1. Welcome! Please take a few seconds to create your free account to post threads, make some friends, remove a few ads while surfing and much more. ClutchFans has been bringing fans together to talk Houston Sports since 1996. Join us!

A recap of the 2010 UT-Austin branch football season that's left them in shambles

Discussion in 'Football: NFL, College, High School' started by bigtexxx, Feb 13, 2011.

  1. bigtexxx

    bigtexxx Contributing Member

    Joined:
    Jun 12, 2002
    Messages:
    26,925
    Likes Received:
    2,265
    The Austin newspaper had this recap of the 2010 season. A must read. The cliffs about Mack:

    a CEO
    a poor game day coach
    lazy
    entitled
    arrogant
    unaccountable
    one to play favorites
    too nice to players
    someone that blames everybody else
    unable to handle criticism
    poor talent evaluator
    overrated
    Stoop's b*tch

    http://www.statesman.com/sports/lon...ml?cxtype=rss_longhorns&viewAsSinglePage=true

    What went wrong: A case study of Texas' 2010 football season
    Insiders point to Mack Brown, coaches missing warning signs long before the first kickoff.
    By Kirk Bohls and Randy Riggs

    AMERICAN-STATESMAN STAFF

    Updated: 7:10 a.m. Sunday, Feb. 13, 2011

    Published: 8:53 p.m. Saturday, Feb. 12, 2011


    In the fall of 2010, University of Texas football fans witnessed a horrific 5-7 season and one of the most extraordinary collapses of the second-winningest college program in history, triggering an intensive review by head coach Mack Brown and a nearly total makeover of his staff.

    One season before, the Longhorns were four points away late in the fourth quarter from beating Alabama and winning the national championship for the second time in five years. Last September, they suited up for the fall season ranked fifth in the nation. Expectations among the players, coaches and fans were for a great year.

    But what followed was an astonishing misadventure that ended with a nearly total makeover of a coaching staff that had virtually remained intact for almost five seasons, since Texas celebrated its fourth national championship on the confetti-covered floor of the Rose Bowl in January 2006.

    In the days after Texas' loss to Texas A&M last Thanksgiving night, which ended a bowl-less season, Brown went into relative seclusion, watching tapes from every 2010 game and turning to family, friends and outside consultants to figure out what went so wrong.

    Brown, who has said he's only looking forward and not back, declined through a spokesman to be interviewed for this story, and has addressed his worst UT season only in passing during two recent press conferences. That's vintage, accentuate-the-positive Mack Brown, moving on from a remarkably dark, personal and complicated story of an across-the-board breakdown in the football program, one that stunned fans and gave pause to some future recruits.

    In dozens of interviews with people in or with direct knowledge of the football program, the answers are there. Almost all of these people spoke on the condition of anonymity.

    Importantly, the coaches and staff all had a role in the collapse. As a group, they missed or ignored most warning signs along the road. Those warning signs pointed to problems, among them:

    • A severe depression hangover from the loss to Alabama in the national championship game on Jan. 7, 2010. It was an exhausting disappointment to Brown, who had worked so hard to get his team to the championship and who told confidantes he was certain his Longhorns would beat the Crimson Tide.

    • Brown had become withdrawn from day-to-day coaching, taking on a role akin to a CEO. He was disconnected from his team and his coaches.

    • As the year progressed, fractures within the coaching ranks widened to the point where defensive coordinator Will Muschamp got into a heated argument with offensive coordinator Greg Davis after the loss to Iowa State.

    • UT's recruiters had overestimated the talent of incoming players, particularly on offense. Coaches had resorted more to watching tapes rather than scouring the 1,400 high schools in Texas for the type of players that brought the Longhorns nine straight 10-win seasons.

    • A switch to a running offense that the team was not built for.

    • A lack of dedication in summer conditioning and training, culminating with an eye-opening struggle against Texas State in a 7-on-7 game in July.

    • A shift in attitude by coaches, and players, from confidence to entitlement — a sense that the team was guaranteed victory and prestige.

    • A lack of on-field competence.

