Lesson #1 for Recruits: Choose the school, not the Coach

To say that the coaching profession is fluid is a drastic understatement.

In fact, the average tenure of a Division I college football coach is 3+ years. Which means, if you're a major college prospect, there is a pretty good chance that the coaching staff who courted you won't be there to see you graduate from that university.


Translation: Make your final college decision based on the experience of the university as a whole; not based on the current coach. 

This way, no matter how many coaching changes you survive (and you can bank on at least one), you're attending a school that was the best choice for you overall, regardless of who recruited you.

This recent story about former Texas Tech football coach, Tommy Tuberville, pretty much spells it out.  In reality, a college coach is one better offer (or one losing season) from heading out the door.

Although, most won't depart as abruptly as Tuberville did.

Tommy Tuberville reportedly ditches recruits in the middle of dinner to take Cincinnati job

 

   

We got a Bear here!


Ever wonder what actually occurs on an official visit?  Wide receiver Marvin Jones was kind enough to enlighten us. Here’s his journal entry from his trip to Cal-Berkeley back in 2007 (article by George Dohrmann).

SATURDAY, 5 AM: Jones and his father, Marvin Sr., depart their house in Fontana to catch a flight out of Ontario International Airport.

9:30 AM: They are met at Oakland International Airport by Cal recruiting assistants Andrew McGraw and Kevin Parker and driven in a Suburban to the Claremont Hotel in Berkeley. After checking into his room, Jones is taken to the Doubletree Hotel near the Oakland marina, where the Cal players stay the night before home games.

10:15 AM: Jones meets wide receivers coach Dan Ferrigno, and they walk along the marina. “We were looking across at the Bay Bridge and the Golden Gate Bridge, and Coach Ferrigno was just telling me about himself and where he’d coached before,” Jones recalls.

11 AM: After a brief chat with a wideout, Jones joins the Bears for their pregame meal in one of the hotel ballrooms. “Man, it was a lot of good food,” Jones says. “Chicken and pasta and potatoes.”

NOON: At a team meeting, coach introduces Jones, the only visiting recruit, and shows a video. “It was meant to get everyone hyped,” Jones says. “It was all the big plays and big hits from the season.”

1 PM: Parker drives Jones to Memorial Stadium. On a balcony above the entrance, they watch fans greet the players as they walk from the bus into the stadium, a tradition at Cal known as the March to Victory.

1:45 PM: Jones visits the equipment room, where a manager has laid out on a table all the gear that a Bears player receives – and each piece of this equipment is branded with a 3, Jones’ number. The manager describes to Jones the new jersey design that Cal will wear next year. “A mix of old school and new school,” Jones says. “Real nice.”

2:30 PM: Parker gives Jones a tour of the library, then brings him to the stadium in time to hear the coach’s pregame speech. The coach’s message: Don’t underestimate Oregon State.

5:15 PM: Jones watches the first half from the 6th row of the stands opposite the Bear’s bench. At halftime he visits the coach’s private skybox, where he meets athletic director Sandy Barbour and eats -in order- chicken, steak, a chicken kabob, steak, shrimp, cupcakes, and candy. He returns to the stands for the second half.

7:45 PM: After the unranked Beavers hold off a last-second attempt by Cal to send the game into overtime, upsetting the #2 Bears 31-28, Jones visits the locker room to hear the coach console his team. Jones then meets his player-host, freshman wide receiver Michael Calvin.

8:15 PM: Jones and Calvin relax in the player’s dorm room. “It’s important that the rooms aren’t too small,” Jones says. “These rooms were big. It was more like an apartment.”

10 PM: The two meet a group of Calvin’s friends at a dorm party with the theme All Black, meaning that everyone had to be decked out in that color. “I was wearing a black shirt, which was just luck,” Jones says. “It wasn’t a big party, but it was cool.”

SUNDAY

1:30 AM: Jones arrives back at his hotel and goes to sleep.

9:20 AM: Ferrigno wakes up Jones and takes him to the stadium. They go to the coach’s video room and review footage of Cal’s pass routes and talk about how Jones would fit into the offense “Coach Ferrigno talked about things I could do now to make myself better,” Jones says.

10 AM: Jones and his father meet the coach in his office. He speaks about the value of a Cal degree; they talk about what Jones is looking for in a school. Afterward, the following conversation occurs.

Tedford: “When are you thinking about making a decision?” Jones: “In my mind, I know the decision. I want to come here.” Tedford: “So, when are you going to make a final decision?” Jones: “I just made it.” Tedford: “Is this a commit?” Jones: “Yes.” Tedford: “Wow, That just made this weekend a whole lot better.” 10:30 AM: Tedford leads Jones out of his office and announces to the waiting Farrigno, “We got a Bear here!”

11 AM: Jones returns to the hotel, eats brunch (“Seven hours later I was still full from that meal,” he says) and meets with Mark Jensen, director of football student-athlete development. “We went over my grades and talked about what I needed to do to make sure I could get admitted to Cal,” Jones says. “Mark played at Cal, so he could answer questions I had about being a student and a football player there.”

1:30 PM: On the way to th airport, Parker stops at a Cal university store, where Jones buys 3 sweatshirts, 3 t-shirts, sweatpants, and a bumper sticker.

2:05 PM: Jones boards his flight, arriving home at 5 pm.

Lasting Impression: “I visited Oregon and I like it, but it rains a lot there and it’s farther away from my family. Cal just felt like home. It was where I felt like I could have a good relationship with my teammates and with Coach Ferrigno.”