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Doomed to Failure: The Bill Callahan ClusterFool

As Husker players have finally broken their silence about Bill Callahan, we're finally getting an idea of just how screwed up the Nebraska football program was during Bill Callahan's four years as head football coach.  Not that some signs weren't apparent all along, but not everyone recognized them.  Some couldn't see them, some didn't want to see them, some ignored them and hoped that they weren't as bad as they seemed, and some just denied that there was anything wrong in Lincoln.

Before you can really move on, sometimes you've just got to get these things out of your system.  I think that's what we've heard from Matt Slauson and Cody Glenn this week.  We may hear from some more players.  That's fine for now.  Get it out of your system.  But let's get it over with now and close the book on this sad chapter in Nebraska football history.  That allows us to move on and start looking forward to a new era at NU.  One we all hope is better than the one we just closed the book on.

With that in mind, here's my take on why Bill Callahan was doomed to failure right from the start:

Steve Pederson

Let's face it.  Some fans never got over Pederson's dismissal of Frank Solich.  Myself included.  Did we give Bill Callahan a chance?  I'd like to think I did, but I can also see the point of view that I didn't.  At the very least, Callahan didn't get the benefit of the doubt from some fans right from the start.  Did those negative vibes take their toll on the program?  I'd argue yes...but even then, it was only a contributing, secondary factor.

Coaching Staff
One ill effect of Steve Pederson's coaching circus is that by the time Callahan was hired, every other college football coach was already busy in the middle of recruiting season.  So, Callahan put together the best staff he could.  And with Pederson's obsession with recruiting, the staff went heavy with recruiters.  And while recruiting is important, it became clear over time that this staff wasn't very cohesive.

Or particularly strong when it came to game day.  Ask Oklahoma fans about John Blake.  Ask Wisconsin fans about Kevin Cosgrove.

Reports of dissension amongst the coaches first came up in the Iowa State game in 2004 when people outside the Husker locker room heard arguments underway as to how the Huskers should attack the Cyclones.  A heavy passing attack led to a 27-7 Cyclone lead, and ironically a switch to a rushing attack got the Big Red back into that game.  Dissension became more obvious in the departures of Scott Downing and John Blake, and became public with the comments of Dennis Wagner after Callahan was terminated.

Player Relationships
We should have seen it coming when he was hired; his "dumbest team in America" comment was still echoing throughout the football world when he arrived in Lincoln, days after being fired by the Raiders.  But then we saw many other players (including two team captains) quit with negative comments about Callahan.  Now we're hearing similar comments from Matt Slauson and Cody Glenn.  I don't think they are the last we'll read in the paper either.


'Nuff said.

The Playbook
Callahan's NFL sized playbook simply overwhelmed players.  Thousands of plays...all in search of perfection. Players only got a limited amount of time to digest each part of the playbook before the next lesson... there was no time to teach or correct things during practice because the coaching staff had already moved on to the next lesson.  So each player muddled through as best they could.  And boy, did it show on gameday.  Sometimes running three or more different plays on each snap, as confusion reigned supreme.

The funny thing is that oh so often, the opponent was better prepared for what Nebraska was trying to do than Nebraska was. Or was that the sad thing.  Or was it so pathetic it was funny?

In any extent, I really question just how well Callahan understood the college game.  Callahan struggled at times with understanding college rules.  In the NFL, he could use the radio to send in playcalls, but when he had to signal calls in, the calls got messed up so often that both Joe Dailey and Sam Keller had to run to the sidelines after each play to get the next play call. And with the size of his playbook, he never was able to trim it down to something that college players could master. Certainly not first year quarterbacks, even with a spring practice to learn it.  Not Joe Dailey, not Zac Taylor in 2005, not Sam Keller.

Inconsistent Playcalling
A few years ago, I used to play a lot of golf.  And when I said I played a lot of golf...it's because I stunk.  It took me a lot of shots (and golf balls) to finish a round.  A retired Air Force officer once called my game "Military Golf".  Ball goes left, ball goes right, ball goes left, ball goes right.  Left, right, left, right.  If you averaged my shots though...they averaged right down the middle of the fairway, even though the only time I actually spent in the middle of the fairway was as I walked from one rough to the other side.  Same with Bill Callahan's play calling.  Sure, if you averaged it out, frequently it looked balanced, but most of the time it was anything but.  Sometimes Callahan "pounded the rock", like in most of 2006.  Other times, it was an aerial circus.  Unbalanced playcalling burned Callahan several times, such as against Iowa State and Southern Miss in 2004, Kansas in 2005 and 2007, and USC in 2006.

