s**********r 发帖数: 497 | | s**********r 发帖数: 497 | 2 有paywall,app可以免费看,第三名你们都想不到! | v**********o 发帖数: 11689 | 3 看不了 你把完整排名贴上来呗
【在 s**********r 的大作中提到】 : 有paywall,app可以免费看,第三名你们都想不到!
| s**********r 发帖数: 497 | 4 [在 violetlvsoso (麦兜) 的大作中提到:]
:看不了 你把完整排名贴上来呗
Stew has been doing this list for a few years now, and I’ve taken delight
in nitpicking his on The Audible for just as long. So it’s only fitting I
stick my neck out there. (Wait, we’re not doing this as a slideshow? Nice.)
Full disclosure: Stew (accidentally?) left off Matt Campbell on his initial
version before I pointed out his gaffe. Here we go:
1. Nick Saban, Alabama. He’s the best coach in college football history.
One blowout loss in the national title game doesn’t change that. He’s won
six national titles in an era when there are more challenges and
distractions than any time before. Assistants come and go and nothing slows
his program down. Since 2004, Saban has had 12 different coordinators in
college football, and eight have gone on to become a head coach. Fourteen of
his assistants have become FBS head coaches, and five have become NFL head
coaches.
2. Dabo Swinney, Clemson. With Urban Meyer stepping down, Swinney, now with
two national titles, is the clear No. 2 behind Saban. His team just whipped
Alabama like no one else ever has beaten a Nick Saban team from Tuscaloosa.
Swinney has created as powerful and desirable a culture as there is in the
sport. And his program is only getting better.
3. Chris Petersen, Washington. All he did was go 92-12 with five top 11
finishes in eight seasons at Boise. After arriving in Seattle, he’s turned
the Huskies into the best program in the Pac-12 with a 32-9 mark the past
three years. He’s also dominated another top 10 guy on this list, Mike
Leach, in the Apple Cup rivalry, and it hasn’t been close.
4. Lincoln Riley, Oklahoma. I went back and forth on having the 35-year-old
Riley up this high this season. He’s only had two seasons as a head coach
but led OU to the Playoff both times and also led transfer QBs to the past
two Heisman Trophies. His 2017 team came within a hair of beating Georgia to
play for the national title. Riley, 24-4, also gets extra credit for his
role as an innovative offensive mind. He and his O-line coach Bill
Bedenbaugh have done some cutting edge work with their scheme that has folks
around the sport, including in the NFL, studying up. Riley also made a
shrewd move going and getting Alex Grinch to take over his defense. | s**********r 发帖数: 497 | 5 5. Jimbo Fisher, Texas A&M. He followed a legend at Florida State and had
six double-digit win seasons in eight years and a national title. He did
exit on a clunker of a 2017 season and the Noles had been backsliding, but
he backed up the hype in College Station with a solid 9-4 debut season.
6. James Franklin, Penn State. His turnaround at Vandy is one of the most
impressive jobs any football coach has done in the past 25 years. He led
Vanderbilt to Top 25 poll finishes in two of his three seasons. And this was
after Vandy hadn’t finished in the Top 25 for more than 60 years (!!)
before Franklin’s arrival, and after inheriting a program that was 4-20 in
the two years before he showed up. Since he left, Vandy’s had five
consecutive losing seasons. Then he went to Penn State and delivered a Big
Ten title and back-to-back Top 10 seasons in arguably the toughest division
in college football for a program still smarting from NCAA sanctions and
scandal. His team went 9-4 in 2018 and finished No. 17. Not bad for a “down
” year.
7. Chip Kelly, UCLA. He had a rocky first season back in the Pac-12, going
just 3-9 after taking over what was a significant rebuild of a program that
was chocked with recruiting busts. But the Bruins did start to perk up as
the season went on, grasping his system and averaging 486 yards per game in
their final four games — about 150 yards more than what they’d done in the
first eight. The guy is a brilliant offensive mind, and his innovations are
all over the sport beyond just the X’s and O’s. Many FBS teams changed
the way they practice and schedule their week because of his influence. But
he’s this high up primarily because he went 46-7 in four seasons at Oregon
and 33-3 in conference play and came within a last-second Auburn field goal
of winning a national title. He took over in 2008 when Pete Carroll and USC
were on top of the sport and the conference and Kelly’s teams went 3-1
against the Trojans, averaging 50 ppg. In his final three seasons in Eugene,
the Ducks’ WORST poll finish was No. 4.
