Walt Harris fired at Stanford

devilfan02

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STANFORD, Calif. -- Walt Harris was fired Monday as Stanford's football coach, two days after finishing the worst season in more than four decades at the school.


Athletic director Bob Bowlsby announced the decision after a morning meeting with Harris. The Cardinal (1-11) finished their season with a 26-17 loss to rival California in the Big Game on Saturday.

"This has been a tough year," Bowlsby said. "In some respects this decision was not made as a result of a 1-11 season as much as not seeing the progress in critical areas we would have liked to see the last two years."

Harris had a 6-17 record in the first two years of his five-year contract. Details of his buyout are being worked out. Bowlsby said he'd like to have a search for a new coach completed in two weeks.

Harris' team was devastated by injuries this season and finished with the most losses in school history and the worst record since an 0-10 mark in 1960.

The Cardinal have struggled mightily since Tyrone Willingham left for Notre Dame following the 2001 season. They have not had a winning season in five years under Buddy Teevens and Harris.

"Regretfully, I leave with a heavy heart, because we didn't get the job done," Harris said. "I wish the Stanford players and the program the best of luck as they rebuild."

A season that began with optimism because of a renovated stadium and the return of several skill players on offense, quickly became a disaster for the Cardinal.

After blowing a 20-point lead the second game of the season to San Jose State, the Cardinal didn't take another lead at any point in a game until beating Washington 20-3 for their only win Nov. 11.

Big-play receiver Mark Bradford went down with a season-ending foot injury in the season week and receiver Evan Moore missed four games with a foot injury.

Starting fullback Nick Frank ended his football career two games into the season after being diagnosed with a narrowing of a vertebra in his spine.

Then quarterback Trent Edwards, who battled injuries most of his career, went down for the season in the first quarter against Arizona on Oct. 14.

"Clearly the injuries were a factor this year in terms of how well we performed in some of the games," Bowlsby said.

With the team also needing to replace 10 defensive starters from last season, the results were predictably horrid and the new stadium was usually half-filled.

Bowlsby said the attendance was a factor in his decision, saying the football team plays a big role in raising revenue for other programs at the school.

"No question it was a factor," he said. "People vote with their pocket books and vote with their feet."

http://sports.espn.go.com/ncf/news/story?id=2685975
 

MaoTosiFanClub

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This would've been Chow's job had he not bombed the interview.

Interesting to see who they'll go after, Tom O'Brien would be a good fit considering he's used to academic requirements and private school mentality. Stanford could probably pay more than BC (although not as much as ASU who's also interested) if they want him that bad.
 
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devilfan02

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This would've been Chow's job had he not bombed the interview.

Interesting to see who they'll go after, Tom O'Brien would be a good fit considering he's used to academic requirements and private school mentality. Stanford could probably pay more than BC (although not as much as ASU who's also interested) if they want him that bad.

Agree. O'brien makes 750K per year at BC so he would get a payraise at nearly every PAC school. He almost left for Washington a couple years ago so he will listen to other job opps. He is a great recruiter, especially as you said with academic requirements/small talent pool. He's a great coach and it would be bad news for us if he went to Stanford
 

MaoTosiFanClub

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O'Brien's not that good of a recruiter, look no further than the amount of players he puts into the NFL. He's one of those coaches though whose players are intelligent, sound fundamentally and always in the right spot which allows him to compete with the Miami, Va. Tech, and FSU's of the world who are getting elite athletes every year. BAsically the type of coach Stanford should hire.

Still not sure about him at ASU, the Devil faithful and AD seem to want to go after a guy who can win championships and I'm not sure O'Brien will ever do that. His personality seems to fit a small school with marginal expectations better than an ASU who needs a dynamic personality to go up against Tedford, Carroll and such.
 

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O'Brien's not that good of a recruiter, look no further than the amount of players he puts into the NFL. He's one of those coaches though whose players are intelligent, sound fundamentally and always in the right spot which allows him to compete with the Miami, Va. Tech, and FSU's of the world who are getting elite athletes every year. BAsically the type of coach Stanford should hire.

Still not sure about him at ASU, the Devil faithful and AD seem to want to go after a guy who can win championships and I'm not sure O'Brien will ever do that. His personality seems to fit a small school with marginal expectations better than an ASU who needs a dynamic personality to go up against Tedford, Carroll and such.

Yes, I think Russ Smith would be a bitter fit at ASU. California ties, smartest on ASFN.....can't miss hire.
 
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devilfan02

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O'Brien's not that good of a recruiter, look no further than the amount of players he puts into the NFL. He's one of those coaches though whose players are intelligent, sound fundamentally and always in the right spot which allows him to compete with the Miami, Va. Tech, and FSU's of the world who are getting elite athletes every year. BAsically the type of coach Stanford should hire.

Still not sure about him at ASU, the Devil faithful and AD seem to want to go after a guy who can win championships and I'm not sure O'Brien will ever do that. His personality seems to fit a small school with marginal expectations better than an ASU who needs a dynamic personality to go up against Tedford, Carroll and such.

