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Texas A&M pulls the plug on Mike Sherman, valedictorian of the NFL’s mediocrity exchange

December 2nd, 2011 by

Texas A&M pulls the plug on Mike Sherman, valedictorian of the NFL’s mediocrity exchange

Texas A&M’s fourth season under Mike Sherman began with the Aggies basking in a pending defection to the SEC and its highest expectations in a decade. It ended tonight with Sherman being led to the guillotine on the heels of a 6-6 campaign defined by blown second-half leads and a steady drumbeat of disappointment, drawing the curtain on a tenure that encompassed 25 wins and 25 losses.

In its own way, it was a remarkable, carefully honed achievement: A near-perfect ode to mediocrity.

Texas A&M pulls the plug on Mike Sherman, valedictorian of the NFL’s mediocrity exchangeUnder different circumstances, there might have been some solace in the fact that A&M was so close. Five of the Aggies’ six losses in 2011 came by a combined 17 points, two of them in overtime, three of them against teams ranked in the top dozen of the latest BCS standings. Five of the six came after they led by at least two scores in the second half. They played arguably the toughest schedule in the country, and were in every game except one (a 41-25 loss at Oklahoma on Nov. 5) down to the final snap. Even after last week’s last-second loss to Texas, the computer polls remained suitably impressed with the overall product.

But Texas A&M wasn’t an up-and-comer building toward a run in 2012: On the heels of a 6-1 finish in 2010, it was a consensus top-10 contender this summer with no glaring weaknesses. The 2011 Aggies had the savvy senior quarterback (Ryan Tannehill), the best 1-2 tailback punch in the Big 12 (Cyrus Gray and Christine Michael), a completely intact receiving corps, a nearly intact offensive line featuring at least two future draft picks and eight returning starters from a vastly improved defense under first-year coordinator Tim DeRuyter. It was the single best opportunity A&M has had for a move on the Big 12 On the other side of the regular season, they limped in with losses in four of their last five, marquee wins over Iowa State and Baylor and something less than a winning record for the third time in four years.

Sherman returned to College Station from a decade in the NFL, including six years as head coach of the Green Bay Packers, and may well go down as the patron saint of dour, milquetoast refugees from the league. The trajectory of his tenure at A&M is a model for the genre: Four years, zero conference championships, ending with a minor breakthrough (9-4 in 2010) that’s immediately followed by a disappointing return to mediocrity. Four other ex-NFL head coaches have been hired for their first college head coaching job since 2002:

Chan Gailey (Georgia Tech): Six years, zero conference championships, ending in a minor breakthrough (9-5 in 2006) that was immediately followed by a disappointing return to mediocrity (7-5 in 2007).
Bill Callahan (Nebraska): Four years, zero conference championships, ending in a minor breakthrough in (9-5 in 2006) that was immediately followed by a return to mediocrity (5-7 in 2007).
Dave Wannstedt (Pittsburgh): Six years, zero conference championships, ending in a minor breakthrough (10-3 in 2009) that was immediately followed by a return to mediocrity (7-5 in 2010).
Lane Kiffin (Tennessee). One mediocre season (7-6 in 2009), which he parlayed into his dream job at USC. What can you say? The man is a trailblazer.

See also: Mike Shula, Al Groh, Greg Robinson and Charlie Weis, all longtime NFL assistants turned infamously failed college head coaches. Their teams are indistinguishable, and their fate is always the same.

If campus titans like Nick Saban, Butch Davis, Steve Spurrier and Bobby Petrino couldn’t hack it in their brief stints in the pros, the grim offerings coming in the opposite direction have failed to produce anything better than the equivalent of an early exit in the playoffs. Which, come to think of it, is exactly how they all fared in the NFL, too. The principles of Chan Gailey Equilibrium are eternal: Wherever you go in life, basic competence and a reflexive deference to conventional wisdom under any and all circumstances will produce victory exactly 58.3 percent of the time.

Now: Who’s going to roll the dice on Jack Del Rio before it’s too late?

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Matt Hinton is on Facebook and Twitter: Follow him @DrSaturday.

