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Pelini, imo, was fired because he couldn't get over the hump. That fateful decision has led to one of the most underwhelming era's of Nebraska football I've ever experienced; the furthest back I can recall watching games had Crouch manning QB.
Looking at the Coaching Tier thread got me thinking... Have Nebraska's expectations matched those of other blue blood programs like USC for instance?
After multiple losing seasons since Pelini was fired, winning 8-9 games a year and the occasional 10 doesn't sound bad at all. However, you had to take what came with it. 1 major blowout a year, a game that shouldn't have been close going to the wire, one (or multiple) of NW, Cockeye, Wisc, Minny beating us in the West.
Pelini Stats:
7 Seasons
66-27 (Left out his interim win) (.710 which is in Shaw, Patterson, Kelly territory AKA pretty fuckin good)
4 Division Titles
0 Conference Titles
0 NY6 Games
Helton Stats:
6 Seasons
45-24 (Left out his interim win) (.652 is in Harbaugh, Mullen territory. I wouldn't call it bad.)
2 Division Titles
1 Conference Title
1-1 NY6 Games (Rose Bowl win)
One might look at Helton's body of work and think "This isn't good enough at USC" and they would probably be right. Was Nebraska wrong to have the same thought process back in 2014? Pelini was averaging more than .5 a W a year than Helton, played in tougher conference (BIG Legends/West vs. Pac-12 South), nowhere near the same talent and yet I felt like the results on the field justified his firing (ignoring the political bullshit and off-field drama).
Is USC making a similar mistake as we did back in '14 or did Helton suck too much to lead USC? Was the decision to fire Pelini the correct decision "philosophically" and we just botched the execution? I think hiring and firing coaches until you find a championship-caliber coach is the way to go but maybe we should be thankful we get to go to bowls and win 8-9 games a year after all.
Looking at the Coaching Tier thread got me thinking... Have Nebraska's expectations matched those of other blue blood programs like USC for instance?
After multiple losing seasons since Pelini was fired, winning 8-9 games a year and the occasional 10 doesn't sound bad at all. However, you had to take what came with it. 1 major blowout a year, a game that shouldn't have been close going to the wire, one (or multiple) of NW, Cockeye, Wisc, Minny beating us in the West.
Pelini Stats:
7 Seasons
66-27 (Left out his interim win) (.710 which is in Shaw, Patterson, Kelly territory AKA pretty fuckin good)
4 Division Titles
0 Conference Titles
0 NY6 Games
Helton Stats:
6 Seasons
45-24 (Left out his interim win) (.652 is in Harbaugh, Mullen territory. I wouldn't call it bad.)
2 Division Titles
1 Conference Title
1-1 NY6 Games (Rose Bowl win)
One might look at Helton's body of work and think "This isn't good enough at USC" and they would probably be right. Was Nebraska wrong to have the same thought process back in 2014? Pelini was averaging more than .5 a W a year than Helton, played in tougher conference (BIG Legends/West vs. Pac-12 South), nowhere near the same talent and yet I felt like the results on the field justified his firing (ignoring the political bullshit and off-field drama).
Is USC making a similar mistake as we did back in '14 or did Helton suck too much to lead USC? Was the decision to fire Pelini the correct decision "philosophically" and we just botched the execution? I think hiring and firing coaches until you find a championship-caliber coach is the way to go but maybe we should be thankful we get to go to bowls and win 8-9 games a year after all.