IMO, O'Brien is a above average recruiter. Not many elite prospects want to play at a school like BC when they could go to other big time football schools on the East Coast (Miami, VT, FSU, Fl, etc...). Also, he can only recruit athletes who have the academic resume to get into BC. With what he has to work with, I think he does a good job recruiting. He's competitive in the ACC which leads me to believe he would do much better, especially at a school with no academic requirements.

I agree with your assesment that there are questions surrounding his ability to take a program to the top. I would have faith that he could come here and recruit very well, play solid defense, and run a tight ship. Thats what I want the most out our next HC and I think he fits that description. I'm sick of all the crap- penalties, missed assignments, trouble off the field, etc. As you said above, he gets his players to play solid fundemental football, something Dirk couldn't do to save his life.

I'm a Tom O'brien homer (I've said I wanted him since before Koetters extension last year) and I think he'd be great here. There are other great/big candidates which I believe LL will hire but I hope she looks at O'Brien
 

Diamondback Jay

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Leaving Pitt sure was a good idea wasn't it?

Nothing will be more humorous than seeing this pompous prick coaching Louisiana Tech next year.. Wait.. This season's debacle was more funny than that.. Nevermind.

As for Stanford, Tom O'Brien's an interesting name for that job. Question is, would he really leave a stable job at BC for a complete rebuilding process?
 

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I have heard Dick Tomey's name come up for this job. He has done wonders at San Jose St.
 

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Why would O'Brien leave BC- a top 3 ACC school, for Stanford, the dweller of the Pac-10? I dont see it.
 
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devilfan02

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We were simply saying he would be a good/natural fit at Stanford. I would expect Stanford to target Steve Kragthorpe and Norm Chow. The Stanford AD who pulled the plug on Chow at the last second is gone and I'd expect the new AD to interview him quick.
 
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devilfan02

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Why would O'Brien leave BC- a top 3 ACC school, for Stanford, the dweller of the Pac-10? I dont see it.

Oddly enough.....

Stanford poses problem

The Cardinal may be interested in the same head coaching candidates as Arizona State


Jeff Metcalfe
The Arizona Republic
Dec. 5, 2006 12:00 AM

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A second Pac-10 football coaching opening at Stanford could impact Arizona State.

Tom O'Brien and Norm Chow, both believed to be ASU candidates, also could be on the list of Stanford Athletic Director Bob Bowlsby. Stanford fired Walt Harris after two seasons on Monday and wants to name a new coach within two weeks.

ASU is in the second week of its search for a replacement for Dirk Koetter.
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Chow was runner-up when Harris was hired by Stanford in December 2004, before Bowlsby was athletic director.

Sources said Monday that Chow, the Tennessee Titans offensive coordinator, has been contacted about the ASU job and that Dave McGinnis, Titans defensive coordinator, has not.

O'Brien, the winningest coach in Boston College history, also is believed to be on ASU Athletic Director Lisa Love's short list. Love was out of town over the weekend.

Chow told the Decatur (Ala.) Daily on Sunday that he was contacted by Alabama officials before Mike Shula was fired.

"I'm not interested in the Alabama job. I am very happy right where I am now," he said.

Whether he feels the same toward ASU is uncertain. Chow, 60, was USC offensive coordinator when Love was USC senior associate AD. He has never been a head coach but has 32 years of collegiate coaching experience and worked with three Heisman Trophy-winning quarterbacks.

O'Brien, 58, is in a situation not unlike recently hired ASU men's basketball coach Herb Sendek was at North Carolina State. He is underpaid by market standards and perhaps underappreciated at Boston College, where he has a 75-45 record in 10 years with the longest current bowl winning streak (six).

Boston College has won its last four games against Notre Dame, although the schools have not met since Charlie Weis became Irish coach.

O'Brien was a finalist at Washington two years ago but pulled out when Huskies officials dragged their feet on an offer. Asked then if he would stay at Boston College forever, O'Brien told the Boston Herald, "The only person I've ever said forever to is my wife."

Neil Cornrich, O'Brien's agent, said Monday, "Due to attorney-client privilege, I can't comment on it (ASU) one way or the other."

O'Brien does not have a buyout in his contract, critical in ASU's search because of $2.85 million owed to Koetter. O'Brien reportedly makes $733,626 annually at Boston College, less than Koetter's $950,000.

Boston College won nine games for a third consecutive season. The No. 23-ranked Eagles will play Navy in the Meineke Car Care Bowl in Charlotte, N.C., on Dec. 30.

Detroit Lions offensive coordinator Mike Martz, Texas-El Paso head coach Mike Price, LSU defensive coordinator Bo Pelini and Michigan defensive coordinator Ron English are among those with interest in the ASU job. Talks with Price do not appear to have proceeded past a preliminary level.

First-year UCLA defensive coordinator DeWayne Walker is on some head-coaching lists coming off the Bruins' 13-9 upset of USC. He has seven years of NFL assistant coaching experience with New England, the Giants and Washington.


• ASU begins practice for the Hawaii Bowl today and Wednesday before a two-day break for final exams.
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http://www.azcentral.com/sports/asu/articles/1205asufoot1205.html
 
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