wyckoff9, I want those things, too. And I want them sooner rather than later. If Chizik can give those things to us this year, I will be overjoyed. If he doesn't, does that mean you will consider him a failure?Having no experience with Iowa State football until this year, it is hard for me to understand this attitude. Excellence will result in wins. In what other area of life are things judged by qualitative improvements rather than quantitive? Why should anyone be satisfied with moral victories or unmeasurable improvements in competitiveness, determination or effort? When you take the field in football there is only one measure of success. Wins!
I'm not talking about running anyone out of town. I'm talking about evaluating the coaching staff based on performance.
I know that Coach Chizik will not be satisfied with a 5-7 record or one conference win. He is planning to be in a bowl game and not in Shreveport or Houston.
Let's look at a few of the best coaches in the profession and see how they did with first year or two:
Joe Paterno went 5-5 with his first Penn State team in 1966.
Frank Beamer was 5-17 his first two years at Virginia Tech.
Mack Brown was 2-20 with his first two North Carolina teams before turning things around and getting lured away to Texas.
Barry Alvarez's first team at Wisconsin was 1-10. He didn't put a winner on the field until his fourth year.
Even Pete Carroll's first team at mighty USC was 6-6 and lost to an inferior Utah team in the Las Vegas Bowl.
I could cite plenty of other examples, if you want me to... What's your assessment of these coaches? Are they "failures" because they didn't post winning records in their first year? Should we expect Chizik to do better than any of these coaches with a team that was 4-8 last year and (as ISUFan22 has pointed out) just four plays away from being 0-12?
Like I said, building a program is not something that is done overnight. The coach has to change an entire culture and has to bring in players to fit his system -- or at the very least, convince the players on his roster who were recruited by his predecessor to buy into his system.
Realistically, we don't have the players or the talent to make it to a bowl game better than Shreveport or Houston this year -- if we can make it to one of those bowls at all. As Chizik changes the culture and brings in his own players, the wins should come. They just might not come in droves his first year. I, for one, am not ready to call this year's Cyclone team a "failure" if they don't finish with a winning record. I'm willing to be patient and let Chizik build the program he needs to build to get the kind of wins that you and I both want to see.
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