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Jimbo Fisher leaving FSU for Texas A&M; will get $75M over 10 years

December 2, 2017 by  
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Florida State football coach Jimbo Fisher has resigned to take the head-coaching job at Texas AM, Florida State officials said Friday.

Fisher won’t coach the Seminoles against Louisiana-Monroe on Saturday. Associate head coach and defensive tackles coach Odell Haggins instead will lead the team.

“Coach Fisher did an exceptional job as both an assistant coach at FSU and in the challenging role of successor to the legendary Bobby Bowden,” Florida State president John Thrasher said in a statement. “I believe Texas AM is getting one of the best coaches in college football.”

Fisher, 52, had hoped to wait to announce his decision until after Saturday’s regular-season finale, which the Seminoles (5-6, 3-5 ACC) need to win to extend their streak of 35 consecutive bowl games. The game was postponed from Sept. 9 and rescheduled to Saturday because of Hurricane Irma.

Jimbo Fisher always wanted more; this time FSU was tired of giving

Fisher brought the Seminoles back to national prominence, but it came at a cost. Even with constant demands and frayed relationships, FSU was happy to pay, until Fisher tried to raise the price one too many times.

  • Whom should Florida State hire to replace Jimbo Fisher

    The Seminoles, shockingly, need a new coach. They are one of the sport’s top destinations with a wealth of recruiting advantages and a championship legacy. Can FSU bring Willie Taggart back to the state or will another candidate emerge?

  • Sources told ESPN that Texas AM officials have approved a 10-year, $75 million fully guaranteed contract for Fisher, which is the richest deal in college football history in terms of total value. He’ll be the second highest-paid coach in the FBS with an average salary of $7.5 million, which ranks behind only Alabama’s Nick Saban.

    Fisher had signed an extension through 2024 with Florida State in December 2016 that gave him a base salary of $5.5 million. Fisher’s buyout from Florida State is the sum remaining on the contracts of his assistants who are not retained, which would be in the range of $5 million to $7 million.

    The Aggies will pay Fisher more than double what they paid former coach Kevin Sumlin, who made $35.5 million over six years, including his buyout.

    Saban, who has guided the Crimson Tide to four national championships in 11 seasons, agreed to an eight-year contract extension in May that will play him $65 million over the life of the deal. Saban is being paid $11.1 million this year and an average of $8.1 million.

    Clemson coach Dabo Swinney is now the third-highest-paid coach in the FBS, at an average of $6.75 million over eight years.

    “Obviously, he feels like it’s the right move for him. I don’t know,” Swinney said when told of the move during a news conference for the ACC championship game. “I know he did an unbelievable job at Florida State. This is a business that’s very public, as we all know, and from time to time, you have to make decisions. … I like Jimbo. It’s been a great, competitive journey. I’ve known him forever, when I was at Alabama and he was at Auburn.

    “Florida State is Florida State. They’ll hire a great coach. I don’t have any doubt about that. And I guess we’ll see [Fisher] next year, if that’s what he’s going to do. We play Texas AM the next two years. If he is [going to the Aggies], I can’t get rid of him. He’ll still be a thorn in our side.”

    When Texas AM fired Sumlin on Sunday, athletic director Scott Woodward stated a desire to compete for SEC and national championships. When asked Thursday what he would be looking for in a coach, university chancellor John Sharp deadpanned, “Nothing serious, just want him to win a national championship.”

    Sumlin went 51-26 in six seasons with the Aggies. Texas AM must pay Sumlin a $10.4 million buyout by Jan. 25, and his buyout will not be reduced if he takes another coaching job.

    Oregon’s Willie Taggart, South Florida’s Charlie Strong and Virginia Tech’s Justin Fuente are options who might be considered.

    ESPN reported Wednesday that Oregon offered Taggart a new contract worth more than $20 million, before incentives, over the next five years. A source told ESPN’s Heather Dinich on Friday that Taggart has yet to sign the deal. Taggart tweeted that his agent is looking over the offer.

    Fisher won the BCS National Championship in 2013 with the Seminoles and was 83-23 in eight seasons as their head coach.

    Texas AM last won a conference championship in 1998, when the Aggies were members of the Big 12. The school’s lone national championship came in 1939.

    Information from ESPN’s Mark Schlabach, Chris Low and Sam Khan Jr. and The Associated Press was used in this report.

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    Ole Miss sanctions: Bowl ban, multiple show causes among NCAA penalties

    December 2, 2017 by  
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    The seemingly never-ending investigation by the NCAA into Ole Miss athletics is finally over — and the football program took the brunt of the penalties.

    The NCAA announced the program lacked institutional control and fostered an unconstrained culture of booster involvement in football recruiting, in a report released Friday. The school will receive three years probation through Nov. 30, 2020, a two-year total bowl ban (one additional year from what has already been self-imposed), vacation of all regular-season and postseason wins in which ineligible student-athletes competed and the NCAA upheld Ole Miss’ scholarship reductions through 2018-2019 that it self-imposed (11 over four years).

    Former head football coach Hugh Freeze must serve a two conference-game suspension if he is hired prior to Nov. 30, 2018. Several other coaches and administrators received show-cause orders in the report, including Barney Farrar (five years) and Chris Kiffin (two years), according to the Clarion Ledger. A show-cause penalty means that any school hoping to hire any of those coaches prior to the order running out will have to present a case to the infractions committee.

    “This is now the third case over three decades that has involved the boosters and football program,” the NCAA panel stated in its decision. “Even the head coach acknowledged that upon coming to Mississippi, he was surprised by the ‘craziness’ of boosters trying to insert themselves into his program.”

    The additional bowl ban means that rising seniors currently with the program have the ability to transfer to other FBS institutions without sitting out a year as generally mandated by the NCAA. That means star players like rising junior quarterback Shea Patterson and junior wide receiver A.J. Brown would have to sit if they transfer, since they conceivably could play in the postseason after the 2018 ban expires. 

    The announcement by the NCAA brings to an end a long process that began with an investigation into women’s track and field, basketball and academic issues relating to the Houston Nutt era Rebel football program (2008-11). The program self-imposed scholarship restrictions and a one-year bowl ban in 2017 as a result of that aspect of the investigation.

    But when former Rebels offensive tackle Laremy Tunsil suffered through a miserable NFL Draft night that included a video of him smoking a substance through a gas mask, a sudden fall to 13th overall in the 2016 NFL Draft and the post-draft admission that he took money from Ole Miss coaches, the NCAA came calling again. That resulted in a second Notice of Allegations that dealt with recruiting violations that were unrelated to Tunsil, but discovered due to the Tunsil incident extending the inquiry. 

    The Rebels went 6-6 in 2017 under interim coach Matt Luke, who replaced Freeze when the former Ole Miss coach was let go after the school discovered that he made improper calls from his university-issued cell phone. The day after topping rival Mississippi State 31-28 in Starkville, Luke had the interim tag removed, and the former Ole Miss offensive lineman is now on the job on a full-time basis. 

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