    One former player summed it up this way: "UT was just unprepared for the 2010 season. Coaches and players alike."

    The bottom line: The UT team was flawed enough that its season was in doubt even as the players took the field at Reliant Stadium on Sept. 2 to play the Rice Owls. Many observers point to that game, which UT won by a closer margin than expected, as the sign that all was not well.

    But the warning signs were evident months before that.

    Overconfidence a killer

    It might have been the events on the Rose Bowl stage a year ago — when just five plays into the national championship game, quarterback Colt McCoy went to the sideline with a shoulder injury — that set in motion the school's most traumatic season in 13 years. The subsequent offseason also was traumatic for Brown, whose makeover of his coaching and office staff included losing three veteran coaches and two men regarded as vital cogs in his inner circle.

    How and why it happened continues to intrigue, fascinate and in some cases scare the fan base that averaged more than 100,000 for Texas' seven home games, five of them losses.

    It seems clear now that Brown's operation had become infected with a debilitating sense of entitlement that led to a lack of accountability with the starting lineup and wide dissension inside the locker room and coaching staff.

    Brown acknowledged at his state-of-the-Longhorns press conference on Jan. 31 that the sting of the Alabama loss impacted him more than he could have imagined.

    "I felt like I had a hangover after the national championship game, and I don't know if I've ever taken a loss as hard," Brown said. "I don't think I did a good job of coming back out of it and getting a spark and getting the energy back to where I needed it to be, and I didn't realize it. I just pouted for a while, and when you're pouting at 13-1 that's pretty stupid."

    Some say the older members of a staff that averaged 25 years in the business — five of the 10 coaches had spent 31 or more years in coaching — grew stale in their approach, lazy, or at the least complacent.

    More than one close observer pins the Longhorns' decline to poor evaluation in recruiting and the pattern that Texas has fallen into of extending scholarship offers before players' senior seasons, thus severely limiting the amount of data to evaluate.

    "The biggest contributor, in my opinion, is they lost their talent advantage," said one source with deep connections to Longhorns coaches. "There was no wide receiver worth a (expletive). They didn't have an offensive line that was prepared because of poor development or evaluation.

    "Name me a (Longhorns) running back that will play in the NFL. Look at every single running back Texas has. How many did Texas pass over who are going to be NFL running backs? Ten to 15? Would you rather have Kendall Hunter or Tré Newton? Would you rather have Cyrus Gray or Fozzy Whittaker? Christine Michael the next year? You just go down the list."

    Others point to overconfidence at the top, suggesting Brown had evolved into too much of a CEO or figurehead, had disconnected from his team and had assumed his program was in good shape and incapable of the type of droughts that have inflicted one-time perennial winners like Michigan, Notre Dame and Washington.

    Brown even has admitted he felt Texas was relatively bulletproof.

    One person with close ties to the coaching staff said: "Mack was the king of entitlement."

    That point bore home in particular during the week of the Iowa State game. Leading up to the home game against a Cyclones team that had never beaten Texas, Brown told his players behind closed doors that they all knew they were going to win the game. That was a given.

    "Oklahoma just beat these guys 52-0," Brown told them, according to a source who heard the lines. "We have to match that. We have to make a statement."

    Instead, Texas managed only a field goal in the opening half and was held in check in a 28-21 loss that reverberated around the nation. Muschamp blew up at Davis for questioning his defense afterward. A week after a supposedly statement-making road win over Nebraska, the Longhorns had dropped two straight at Royal-Memorial for the first time since John Mackovic's final, desultory season in 1997.

    Others point to the spring drills in which Texas changed course, dumping a highly successful spread offense philosophy predicated on the zone read, which required an athletic, mobile quarterback who forces defenses to respect his running ability. In place of that, Texas went with a more run-oriented scheme in which the quarterback operated under center as much as out of the shotgun.

    Along with that was the absence of proven, established starters at quarterback or running back, where Texas continued to search for a standout like Ricky Williams or Cedric Benson. Insiders raved that quarterback Garrett Gilbert didn't throw an interception all summer, but he would throw five in one game last fall and ranked 95th nationally in pass efficiency.

