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In Depth
Sideline Homecoming
Coaches Feel Drawn To Their Roots
By Joe Bendel
The coaching world can be as fluid
as the Nile, a never ending passage with more twists than Bob Vila's
screwdriver.
"You never know where you'll
end up in this profession," former Pitt football coach Johnny Majors
said.
One day it could be Columbus.
The next it could be Akron or Anchorage or Arkansas.
It's
a vocation that's sent Steelers coach Bill Cowher to three different
outposts, Majors to five, Rich Rodriguez of West Virginia to six and
former Pitt basketball coach Ben Howland to six, as well.
The common denominator among that
group is that all eventually returned home to coach the franchises or
schools they grew up rooting for.
In some instances, they returned
to the organizations for which they played.
Local Heroes
"It's an honor to be asked
back," Majors said. "It's a draw on you emotionally and on
your ego. You get a chance to rebuild the fortunes of a program that
is important to you. As Thomas Wolfe said, 'You can never go home again.'
Well, I did go home again and had a lot of excitement doing it."
It took Majors 20 years in the
coaching ranks before returning to the University of Tennessee, his
state school and alma mater, where he finished as a runner-up for the
Heisman Trophy in 1956.
He left a national-championship-winning
program at Pitt in 1976 for a chance to coach in Rocky Top country.
His introductory press conference at Tennessee drew more than 100 media
members.
Cowher canvassed the coaching
circuit for well over a decade before that memorable day in 1992, when
Dan Rooney gave the Crafton native the keys to his hometown team. The
city was abuzz in Cowher's rookie year when he led the Steelers to an
11-5 record and a division title. He had them in the Super Bowl in '95.
Howland, meantime, left the elevating
Pitt basketball program behind in April to get back to his California
roots at UCLA, and Rodriguez saw a successful career as an assistant
take him to his "dream job" in Morgantown with the hometown
Mountaineers, for whom he played from 1981-84 and once worked as a graduate
assistant.
No Place Like Home
"Not to sound funny, but
there's no place like home," Howland said. "You work long
and hard with the hope that you can fulfill a dream and go back to where
you came from. I'm living out a dream. I'm near my family. I'm around
my friends. And I'm coaching at UCLA. It's probably the only job I would
have left Pittsburgh for. I had a great situation, but this was too
good to pass up."
Howland has already assembled
a strong recruiting class for next season and has the Bruins playing
hardnosed, defensive basketball, as he did in his four successful years
at Pitt.
He is looking to revitalize his
hometown team, just like Cowher has done with the Steelers, who've been
to three AFC Championship games and a Super Bowl, and like Rodriguez
is doing with WVU, which won a share of the Big East Conference title
in his third season this fall.
Majors guided Tennessee to a 116-62
mark, with three Southeastern Confer-ence championships and a 7-4 bowl
record in 16 seasons before returning to Pitt for a four-year stint
from 1993-96.
"You want to get the job
done for the people who have supported you throughout your life,"
said Rodriguez, the Big East Coach of the Year in 2002 and 2003. "There's
nothing like being on that field on Saturdays in front of your extended
family."
Natives Grow Restless
That said, it's not always best
to go home. Majors felt uneasy about leaving the Pitt program behind,
even though he was headed back to his roots. He had rebuilt things quickly
after arriving in 1973, turning Pitt into a national powerhouse and,
ultimately, a national champion.
He made countless friends in the
city, not to mention good money, and received carte blanche treatment
anywhere and everywhere he went. He has said on many occasions that
he might have been hasty in signing on the dotted line at his alma mater.
He eventually felt less welcome
at Tennessee, and, several of his colleagues turned on him. He was forced
to resign, and his departure was bitter, even though he is one of the
most revered heroes in the history of Tennessee athletics.
"I wanted to stay in Pittsburgh
more than I wanted to go to Tennessee, but I had a chance to be closer
to my family - my mother and father and three brothers. It was intriguing,
but we would have won a lot more at Pittsburgh. There were possibilities
of other national championships at Pittsburgh.
"But with all that being
said, I had great times and it was exciting rebuilding the Tennessee
program. We were the winningest team in the SEC my last five years and
went to four major bowl games in six years. But I was undercut and lied
to the day before I went into heart surgery (in '92). Until my ignominious
demise - when I was knifed in the back by the present coach and some
administrators - it was a great run."
Majors' ousting prompted former
Pitt athletic director Oval Jaynes to say this about Vols fans: "Sometimes
you have to be more than 100 miles from home before you are considered
an expert."
To a lesser extent, Cowher is
discovering that the hometown fans don't always see a local as a hometown
hero. The natives are getting restless with his team, particularly since
the Steelers will miss the playoffs for the fourth time in six years.
Howland has already been booed
at UCLA's Pauley Pavilion, where national championships are expected.
Difficult Decisions
Former Steelers' assistant Chan
Gailey said going home is not right for everyone. He coached at the
collegiate and pro levels for 26 years, including a two-year stint with
the Dallas Cowboys as head coach, before heading back to Atlanta to
coach Georgia Tech two years ago.
"First, you have to understand
and decide what's important to you," Gailey said. "Coming
home and being around the people at home have always been vital to me.
These opportunities just don't come up very often, so when they do,
you have to react quickly. If you pass on the chance to go back to where
you started, you might never get that chance again. Part of you feels
like you owe it to the people from your home state to come back. And
part of you thinks you owe it to yourself. Some people pass up on the
chance and regret it. Some know it would have never been the same.
"You need to make sure it's
going to be a comfortable setting for you and your family. Just like
anything, it has to be the right thing for all involved. This was what
was best for me. The timing was right and we were able to take advantage."
Skip Prosser, a Carnegie native,
passed up on a chance to coach at Pitt when Howland left to stay at
his current post at Wake Forest.
"It's all about timing,"
Prosser said. "Sometimes, it's perfect. And sometimes, it doesn't
work out. I made the decision based on what I thought was best for my
family and my career. You make choices, and you just hope you don't
regret them."
Joe Bendel covers college
sports for the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review. |