Who Will Be the Next USC Football Coach?

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I knew Clay Helton was not going to last past this year unless USC won the title. Well, he only lasted two weeks. USC got absolutely crushed, at home, by Stanford. The Cardinal football team just crushed them early and rode that momentum to an easy two touchdown win. It was a solid win for David Shaw and Stanford. It cost Helton his job. He was not long for USC's head coaching job pretty much from the moment he was hired.

Truth is that Helton was not the first choice, and USC's much praised alumni made that well known. And Helton never did "enough" in the eyes of the school to keep him around. He had a solid record since taking over in 2015 at 46-24. But his best season was in 2017 when they finished 11-3, but got beat in the Cotton Bowl. Every other season was 8-5 or 5-7. He had one ten win season, but he was much more inline with the seven or eight win seasons. Unfortunately that does not cut it at a school like USC. They have national title aspirations. They are a blue blood team. They were once dominant. They used to get the best of the best recruits. Then Pete Carroll left, the school got disciplined and they have not recovered. Lane Kiffin didn't work. Steve Sarkisian didn't work. And now Clay Helton has not worked.

I have seen the names being mentioned, and it looks like USC is going to shoot for the stars. The first name I saw was Luke Fickell. I do not like that guy at all. He is a total asshole. But he has turned Cincinnati into a real playoff contender. They are a very legit top 10 team. They can play. He has squashed the rumors, but every coach mentioned for this job will say they have no interest.

I saw James Franklin was mentioned. He has built Penn State back into a perennial top 20 team. Again, I do not care for Franklin as a person, but he has won everywhere he has coached. He did it at Vanderbilt, but left them a total mess from which they have not recovered. And now he has Penn State back in the national conversation after a very odd season last year. Franklin to USC actually makes a ton of sense to me, but I do not know if he will leave Penn State just yet.

Whenever a major head coaching job opens, or is even talked about possibly being opened, Matt Campbell's name comes up. Campbell has turned Iowa State into a good team, but they seem to fall flat in big time games. Iowa State was supposed to beat Iowa this year. It was their time. Iowa beat them pretty handily. They also lost some odd games last year. Campbell will get his shot eventually, but USC would be trading Helton for a slightly better version of Helton if they hire Campbell.

PJ Fleck is another name I see and this one makes zero sense to me. Fleck did turn Western Michigan into a very good team, but he has only had one good season with Minnesota. He can coach the kids up, but Minnesota is not as dominant as I think they hoped when they hired him a few years back.

Mario Cristobol was mentioned, but I do not see him leaving Oregon any time soon. He is building something good in Eugene. And as it does any time a big job is opened you get the former star coaches or former/current pro coaches.

Bill O'Brien has come up on lists. I'd say no thank you.

Bob Stoops has been out of the game way too long. He is no Mack Brown. I also do not think he wants to come out of retirement.

Tony Elliot, Clemson's offensive coordinator, is on a few lists, but he seems rather comfortable where his is right now.

Of course, Urban Meyer is being mentioned, especially since the Jags got bombarded by the Texans in his first game as a NFL head coach. If Meyer were to leave the Jags for this job, he is no better than Bobby Petrino. In fact that would be worse. Not only would is prove that he couldn't cut it at the highest level, but that he was not prepared to do it at the highest level.

Looking at this list I think the job comes down to three guys, Fickell, Franklin or Campbell. If I were a betting man I bet Franklin leaves PSU for this job. That makes the most sense to me. He is a proven winner, can recruit and would fit it very well in Southern California.

That is how I see this whole USC coaching search ending, but it will take some time, all season long in fact, before they eventually try and lure Franklin away from his current job. And I bet he takes it. It is too good a job not to.

Ty

Ty is the Pop Culture editor for SeedSing and the other host of the X Millennial Man Podcast.

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The Texans Finally Did the Right Thing

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The Texans finally did it. All it took was a plethora of terrible trades, mostly bad draft decisions, star players turning on him and an 0-4 start, but they finally fired Bill O’Brien. In fact they relived him of all duties he held, effective immediately. When they fired him, they made sure it was well known that it was then and there. No waiting until the end of the year, no third or fourth chance, nothing. He, as of last night, is unemployed.

Now, as far as O’Brien’s on field coaching, he’s not good, but he’s not terrible. The Texans did make the playoffs pretty regularly, and they even won a game in the playoffs once in awhile. Yes, the division is not good, the Colts had to deal with Andrew Luck suddenly retiring and Jacksonville’s epic collapse after an AFC title appearance. O’Brien also had a hand in drafting Deshaun Watson. Yes, he mortgaged the future by trading many, many picks, but still, they got Watson. As far as the on field play, it wasn’t too bad. Watson masked a lot of the problems, but still, they had an okay enough offense to win nine games a season. But everything kind of came to a head this off-season. They traded Deandre Hopkins for peanuts. Apparently Hopkins and O’Brien didn’t get along, and since he had GM responsibilities, O’Brien chose himself and his priority over what was best for his team. He offloaded his young star QB’s best weapon because they didn’t like one another. There’s been so many of these stories in the past, star player doesn’t like coach, but it usually solves itself, or the coach goes. It’s almost never coach over player. But most coaches don’t have GM authority, or if they do, it doesn’t work. O’Brien was clearly in the latter. Beside the Hopkins trade, O’Brien had many mishaps. He did get Watson, but mortgaged the future of the team. He never drafted or developed O line to help the franchise QB. They took on too many “project” players. They never really added to the defense. They let Jadaveon Clowney leave in free agency.