    But one person with ties to the program who attended practices didn't see anything in spring practices that led him to believe the new emphasis on running the ball would work, even though Texas ran the ball the first 11 plays of the Orange-White game.

    "In watching what was going on in spring practice, who could watch it and actually think they were going to be good at it?" he said. "I could not see us running the ball after spring, and we'd spent months working on that. How could you commit to a running game when you didn't have a fullback, didn't have a tight end with all the injuries?"

    Crack in the foundation

    The fissure exposed in the spring began to develop into a dangerous crack during the summer. Some players did not follow the offseason training regimen with the same dedication of previous teams.

    This was painfully evident during the 7-on- 7, non-contact competition between Texas and about 30 Texas State players. The Longhorns struggled and lost the informal game played at Denius Fields before a few dozen fans — no coaches were allowed — in July.

    "I heard we played well," one inside the Texas State football program recalls.

    "They were taunting us," said one well-connected Longhorns fan. "There was almost a fight with Texas State."

    The strain was beginning to show. At one point, Texas safety Blake Gideon openly chastised senior cornerback Chykie Brown, and the two exchanged heated words.

    Texas' pride was so stung that its players talked the Bobcats into a second scrimmage later, which the Longhorns won handily.

    But the weakness was still there. Texas State had victimized Texas during the scrimmages and exposed the lack of speed by the Longhorns' safeties, an issue that would become an Achilles' heel in the fall.

    Where once Vince Young would scrawl on a dryboard in the locker room, "Meet me at 6:30 a.m. if you want to beat Ohio State," and McCoy would personally knock on the doors of young receivers like Brandon Collins before summer workouts, none of that leadership was present last summer.

    The young Gilbert had neither the innate leadership skills nor the wherewithal to command the same sense of purpose. The result was that the team showed up for preseason camp out-of-shape and directionless.

    "They weren't in shape when they got here," Brown recalled recently of the 2010 class. "And they didn't get in shape in the summer. They relaxed and enjoyed their spring and came in out-of-shape and weren't ready to play."

    Close observers say the young players were reflecting the tone of most of the team and the coaches.

    "The blame goes straight to Mack Brown," a former Longhorns quarterback said. "Players and coaches sensed that Mack was preparing to ride off into the sunset, possibly to TV, and that the ride was over.

    "They just didn't work as hard as they did in past years. This goes to strength and conditioning, on-the-field effort and probably the players' and coaches' study of opposing teams."

    A house divided

    No scene better illustrates Brown's angst during the 2010 season than his scathing, eyebrow-raising throwdown of his team — staff included — following the Oct. 23 loss to Iowa State.

    "This team is '07 all over again," Brown told the media that Saturday of the defense-challenged, 10-3 season three years earlier. "You don't ever know who's going to show up, and it scares you to death.

    "I'm fighting my guts out to get 'em turned. You've just got to stay after them every day. You can't trust your team. You can't trust your coaches when they're not getting things ready to go."

    It struck many as a highly inflammatory comment and, according to some, divided the staff. Brown eventually forced out or accepted the resignation of his longtime friend and offensive coordinator Greg Davis, and the retirements of his veteran defensive tackles coach Mike Tolleson and offensive line coach Mac McWhorter.

    Brown also has had to deal with a matter involving Cleve Bryant, his longtime right-hand man who had been UT's associate athletic director for football operations since 1998. In early October, Bryant, who oversaw the day-to-day operations, took — and remains on — a paid leave during an internal, still-incomplete investigation regarding accusations by a former female staffer.

    Brown " was a little lost," said one football program insider. "The Cleve loss was a lot more important than it looks from the outside because Mack had to worry about things he didn't normally have to worry about."

    Brown also was blindsided by the hiring of his defensive coordinator Will Muschamp as Florida's new head coach.

    Jeremy Foley, Florida's athletic director, had come to Austin the last weekend in November to get acquainted with Muschamp under the pretense of accompanying the Gators' top-ranked women's volleyball team to the NCAA regional playoffs at UT. He spent much of the day with Muschamp, whom he had targeted as a replacement for Urban Meyer, who would retire the following Wednesday.

