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Disappointment From Coast to Coast, Part Two
The NCAA Football regular season ink is dry, and the dye is mostly cast.
For many teams the season’s promise was bright as summer turned to fall. Now, as fall turns to winter, that promise has turned darker than late afternoon post the change in daylight savings time. You set you clocks back while some team’s performance set their programs back.
So who are they? Who are those teams that fell significantly short of meeting the expectations of their followers? Disappointment can and does come from a few angles. The program’s history builds in annual minimum standards. A new, and maybe highly paid, coach can further that. A good recruiting year or three can further that. Some teams are bad but somewhat expected. Some are disappointing and somewhat unexpected.
In part one we selected Washington out of the PAC 12 as the most disappointing. Evidently, head coach Chris Petersen was disappointed as well. He stepped down yesterday citing a need to “recharge.” Today we continue with part two of our series scanning each of the Power 5 conferences to select the most disappointing performance.
ACC
Most Disappointing
Usually in year two of a new coaching staff’s run the ascent begins. After all, you have two years of your own recruits. You may have run off a few that you don’t want. The transfer portal can accelerate your personnel transformation. You have instilled the weight and nutritional training that you want to shape your team. Your culture is, or better be, in place. Your staff has had two springs and two falls to “coach em up.” If it’s a big time program money/budgets are generous to accomplish all of the above.
“Usually” is the key word. For Florida St. the 2018 and first half of the 2019 season was all the boosters, alumni, AD, and school administration needed to see “usually” would not turn into their reality. Willie Taggert, nine games into year two and 21 games in in total was fired. Several losses in 2019 were downright embarrassing. A season opening home loss to Boise St. was followed by a one point win over Louisiana Monroe. Clemson and Miami both worked FSU over. Discipline lacked and class attendance declined. And, then it was over.
Taggert, 43, had ascended rapidly in the head coaching world. Western Kentucky’s success lead to USF’s turnaround which led to a major jump to the helm at Oregon. One year in at Oregon, Taggert jumped ship to coach the Seminoles.
Florida St. missed the bowl season in 2018 (the first time since 1981), and won six and lost six in 2019. That’s only good enough for a tie for fourth in the Atlantic side of the ACC. They also will be buying out Coach Taggert for a smooth 20 million per the contract that he didn’t finally sign, but will expect to collect from. Taggert finished 9-12 in his 1 3/4 years there. His ACC record was a miserable 6-9 in a conference that isn’t from top to bottom that feared. The team was 4-5 when he was let go.
Clemson is the standard that FSU aspires to compete with. When you finish behind Louisville and Wake Forest, and tied with Boston College, Clemson is more than a few hydration bottles ahead of you.
Florida St. is easily the most disappointing team in the ACC.
Also Considered
FSU took the prize and second place wasn’t close. However, the continued noise emanating from South Beach isn’t due to partying about the Miami Hurricanes football team. They finished 6-6 as well. They began 2018 ranked 3rd in the U.S. They end 2019 as an afterthought in the ACC. A parade of coaches have come and gone since that program has been relevant on the national stage.
Syracuse, finishing 5-7, also underwhelmed. The Orangemen were upstarts for two straight years registering some nice upsets along the way. This year was a step backwards.
Comment section
Did you hear that Coach Orgeron is on the hot seat at LSU? You know, he was fired at Ole Miss.
Bitter and jaundiced is no way to go through life Pluto.
If Manny Diaz doesn’t win 9 games next year, they will take him fishing and use him for bait. Can you say Long John Silver?
Dexter on line two.
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