oh, how I would love to see your recommendations/column in the Post - though I do not know who you should replace - Wilbon? Great stuff!!!
ReplyDeleteWho's going to replace Richt at UGA?
ReplyDeleteSince you opened the door to a political discussion...
ReplyDeleteNotice how the incoming administration is starting to look and sound like the current administration? Where's the "progressive" agenda?
OK, I'll bite: How is Obama's administration/transition team/whatever "starting to look and sound like" the Bush administration?
ReplyDeleteObama=BushIII
ReplyDeleteHe's flippin' like a carp out of water.
I'm so happy about Obama/Biden!
ReplyDeleteInterestingly true:
ReplyDeleteRaising taxes on the wealthy is off the table.
We'll be in Iraq through 2011.
Doesn't look like Gitmo's going anywhere.
Wiretapping won't change.
Record spending.
Sounds like Bush III.