8. Gary Patterson, TCU. He’s won and won and elevated this program back
into the big time. He’s won six league titles in three different
conferences. Even though his program doesn’t have the resources of A&M or
Texas, he’s still had seven Top 10 finishes in the Coaches Poll. Yes, there
have been a few down years sprinkled in, but keep in mind that from 1960 to
1997, TCU had just seven winning seasons. Patterson is a defensive genius
thriving in the most offense-rich league in the sport.
9. Brian Kelly, Notre Dame. A three-time national coach of the year award
winner, Kelly won big in Division II and in the MAC, led a Cincy team from
the Big East to a No. 4 national ranking and has made Notre Dame football a
national force again. Facing a schedule without FCS opponents or cupcakes,
Kelly’s won double-digit games in three of the past four seasons. Since
taking over a program that had bottomed out under Charlie Weis, Kelly got it
back on track and has had ND finish twice in the top five. Kelly’s been
very good at adapting and evolving and has continued to thrive at a place
that usually wears out coaches. He’d be higher on this list if his teams
hadn’t been blown out in their two shots at the national title.
10. Mike Leach, Washington State. He’s the best coach Texas Tech’s ever
had and made Washington State nationally relevant. In the last four years,
the Cougars are 37-15 and 26-10 in Pac-12 play. Unfortunately four of those
Ls are to Washington, and they haven’t been close. Last year Leach did the
best coaching job of anyone in the FBS. He had to replace most of his staff,
lost his best defensive player and steer a program that was coping with the
tragic loss of Tyler Hilinski. The Cougars ended up winning 11 games for
the first time in school history. One other thing: Leach doesn’t have a
coaching tree. He has a coaching forest.
11. Jim Harbaugh, Michigan. He’s earned his spot in my top 25 if for no
other reason than the turnaround he led in taking Stanford from being the
worst power conference program into one that got the best of Pete Carroll’s
dynasty at USC and was winning BCS bowls. He went to the NFL and led a
49ers franchise that had been spinning its wheels into the NFC championship
— twice — and a Super Bowl. And that was after a run of eight consecutive
losing years. At Michigan, the hype has been staggering and he’s gone 38-14
and 26-9 in Big Ten play. For context: Before Harbaugh came home to Ann
Arbor, Michigan was in a 55–46 (30-34 in conference) stretch. And yes, I
know, he still hasn’t beaten archrival Ohio State. That’s why he’s not in
my top five despite all of the above, but it also doesn’t invalidate all
of the other success he’s had. | s**********r 发帖数: 497 | 6 12. Kirby Smart, Georgia. The Nick Saban protégé took over a good program
from Mark Richt and elevated it. Smart’s built a recruiting machine in
Athens, and he seems primed to move up this list quite a bit. After opening
with an 8-5 (4-4 SEC) season, they’ve since dominated the SEC East and are
14-2 in league play the last two years. They also came within a sniff of the
national title a year ago. His team has given Bama fits the past two years
but also has been blown out by three touchdowns against Auburn and LSU.
13. David Shaw, Stanford. The former Stanford wideout has done an excellent
job building on what Harbaugh did in Palo Alto. Under Shaw, Stanford has
three top 10 finishes in his eight seasons, has gone to three Rose Bowls and
is 55-17 in Pac-12 play. In the past two seasons, the Cardinal has tailed
off a touch, going 18-9, but Shaw is still one of the best coaches in the
sport.
14. Dino Babers, Syracuse. He’s providing a ton of energy to what was a
program mired in a long tailspin. Babers, with his rousing postgame locker
room speeches and high-octane big-play offense, just led the Orange to a 10-
win season after inheriting a 4-8 squad. At Eastern Illinois, his team went
12-2 in his second season after being 2-9 the year before he showed up. Then
he went 10-3 at Bowling Green, and the Falcons won just nine games in the
three seasons after he left.
15. Matt Campbell, Iowa State. He is one of the hottest coaching commodities
in football, and with good reason. The Cyclones are 16-10 the past two
seasons and have three wins against teams ranked in the top six. The 39-year
-old Mount Union grad has set the foundation, thriving in one of the
toughest jobs in Power 5 football. Prior to Iowa State he was 35-15 at
Toledo.
16. Pat Fitzgerald, Northwestern. He’s Mr. Northwestern. He’s 44 and he’s
already coached his alma mater for 13 seasons. The Wildcats just won the
Big Ten West, have finished in the top 25 three of the past four years and
are on a three-game bowl winning streak.
17. Kyle Whittingham, Utah. His teams are always tough and physical. When
you see the Utes play from field level, you gain a special appreciation for
them. They’re nasty. Always. Under Whittingham, the Utes have averaged nine
wins over the past five seasons, and he is an eye-popping 11-2 in bowl
games.