Dr. Saturday – NCAAF – Yahoo! Sports

Texas beats Aggies in likely rivalry end (AP)

November 25th, 2011 by

COLLEGE STATION, TX - NOVEMBER 24:  Head Coach Mack Brown of the Texas Longhorns works the sidelines in the second half of a game against the Texas A&M Aggies at Kyle Field on November 24, 2011 in College Station, Texas. (Photo by Darren Carroll/Getty Images)

Texas spoiled Texas A&M’s going away party. Justin Tucker kicked a 40-yard field goal as time expired to give the Longhorns a 27-25 victory over Texas A&M on Thursday night in the likely end of a more than century-old rivalry. Texas A&M’s last Big 12 game and the 118th meeting between the bitter rivals before the Aggies depart for the Southeastern Conference next season was a thriller…



Yahoo! Sports – NCAA Football News

Texas tops Texas A&M in thriller

November 25th, 2011 by

Justin Tucker kicked a 40-yard field goal as time expired to give the Longhorns a 27-25 victory over Texas A&M on Thursday night.




USATODAY.com Collegefootball

Texas, A&M may be meeting for last time (AP)

November 24th, 2011 by

The winner of Texas and Texas A&M’s annual game usually gets a year of bragging rights in this football-crazy state. The victor of Thursday night’s showdown will get to boast about this one for a lot longer than that. It is Texas A&M’s last Big 12 game before the Aggies move to the Southeastern Conference next season.
Yahoo! Sports – NCAA Football News

Oklahoma, Oklahoma State bond over shared hatred of Texas

October 27th, 2011 by

Oklahoma, Oklahoma State bond over shared hatred of Texas

Texas has been blamed for a lot of bad blood this year as the Big 12 has struggled to keep itself together, but in at least one respect, the Longhorns and coach Mack Brown are responsible for bringing people together — specifically former Oklahoma coach Barry Switzer and Oklahoma State mega-booster T. Boone Pickens.

Oklahoma, Oklahoma State bond over shared hatred of TexasDuring a luncheon Wednesday, Pickens, Oklahoma State’s biggest benefactor, recounted an email he received from Switzer after Oklahoma trounced the Longhorns earlier this month, 55-17. According to Pickens, Switzer wrote that Oklahoma State, who was due to play the Longhorns the following week, shouldn’t “beat them as bad as the Sooners did because we want to keep Mack Brown as coach — we want somebody that both of us can beat.”

Ooo, burn!

Oklahoma State went on to beat Texas 38-26 for the Cowboys’ second consecutive win in Austin. Prior to that, Brown had been 12-0 against the Cowboys.

The best part of the story? Switzer was actually in the crowd when Pickens was telling it. I can just see those two cackling about it well into the evening. Wonder how Oklahoma and Oklahoma State fans feel about those two getting chummy? Well, at least both groups can bond over their hatred of the Longhorns.

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Graham Watson is on Facebook and Twitter: Follow her @Yahoo_Graham.

Dr. Saturday – NCAAF – Yahoo! Sports

Big 12 Rewind: Oklahoma must pick up pieces after loss to Texas Tech

October 24th, 2011 by

A look back at highlights and lowlights from the weekend in the Big 12 Conference.




USATODAY.com Collegefootball

Oklahoma shocked at home by Texas Tech (AP)

October 23rd, 2011 by

Oklahoma took the field without its usual pregame ritual of charging out the tunnel at the conclusion of an introduction video that gets the crowd and players pumped up. The atmosphere was quite literally dampened, with thousands of fans taking off early because of a storm that brought strong winds, rain and enough lightning to cause a delay of 1 hour and 35 minutes.
Yahoo! Sports – NCAA Football News

Big runs by Jeremy Smith lift No. 7 Oklahoma State by Texas

October 16th, 2011 by

Smith scored on touchdown runs of 30 and 74 yards as the Cowboys won in Austin for the second consecutive season.




USATODAY.com Collegefootball

No. 6 Cowboys set to visit No. 22 Texas (AP)

October 14th, 2011 by

It used to be Texas could count on a long winning streak against Oklahoma State to all but guarantee the Longhorns would again beat the Cowboys. Texas had made a 12-year habit of beating the Cowboys with all sorts of routs and rallies. But the old saying that “old habits die hard” does allow for habits to, well, die.
Yahoo! Sports – NCAA Football News

Texas likely to keep 2 QB attack for now (AP)

October 11th, 2011 by

Texas’ two-headed quarterback attack looks like it will survive for at least another week. Even after a 55-17 loss to No. 3 Oklahoma in which sophomore Case McCoy and freshman David Ash made critical mistakes, offensive coordinator Bryan Harsin said Monday he still thinks the rotation Texas has been using for several weeks can work.
Yahoo! Sports – NCAA Football News