Embarassing Gaffes
Let's face it.  Billy C had his share of embarassing moments.  "Dumbest Team in America."  "F'in Hillbillies!"  The throat-slash.  "I'm doing an excellent job." "It's probably too technical for you."  Over time, it led Callahan to isolate himself, away from the public spotlight.  The more isolated he became, the less people associated with Callahan.  Occasionally he'd say the right thing, but you got the idea they were scripted words placed in his mouth.

Recruiting Overemphasis
I touched on this with coaching.  But it deserves it's own section.  In Callahan's first season, despite the awfulness on display on the field, we were promised that his recruiting would solve everything.  But it never materialized.  Highly recruited players like Harrison Beck and Leon Jackson left the program in somewhat dubious circumstances.  Over time, fans realized that recruiting was only part of the equation when Nebraska got repeatedly blown out by teams with lower rated recruiting classes (Missouri, Kansas, Oklahoma State).

Overall Managment
Over time, Bill Callahan had his share of head scratchers that made me wonder just what was going through his mind.  First one had to be calling for a field-goal from the 1 foot line at Pitt in 2004. (Snap botched, no points scored, I'm screaming obscenities for five minutes.)  Sending Beau Davis in to replace Joe Dailey at Texas Tech and asking him to throw the ball over and over for five turnovers which turned a 35-10 loss into a 70-10 blowout. Letting Zac Taylor get assaulted late in the game against Missouri and Kansas in 2005.  Throwing the ball on 3rd down against Texas in 2006 when the Longhorns had the wind and clock working against them.  Fake punt against Auburn. Not giving Joe Ganz a shot until a struggling Sam Keller broke his collarbone at Texas.


He's all yours now!
I'm sure there are many other examples I've missed here.  (And I've probably missed some even bigger examples.)  But this wasn't intended to be a comprehensive indictment of Bill Callahan.  It's simply not necessary to lay out everything he did wrong.  He's gone.  He's now the problem of New York Jets fans everywhere.

We just needed to get this out of our system, and learn what went wrong so hopefully we aren't doomed to repeat it.

And so we're not still discussing this this fall. Get this out of our system now, and let's move on.

Poll
When did you realize Bill Callahan wasn't the right coach for Nebraska?
  • Ball State up 2 scores on Nebraska in the 4th quarter
  • Oklahoma State 45, Nebraska 14
  • I didn't believe in him when Steve Pederson hired him in the first place.
  • Southern Miss 21, Nebraska 17 (2004)
  • Texas Tech 70, Nebraska 10 (2004)
  • No Bowl Game in 2004
  • Kansas 40, Nebraska 15 (2005)
  • USC 28, Nebraska 10 (2006)
  • Five losses in 2006
  • USC Leading Nebraska 42-10 in the third quarter in Lincoln

  293 votes | Results

0 recs | Comment 7 comments

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Never was sure

what to think of Callahan.  Just when I'd give up, they'd go on a run like at the end of 2005 or 2006.  I reserved judgment in 2004 (because of the transition to new systems, bla bla bla), but had all but given up in '05 after the 7-6 debacle that was the Pitt game (well before the disaster that was losing 40-15 to Kansas) when Nebraska rolled out the "Restore the Order" t-shirts for the CU game.  From there into 2006, it was seeming like Callahan and the staff was finally starting to "get it."

There were signs that something was horribly, horribly wrong, though.  Red flags should have gone off when Nebraska was running a so-called "West Coast Offense" for three years without calling a single quick slant pass.  Or that Callahan's passing game was just as screwed on 3rd and more than 6 as Solich's single-wing running attack.

The fumblitis that plagued Solich's teams from the 1999 Colorado debacle until he was fired simply morphed into interception-itis, with the exception of 2006, when Zac Taylor managed to bring things under control (save the Big XII Championship).  (Just think how bad things would have been without Zac Taylor, btw)

For the record, I was in favor of firing Solich (actually thought he should have been fired in 2002).  Even after the bounce-back in 2003, it still seemed to me as if certain systemic problems weren't being addressed.  As I often tell people, the wheels may have come off the Solich bus during the 2001 Colorado game, but the lugnuts were already loose long before that.  But not being a Solich guy didn't make me a Callahan or Pederson guy -- the whole transition was a fiasco, and I was just happy not to have Houston Nutt.

I guess the big lesson of the last 4 years is this: you can't spell Bad Coach without the initials "B.C."

Got Corn?

by huskerlibrarian on Mar 29, 2008 9:51 AM CDT   0 recs

I

think it traces all the way back to the retirement of Bob Devaney in 1993 and the hiring of "Dollar Bill" Byrne.  There was no way Byrne could fire T.O. Period.  Byrne did some great things for the football program but it seems the program was beginning to lose it's soul during the championship years.  It ultimately lost it when T.O. retired from coaching.