18. Tom Herman, Texas. A big second season at UT, going 10-4 with an
impressive bowl win against Georgia, bumped the 43-year-old Herman up a few
spots. He brought an edge to Houston from Ohio State, won big games and
parlayed a 22-4 record into the big Longhorn job. Another top 10 finish
might be good enough to earn him a spot in my top 10 next year. | s**********r 发帖数: 497 | 7 19. Jeff Monken, Army. If I did this list a year ago, I would have had a
different service academy coach around this spot. Navy’s Ken Niumatalolo is
still deserving, but I’m going with Monken. A top 20 poll finish with the
Black Knights — their first in 60 years — has the 51-year-old’s stock
soaring. This has been an amazing turnaround. Monken is the first Army coach
to notch consecutive 10-win seasons. The program had averaged fewer than
three wins a year the 14 seasons before he was hired. He also did an
outstanding job at Georgia Southern, going 38-16.
20. David Cutcliffe, Duke. What he’s done in Durham is remarkable. In the
past six seasons, Duke is averaging almost eight wins. The Blue Devils were
4-42 in the previous four seasons before he was hired. He’s turned a
doormat program into a very respectable one. They’ve been to six bowl games
since 2012. They’d been to just two in the prior half-century. Before that
he was 44-29 at Ole Miss and was eventually canned by a mediocre AD after
one down season.
21. Mark Dantonio, Michigan State. People forget how mediocre the Spartans
were under John L. Smith before Dantonio was hired. Dantonio rebuilt this
program into a big problem for arch-rival Michigan. From 2010-2015, his
teams won 11 or more five times. Since then, Michigan State is 20-18 as the
division has gotten tougher with Meyer and the arrivals of Franklin and
Harbaugh, but this is still one of the sport’s top coaches.
22. Scott Frost, Nebraska. Like one of his mentors, Chip Kelly, Frost had a
rough first season back home last year, but things looked up by the end of
the season. His brief stint at UCF transformed a winless operation into an
astonishing one that went 13-0 by year two, and that merits him a spot here.
23. Mike Gundy, Oklahoma State. His teams have been excellent basically
since he went on his “I’m a man. I’m 40!” rant 11 years ago. In the past
nine years, he’s led OSU to six double-digit win seasons. Overall, he’s
121-59. The downside: only one Top 10 finish.
24. Dan Mullen, Florida. Meyer’s protégé did a very good job in
Starkville, leaving things better than he found them. His 33-39 record in
SEC play won’t wow anyone, but it did come in the roughest division in
college football during that stretch. Mullen put together a strong first
season at Florida, going 10-3, although it did have two blowout losses.
Still, he was able to get Florida back in the top 10, his first top 10
finish as a head coach.
25. (tie) Jeff Brohm, Purdue. He’s turned down some big-time jobs in his
two seasons at Purdue. Last year it was Tennessee. This year it was his alma
mater, Louisville. A fantastic play-caller, Brohm went 30-10 in three years
at Western Kentucky. That program flopped after he departed. He has made
the Boilers interesting and landed some blue-chip talent. The 13-13 record
isn’t spectacular, but they did post three Top 25 wins in 2018, including
blowout wins against Ohio State and BC.
25. (tie) Matt Rhule, Baylor. NFL GMs like him, and it’s not hard to see
why. His teams are physical and play hard. He’s got a track record of
developing talent and always seems to say the right thing, which is key in
the job he’s in at Baylor given the mess he is charged with helping clean
up. In his first head coaching job at Temple, he went 2-10 in year one but
went on to go 20-7 by years three and four and 14-2 in the AAC. Last year
his Bears were one of the most improved teams in the country, going from 1-
11 to 7-6 and a bowl win. | v**********o 发帖数: 11689 | 8 赞
感觉大宝排高了,金宝鱼排低了,你的偶像也排低了
.)
initial
won
【在 s**********r 的大作中提到】 : [在 violetlvsoso (麦兜) 的大作中提到:] : :看不了 你把完整排名贴上来呗 : Stew has been doing this list for a few years now, and I’ve taken delight : in nitpicking his on The Audible for just as long. So it’s only fitting I : stick my neck out there. (Wait, we’re not doing this as a slideshow? Nice.) : Full disclosure: Stew (accidentally?) left off Matt Campbell on his initial : version before I pointed out his gaffe. Here we go: : 1. Nick Saban, Alabama. He’s the best coach in college football history. : One blowout loss in the national title game doesn’t change that. He’s won : six national titles in an era when there are more challenges and
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| s**********r 发帖数: 497 | 9 我偶像主要是年年输UW有了硬伤
[在 violetlvsoso (麦兜) 的大作中提到:]
:赞
:感觉大宝排高了,金宝鱼排低了,你的偶像也排低了
:initial
:won |
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