This is all on O’Brien. He can be blamed for this. Back to the Hopkins trade. As I said, they got peanuts. They got some late round picks and David Johnson. No disrespect to Johnson, but he was a one season wonder, and then his leg exploded the following season. He’s not the guy he was that one year, and he will never be again. Hopkins on the other hand is young and awesome. He is currently crushing it in Arizona. The Cardinals may not be the best team, but they’re better than the Texans currently. But with all the turnover, the fights and the mishandling in the front office, it just felt like a matter of when, not if, O’Brien would be fired.

Then the Texans started the year the way they’ve started it. They’ve looked anemic on offense. They can’t protect Watson, the receivers get zero separation and the run game is non existent. The defense, it’s below average. JJ Watt is overrated and always hurt. Whitney Mercilus is hurt. They haven’t replaced Clowney. Their secondary is shotty. And again, this can all be placed on O’Brien. He took on all these extra roles, and when you take on too much, it’s hard to do any of them adequately. He made bad decisions as a GM, and the on field play was starting to really suffer from his poor play calling. He also let his feelings get involved, and that cannot happen in the NFL.

O’Brien has struck me as a guy that has failed up. He was on a good staff in New England when he got the Penn State job. He was fine there, but they were never a true threat. He then got this Texans job, and soon enough he became the GM, as well as the head coach and was given full authority for the most part. He didn’t do that good enough, and now he’s out of all of those jobs. I don’t know where he goes from here. I mean, he had all this power, so what will he look for in a new job if he’s offered one? I don’t think an NFL team will hire him, at least not as a head coach. He could get a coordinator job, but not a head coaching job. He should not get a front office or GM job ever again. This was where he messed up the most. As far as college, will he go back? Will he take less money? Will he go to a lower tier school? I don’t know. I don’t think a big time program will hire him. He wasn’t hyper competitive at PSU. He didn’t win any titles wasn’t in contention. I don’t know how many big schools will have an opening either. This is tricky because of the pandemic, and how rough this last image of him is going to be. If I had to guess, I’d say he takes a coordinator job. I don’t think he’ll want to go back to college, but I don’t think an NFL team will give him the top job.

Hey, at least Texans fans don’t have to deal with O’Brien’s idiocy anymore. That’s their silver lining.

Ty

Ty is the Pop Culture editor for SeedSing and the other host of the X Millennial Man Podcast.

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What in the Hell are the Texans Thinking?

This past Labor Day weekend featured one of the more wild trades I have seen go down in the NFL in my lifetime. While it doesn't have the name recognition that the Khalil Mack trade had last year, it was still pretty nuts.

And no, I am not completely talking about the Jadeveon Clowney trade to Seattle. But, I do want to touch on that real quick. This was a very lopsided trade, in favor of the Seahawks. I cannot believe all they had to trade was a few guys that they were going to cut and a third round pick for Clowney. Clowney is a top notch defensive end, and that is such a light return. Clowney is going to make Seattle a solid defense again, and may even make them a possible contender. He doesn't do as much as Mack to the Bears did, but still, the Seahawks got a top tier defensive lineman for next to nothing.

I want to talk about what the Texans did the very next day. This will stick with me for a good while because of how insane a deal they pulled off, in not such a great way. The Texans, one day after trading Clowney for peanuts, gave Miami what seems like a million first round picks for Laremy Tunsil and Kenny Stills. The amount of picks the Dolphins got for these 2 guys is akin to what the Thunder got this offseason for all the trades they pulled off. I have zero doubt in my mind who won this trade, and it is the Dolphins by a good long mile. Look, Tunsil and Stills are solid players, but they are not worth that amount of picks.

The Texans essentially mortgaged their future because they think they have a window for a title now. They don't. I think the Texans are good, and I like that they got a solid tackle to help protect Deshaun Watson, and another receiving weapon in Stills. These 2 guys will help the Texans do exactly what they did last year. They will win 10 or 11 games, the AFC South, and most likely, have an early-ish exit from the playoffs. The Texans, even with these moves, are still not on the same level as the AFC's top teams. The Patriots are still better. The Chiefs are much, much, much better. I still think the Colts can contend with the Texans in their own division because they have a good, young defense. I think the Ravens are just as good, if not better, than the Texans. And, if they somehow beat the Patriots or Chiefs, and make the Super Bowl, the NFC has so many teams better than them right now. The Rams, Saints, Bears, Vikings, Seahawks and maybe even the Packers, in my opinion, are all better than the current roster the Texans have. I get that they most likely heard the talk last year about how they could not protect Watson, and that Clowney wanted out and wouldn't sign the franchise tender. But these were some poor decisions made by the front office, and Bill O'Brien. This should prove to anyone who may still think that he is a solid coach and evaluator of talent that maybe, they were wrong. Bill O'Brien has not done anything of note really in the NFL, and yet he is given carte blanche by this franchise to make these horrible decisions. Why? What has he shown to them that they trust him so much with the future of this team? I want them to be good because I really like Watson and Deandre Hopkins. But, a guy like O'Brien is just there to seemingly blow it up.

Like I said, I think the Texans will be fine, but not of note now, or in the near future of the NFL. These trades were odd and kind of dumb, but that is Bill O'Brien for you. Oh well.

Ty

Ty is the Pop Culture editor for SeedSing and the other host of the X Millennial Man Podcast. Ty usually thinks that NFL trades are some of the most boring and pointless sports things ever. Except for that one time.

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