    The next Saturday, Foley again flew to Austin, and sealed the deal with Muschamp.

    Muschamp was unavailable for comment for this story, but those who know him say he had become disillusioned with the direction of Brown's program and the lack of accountability in playing time, and grew weary of waiting for Brown's retirement as Texas' head coach-in-waiting.

    "He was furious the entire season," one source said. "He got detached."

    Another source, however, said Muschamp never spoke negatively about his colleagues, but that he fumed that the coaching staff had done a poor job of evaluating recruiting prospects at offensive line, receiver and running back.

    Muschamp's disenchantment spoke to some of the internal dissension on Mack's staff and the schism that grew between the older and younger coaches. That said, Brown regularly lauded running backs coach Major Applewhite in staff meetings, to the point of embarrassment.

    Moving forward

    Part of the reason for the season's troubles can be traced to the surprisingly average play of Gilbert, whose 10 passing touchdowns — with a rushing attack ranked 66th in the nation — couldn't offset his 17 interceptions.

    Five of those picks came in the frightful loss at Kansas State, but Brown never pulled Gilbert. Consequently, his backup, freshman Case McCoy, became disillusioned and confused about why he wasn't allowed in for more than 11 plays (and only one passing play, in the opener against Rice) during a largely wasted season that cost him a year of eligibility.

    People inside the program rave about Gilbert's poise and toughness, but question his leadership skills and ability to lift up teammates, some of whom would yell at Gilbert during games. They say expectations for Gilbert were unrealistic after his second-half performance in the BCS championship game, partly because of the outstanding effort that night by senior wide receiver Jordan Shipley, who caught 10 passes for 122 of Texas' 195 receiving yards.

    It seems bizarre to think that Longhorns fans were more optimistic about Gilbert after his off-the-bench outing against the Crimson Tide than they were following 12 starts. Perhaps a younger, fresher staff with two coordinators under the age of 37 will provide the tonic that Brown needs to put Texas back on course.

    Toward that end, Brown enveloped himself in the process of hiring smart, up-and-coming coaches like offensive coordinator Bryan Harsin of Boise State and defensive whiz kid Diaz, from Mississippi State.

    "I'm so proud of Mack," said UT President William Powers Jr., who attended every game, home and away. "This is a frustrating year for him. He rolled up his sleeves and re-energized the program. I think we've come out of this the way people ought to come out after a tough season."

    Added men's athletics director DeLoss Dodds: "A little humility is not bad, and change is not bad. You get something out of that."

    In his postseason evaluation, Brown studied every game tape. He hired several outside consultants, like Vinny Cerrato — a former Brown player, as well as the one-time recruiting coordinator for Lou Holtz at Notre Dame and the general manager of the Washington Redskins — to inspect and evaluate his program. He also asked each player to fill out — and sign — a specific questionnaire about the program and his position coach. Brown said he tore them up after reading the surveys.

    Although the results of the reviews were not shared, strength coach Jeff Madden was relieved of his football oversight (though he remains in charge of overall strength and conditioning for the athletic department) and secondary coach Duane Akina took a job at the University of Arizona.

    Cerrato was paid his usual consulting fee of $1,500 after coming in for two days to observe the Monday and Tuesday practices before the A&M game. He said he was paid only to evaluate the players, not Brown's coaching staff.

    "I told Mack he had a bunch of good, young, talented players and that his incoming freshman class was outstanding," Cerrato said. "When I was at Notre Dame, I'd have loved to have 'em all. The future is definitely bright."

    Cerrato really liked Texas' underclassmen.

    "They just needed a good offseason program and need to get bigger and faster," he said. "I was really impressed with their young offensive and defensive linemen, and I really liked their young wide receivers. The quarterback's just got to learn to protect the ball. He's got talent."