And maybe Solich was never the perfect fit.  I'm certain he was a good man (vices aside) and he was a good coach.  He also had BIG shoes to fill and never lived up to the skyhigh expectations that everyone (myself included) had for the program after the 1997 season.

Then came the Boulder Beatdown in November of 2001 and the subsequent loss to Miami in the Rose Bowl.  The "Nebraska mystique" was gone.  Faith in Solich was waning amongst the fans.  A 7-7 outing in 2002 with a loss to Ole Miss in the Independance Bowl didn't help.

Then "Dollar Bill" left for A&M in 2003 and we were introduced to Steve Pederson.  Endorsed by T.O. and was billed as the "guy who turned the Pitt Athletic Department around."  We were treated to toothy grins with ambitious stadium improvment projects and talks of returning to the promised land.  People believed in Pederson (myself included).  Bad move.

Solich's fate was sealed.  We have since found out when Pederson was hired he wanted Solich out.  Even a 9-3 2003 season couldn't save him.  Solich was thrown under the bus to take the program in a new direction.  Problem for Pederson was that the fans wanted Bo Pelini and he wanted his own guy.

Pelini became a "Nebraska guy" the second he set foot on campus and the fans saw alot of "the Bob" Devaney in him.  Unfortunately for us we were treated with four seasons of things being "too technical" and "crusty old f***s."

Anyway, I won't cover B.C. or Pederson's reign that I refer to as the Dark Ages.  But I think Bo is going to bring back what Devaney and T.O. built.  It started when T.O. was hired as the Athletic Director and it's now up to Bo.          

by 96operator on Mar 29, 2008 1:53 PM CDT   0 recs

I'm a sucker

I'll admit it.

I met with someone up here in Minnesota around the time Callahan's 70-10 debacle occurred, a friend of mine. We talked for a while about Callahan and he blankly said that Callahan would never be successful because he wasn't a good teacher.
I came away from that lunch and concluded that he was right, but nonetheless wanted to believe that Callahan would figure it out.

I drank the kool-aid. I did. I thought after the 2006 season that we'd be okay in 2007.

I figured that Callahan would simplify the offense so that it'd work well in the college game, that he'd figure out what worked on the college level, that he'd stop saying stupid things, that he'd learn how to win in the college game because he's such a smart guy.

And I convinced myself that Kevin Cosgrove would magically figure out how to defend the spread, something he's never done, nor will he ever.

Steve Pederson could have been fired anywhere throughout the process, and I'd have been happy with that.  Never liked that guy. Too... too... bad used car salesman-like.

So, there you go. I'm a dumbass when it comes to Nebraska coaches. I'm overly optimistic, no matter who they are. You know what they say.... love is blind.

So, there you go.

Go Big Red!

by corn blight on Mar 29, 2008 6:51 PM CDT   0 recs

Heh heh heh...
...I tried to warn you about Cosgrove in the summer of 2004. And you being in Big Ten country should have seen it as well..

by Husker Mike on Mar 31, 2008 11:17 AM CDT to parent up   0 recs

someone

last year sent me some statistics and an argument that I should have published, showing how Cosgrove's defense was never meant to be paired with the kind of offense Callahan was running, and made that case that the combination was therefore doomed.

WTF was I thinking.... oh, yeah. I wasn't. It was middle-aged absent-mindedness. Yeah, that's the ticket!

But the guy made a very good case, that Cosgrove's defense would have been okay if we were capable of a ball-control offense. Those last three games last year were anything but.....

Go Big Red!

by corn blight on Mar 31, 2008 4:05 PM CDT to parent up   0 recs

I think...

you are wrong. You will be talking about this this fall. When ever the defense does something big or when NU wins a game against Mizzu or KU or if we go to a bowl people will be saying "Thank god BC is no longer here" and "We should have hired Bo 4 years ago and this crap would never have happened".

by taflorom on Mar 30, 2008 9:55 PM CDT   0 recs

Difference between mentioning and discussing...

I think fans will mention the Callahan/Pederson Error for years to come...but not in any depth, or so I'd hope.  You simply can't pretend that it never happened.  That only happens in showers in Dallas.

When I say let's not hear about this in the fall, I'm saying that I'm hoping that this fall, we don't hear new revelations from players.  For example, Barry Turner bitching about Kevin Cosgrove's "scheme" (if you could call it that) or Dave Kennedy turning him into the Incredible Bulk.  If any players have anything to get off their chest, do it now.  By this fall, these guys should be focused on the new season and the new coaches.

by Husker Mike on Mar 31, 2008 11:26 AM CDT to parent up   0 recs

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