Conventional wisdom heading into this college football season has been that there is unlikely to be much coaching turnover.
Between pandemic-related revenue losses and the complications of trying to evaluate performance under such unusual circumstances, the coaching carousel figured to be quiet.
Then Michigan started 1-2 in its sixth season under coach Jim Harbaugh. The 23rd-ranked Wolverines yes, they were still ranked lost 38-21 at No. 13 Indiana on Saturday, snapping a 24-game winning streak against the Hoosiers that dated to 1987.
Harbaugh has only one more season left after this on his original contract, which has made him one of the highest-paid head coaches in college football.
The khaki-clad former Wolverines quarterback’s return to Ann Arbor as a savior, made Michigan better, became a content machine for sports media and lost all five games vs. Ohio State. Whatever shortcomings Harbaugh has had at Michigan, his teams have never won fewer than eight regular-season games and rarely lost to the opponents Michigan is supposed to beat.
Michigan is supposed to beat Indiana. Michigan is supposed to beat a Michigan State team that has now sandwiched losses to Rutgers and Iowa (49-7) around a victory at the Big House.
Youre playing good teams every week,” Harbaugh said. “Weve got to get there fast.
The Big Ten is such a mess there is probably a path to a respectable season for Michigan, but it’s pretty clear the program is trending in the wrong direction.
Firing Harbaugh after a truncated and odd season just does not seem like the Michigan way. The more interesting question at this point: Does Harbaugh want to do this anymore? His contract situation is unheard of in college football, where schools are more likely to rush into a bad extension than let a winning coach get close to walk year.
It’s difficult to forecast where this could be going, but a scenario in which Harbaugh decides he has done all he can do with the job and he moves on without hurting Michigan financial seems plausible.
If the Michigan job opens up it is liable to knock over a few dominos.
Is an Ohio State man what Michigan needs? Former Buckeyes player and assistant coach Luke Fickell has No. 6 Cincinnati looking like a legitimate playoff contender. He turned down the Michigan State job when it opened unusually late in the cycle. The better question is: Would Fickell betray his roots to coach the School up North?
The most obvious solution for Michigan might be in the Big 12. Iowa State’s Matt Campbell’s overall record (30-27 with the Cyclones) might not be enough to impress Michigan fans, but he is having uncommon success in Ames.
What has become apparent is the pandemic is not going to cause the coaching carousel to come to a halt. Already Southern Mississippi and Utah State as of Saturday are in the market.
Things are not trending in good direction for Derek Mason at Vanderbilt. Maybe South Carolina stumbles badly enough to cause the school to make a move on Will Muschamp.
Another one to keep an eye on is Virginia Tech. Justin Fuente’s dalliance with Baylor after last season did not sit well in Blacksburg. A good season for the Hokies could have calmed the situation. Instead, Virginia Tech is 4-3 after Fuente and his staff botched the end of a home loss to No. 25 Liberty and Hugh Freeze.
In a normal offseason, Freeze would almost certainly be bouncing to a bigger program even with all his baggage after what he has done with the Flames.
Just how silly this silly season gets, though, will be determined by Michigan and Harbaugh.
AROUND THE COUNTRY: The Pac-12 canceled two games before it played one. Not a great sign, but the conference launched with exactly what it hoped to get out of its breakfast time kickoff in Los Angeles. No. 20 USC’s late rally against Arizona State in Fox’s noon window was one of the game’s of the day. And the presidential race was called early enough so that the broadcast was not interrupted by the day’s big names … But later more tough news out of the Pac-12. Before its prime-time marquee game of the day, Stanford announced quarterback Davis Mills would not play because of COVID-19 protocols against No. 12 Oregon. … The recruiting machine is still pumping talent into No. 5 Georgia at a high rate, but Bulldogs fans have to be lamenting a lost season and what could been with a normal offseason and Jamie Newman at quarterback? … A Florida-Alabama SEC championship game does not look like a good path for getting two teams from the conference in the playoff. … Current state of the Big Ten: Penn State, Michigan and Nebraska are a combined 1-7. Indiana, Northwestern and Purdue: 8-0. .. If Indiana can beat Michigan State next week, the Hoosiers will match a school record with five consecutive Big Ten victories and set up a huge East Division matchup at No. 3 Ohio State on Nov. 21. Strange season. … Keeping players engaged during this strange season could be challenging for coaches. Penn State getting drubbed at home by Maryland might be Exhibit A. … Every week that passes this college football season, the idea of putting No. 9 BYU or Cincinnati in the playoff looks better.
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Follow Ralph D. Russo at https://twitter.com/ralphDrussoAP and listen at https://westwoodonepodcasts.com/pods/ap-top-25-college-football-podcast/
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