    Texas has declined to name the other outside people who took a magnifying glass to Brown's operation, but some believe former Brown assistant Dick Tomey was one of them. He showed up for the Baylor game and was spotted "taking notes on a clipboard" on the sidelines. Tomey was never officially hired, one source said, but evaluated two Longhorns games last fall.

    "Mack Brown listens to Dick Tomey," the former coach said of Brown's former defensive assistant, whom Brown has often credited for molding team chemistry that was put in motion before the 2005 national championship.

    Now, almost three months after Texas A&M beat Texas for the third time in five years, Brown has to hope he made the right moves. He has severed ties with some of his closest aides, and the highly regarded Muschamp is gone.

    With spring training less than two weeks away and his players getting acquainted with six new assistants, Texas stands on a critical threshold. Was last season a momentary blip — a shocking aberration for one of the nation's most consistent programs — or was it the start of a trend?

    Texas kicks off at home against Rice on Sept. 3. Longhorn Nation will be watching.
     
  2. Major

    Major Member

    Joined:
    Jun 28, 1999
    Messages:
    41,415
    Likes Received:
    15,849
    I think this is a good summary, but there's nothing in here that hasn't been reported over the last several months. Rick Barnes had the same sort of crisis last year, though in a different way. The big question all UT fans had was how Mack would handle the aftermath, and I think he did what everyone hoped but wasn't sure he'd be willing to do. Recognize the mistakes, clean house, seek out the best talent in the country without regards to previous loyalty. Rick Barnes did the same after last year's disaster and we see the results. We can only hope for the same with football.
     
  3. Baseballa

    Baseballa Member

    Joined:
    Jun 12, 2002
    Messages:
    2,385
    Likes Received:
    972
    Here is texxx, midway through reading that article:

    [​IMG]
     
  4. percicles

    percicles Contributing Member

    Joined:
    Jun 11, 2002
    Messages:
    10,868
    Likes Received:
    2,911
    Texxx, it's a beautifull day outside. You should really get out more.
     
  5. Landlord Landry

    Joined:
    Mar 3, 2008
    Messages:
    6,857
    Likes Received:
    295
    Rice University. Where not losing by 40 points to the Horns during their worst season in a decade = success.
     
  6. SuperBeeKay

    SuperBeeKay Member

    Joined:
    Feb 24, 2008
    Messages:
    6,185
    Likes Received:
    258
    hey texx do you go to rice by any chance
     
  7. ItsMyFault

    ItsMyFault Contributing Member

    Joined:
    Jan 28, 2009
    Messages:
    15,646
    Likes Received:
    978
    Expect the Horns back near the top in a couple of years... while Rice... will be Rice... irrelevant.

    Don't see you talk a lot about Florida anymore Brah, I guess you jumped off that bandwagon.
     
  8. DonnyMost

    DonnyMost be kind. be brave.
    Supporting Member

    Joined:
    May 18, 2003
    Messages:
    47,443
    Likes Received:
    17,088
    A bigtexxx UT post you say?

    [​IMG]

    There is nothing more pathetic than hating a school more than loving your own, and this is coming from a guy who thinks that Texas public higher education would be a MUCH better place if UT and A&M did not exist in their present form today.

    Seriously, grow up.
     
  9. SuperBeeKay

    SuperBeeKay Member

    Joined:
    Feb 24, 2008
    Messages:
    6,185
    Likes Received:
    258
    How so? UT has some of the best engineering and business school in the nation.
     
  10. bigtexxx

    bigtexxx Contributing Member

    Joined:
    Jun 12, 2002
    Messages:
    26,925
    Likes Received:
    2,265
    No, he's butt hurt because his alma mater (UH -- Central Branch) isn't a Tier 1 school.

    It's overshadowed by that school a few miles down the road, with 1/10th of the student population, that IS Tier 1....
     
  11. tellitlikeitis

    tellitlikeitis Canceled
    Supporting Member

    Joined:
    May 7, 2009
    Messages:
    19,702
    Likes Received:
    10,194
    Thujone's recap on Shaggybevo was infinitely better....
     
