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Randy Edsall to Replace Ralph Friedgen at Maryland

After a few weeks of speculation about who would replace coach Ralph Friedgen at Maryland, it’s official: now-former UConn coach Randy Edsall’s the guy. 

Less than 24 hours after losing to Oklahoma in the Fiesta Bowl, he traveled to College Park, interviewed, and landed the job.

Until this morning, his name wasn’t really mentioned as a candidate to replace Friedgen (perhaps by design since he was preparing for UConn’s first BCS bowl game), the discussion instead dominated by coaches ranging from frontrunner Mike Leach to Gus Malzahn to thank-goodness-we-didn’t-get-them Rich Rodriguez and Mike Locksley.

Before today, my knowledge of Edsall and his career was limited to: losing to Oklahoma in the Fiesta Bowl, holding the UConn team together in the wake of Jasper Howard’s tragic murder, and acting really, really ridiculous on the sidelines. 

I did a little research and learned that he played under Tom Coughlin at Syracuse (well…he was the backup qb anyway) and took the UConn job as it was on the cusp of becoming the first school to make the leap from I-AA to I-A. His record at UConn was 74-70, although his record after moving to the FBS level is actually better (for comparison, Friedgen was 75-50 at Maryland). 

Edsall did a lot (shephered UConn from I-AA to a BCS bowl berth) in a short period of time (the Huskies moved to I-A in 2000 and joined the Big East in ‘04) with very little (UConn’s football offices were in trailers outside the stadium as recently as five years ago). 

But what will he do for Maryland that Ralph Friedgen couldn’t have done?

I think he’s probably a very good coach who will at least keep the Terps on the same path they were on this year, but I’m not sold that Randy Edsall is the guy who’ll get us in the Orange Bowl every year (partly because I’m not sold that such a guy exists). 

As far as I can tell, he’s a solid, well-liked guy, pretty even-keeled with a good reputation. (Sounds like the Fridge, huh?) He doesn’t have the spark of someone like Mike Leach - who can be more of a dangerously live wire - but he doesn’t have the controversial baggage either. 

Still, if what Maryland’s looking for is someone to fill seats and keep top in-state recruits at Maryland, I’m not sure Edsall’s going to have any more success than Friedgen. As ESPN analyst and Maryland alum Scott Van Pelt pointed out, Maryland’s fan base is tricky, and it’s going to be a challenge for any coach to hold their interest. 

Maryland’s in a basketball conference (the ACC) right between two major NFL markets (Baltimore and Washington). The fanbase isn’t as large and as passionate as that of someplace like Penn State or Florida, because the football team isn’t the team. Maryland’s fans are also Redskins fans or Ravens fans, and they’re more likely to spend their disposable income at NFL games than at Byrd Stadium. 

Winning big, and doing it consistently, will only change that so much. And if Randy Edsall wins big, and does it consistently, bigger schools will come calling. And unlike Ralph Friedgen, a Maryland alum who was more than happy to stay at Maryland, Edsall will likely answer the calls. He was in the mix for the Notre Dame job last season and talked with Miami about that opening earlier this year; if he’s a smashing success in College Park, an even bigger program will offer him even more to coach somewhere else, and Maryland will again be looking for a new hire.

Ralph Friedgen took the Terps from 2-10 to third in the ACC in one season. There’s a lot of young talent on the roster, beginning with ACC Rookie of the Year quarterback Danny O’Brien. If Fridge stays for the final year of his contract, and maybe a one-year extension, maybe they win the conference again. Then if he retires, the Terps are in a bit better position to attract a slightly bigger name, maybe one who’d see Maryland as a long-term deal. 

Right now, up-and-coming coaches see the program as a steppingstone, a strategic career move that will put them on a bigger stage and in a better position to get one of the prime jobs down the road. 

The only person who’d enjoy great success at Maryland and not consider moving on was Friedgen. And Maryland fired him. 

Here’s hoping Randy Edsall is able to pick up where Friedgen left off and accomplish great things with this great group of players. And here’s hoping Maryland treats him a little better than they treated his predecessor.

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The Maryland Terrapins are like a guy with great pick-up lines who just can’t close the deal.
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Ryan Feldman from The Hoops Report with the perfect analogy for Maryland basketball so far this season. It’s so frustrating to watch them lose games against quality opponents that they came really close to winning.

Full text of Feldman’s article here

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Maryland & Randy Shannon: No Deal

After a few days of obsessively refreshing websites and searching Google news and constantly checking Twitter for the latest on Maryland’s offer to former Miami head coach Randy Shannon, I finally got the news. Too bad it wasn’t what I was hoping to hear.

The Baltimore Sun reported that Shannon has declined an offer to take the defensive coordinator position at the University of Maryland.

I won’t lie; I like Randy Shannon and I was very happy to hear he’d been offered the position. I already had a blog post all ready to go about how he’s a stellar defensive coach and a stand-up guy and a really strong hire for new Terps head coach Randy Edsall.

I’ve liked Randy Shannon since he was elevated to the head coaching job at Miami at the end of the 2006 season. I thought it was wonderful when he refused to cater to former UM QB Robert Marve when he was acting like an entitled brat. I wanted him to be successful at Miami - and I don’t even like Miami - because I thought he was good for that program at that particular time (new rule: any player with a gun is off the team and out of school). And I was disappointed when it didn’t work out, just as I’m disappointed it’s not going to work out between Shannon and the Terps.

Shannon reportedly turned the job down because if he took it, he’d be losing $1.5 million in buyout money from the University of Miami. It seems like he gave that number to the Terps, theoretically offering them the chance to match it, and they said “Kbye.”

Can you blame either side?

Maryland’s already paying Randy Edsall somewhere in the $2 million range, and they’re also paying former coach Ralph Friedgen another $2 million to not coach (Tell me where the logic is in that. Please. Someone.) Coming up with another enormous chunk of change for a coordinator probably wouldn’t be a great option for the school right now.

While there are some college coordinators pulling in salaries worth millions, those coordinators do not coach in the ACC (Auburn’s Gus Malzahn will be making $1.3 mil after a raise, but ACC D-coordinators last year made between $150,00 and $700,000, depending on the school.)

Maryland had no business giving Randy Shannon $1.5 million. They probably could’ve come up with something that would add up to that over a few years, but it seems like he didn’t want that.

I wouldn’t either. Why go back to work if you’re going to make less than if you were to stay home and relax? (Jury is still out on whether Randy Shannon actually knows how to relax. Interesting thought, and much more pleasant than thinking about the reality of a world where someone can earn that much money for doing absolutely nothing, while millions work multiple jobs just to put food on the table.)

Randy Shannon to Maryland was a really exciting possibility, but in the end, it was more fiscally responsible for both sides not to come to an agreement. No harm, no foul. And still no DC at Maryland. So, who’s up next? (And can we get a “Candidates must submit minimum salary requirements in order to be considered” this time?)

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BOOM.

Jordan Williams.

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They’ve got a pretty good chance to win all of them,” Vasquez said. “I think we can beat UNC at UNC anytime.
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Greivis Vasquez on the Terps’ chances this season via Tracking the Terps (a Baltimore Sun blog)

Last year, with him on the team, I’d believe it.

This year, mmmm, I have my doubts. They’re pretty big ones, but I’d love to be proven wrong.

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Ravens rookie WR (and former Maryland Terrapin) Torrey Smith was interrupted mid-interview by yesterday’s earthquake.

Notice he doesn’t waste any time getting the heck out of there.

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