  12. DonnyMost

    DonnyMost be kind. be brave.
    Supporting Member

    Joined:
    May 18, 2003
    Messages:
    47,443
    Likes Received:
    17,088
    UT/A&M suck up/are given too much resources per student compared to other Texas public unis.

    I would prefer to see a more equitable state university system, the current system is pretty much the way it is because of UT, and to a lesser extent, A&M.
     
  13. trueroxfan

    trueroxfan Member

    Joined:
    Apr 24, 2008
    Messages:
    4,170
    Likes Received:
    143
    not reading because they were a hell of a team when i went to school there so sucks for the suckas who go there now! jk, but really how can anyone complain after one bad season? when was the last time we had a losing record? over a decade ago. yes mack makes some dumb decisions, but i think his greatest one was holding on to greg davis for so long.

    greg davis smd and gtfooa because you are a giant poswc and i dont care who replaces you as long as he has a brain and more than 2 effective plays
     
  14. SuperBeeKay

    SuperBeeKay Member

    Joined:
    Feb 24, 2008
    Messages:
    6,185
    Likes Received:
    258
    Theres like 1000 universities in Texas, surely you don't expect each school to be equal.
     
  15. br0ken_shad0w

    br0ken_shad0w Member

    Joined:
    Jun 11, 2006
    Messages:
    1,758
    Likes Received:
    302
    Considering our size and population, there should be more than just two flagship universities.
     
  16. DonnyMost

    DonnyMost be kind. be brave.
    Supporting Member

    Joined:
    May 18, 2003
    Messages:
    47,443
    Likes Received:
    17,088
    Differences between unis will always exist, but spending per student should be more equitable. A more level playing field. Where they go from there is their own choice.

    And as stated above, Texas having only two tier 1 public unis is f***ing embarrassing and directly attributable to the inequity I speak of.
     
  17. Fatty FatBastard

    Joined:
    Jul 13, 2001
    Messages:
    15,916
    Likes Received:
    159
    Meh. Tech has just as much a chance of getting Tier one status as anyone, but I don't care.

    MY degree in Finance and Economics came from a business school that was in the top 25 percentile of ALL US universities when I graduated. That's what I hang my hat on. A future ranking really has nothing to do with my degree. Why should it?

    I also know that in the 90's UH's restaurant program was second only to Cornell in the Country. It's all about what you study.
     
  18. DonnyMost

    DonnyMost be kind. be brave.
    Supporting Member

    Joined:
    May 18, 2003
    Messages:
    47,443
    Likes Received:
    17,088

    Doesn't hurt to think about other people, the welfare of the state, and the future, etc.
     
  19. Fatty FatBastard

    Joined:
    Jul 13, 2001
    Messages:
    15,916
    Likes Received:
    159
    It does, and I'm all for both UH and Tech getting Tier 1 status. I made fun of the football team as a joke because they were for so long, but the degrees at UH have always been fairly respected.

    My point is that regardless, my degree was from a program that was well respected. Nothing in the future is going to change that, for better or worse.

    BTW, what degrees did you get from UH? (not being condescending, obviously. Just curious.)

    Oh, and you still up for going to Laurenzo's? My coupon is good until mid April, and I'd like some advice on jogging.
     
  20. SuperBeeKay

    SuperBeeKay Member

    Joined:
    Feb 24, 2008
    Messages:
    6,185
    Likes Received:
    258
    who does Ohio have? Ohio State. Who else...?
    Who does New York have? I can't think of one Texas or A&M like public university there.

    California has the best education system no doubt, with likes of Berkeley, UCLA, UC Davis, etc etc but seriously, majority of other states don't have more than one or two flagship universities.
     

Share This Page

  • About ClutchFans

    Since 1996, ClutchFans has been loud and proud covering the Houston Rockets, helping set an industry standard for team fan sites. The forums have been a home for Houston sports fans as well as basketball fanatics around the globe.

  • Support ClutchFans!

    If you find that ClutchFans is a valuable resource for you, please consider becoming a Supporting Member. Supporting Members can upload photos and attachments directly to their posts, customize their user title and more. Gold Supporters see zero ads!


    Upgrade Now