RIP Coach Jim Walden

The "Fan's Plan" segment on his coaches show shoulda been nixed by someone. Also, his interviews w/ visiting coaches on the show were sometimes uncomfortable. Tom Osborne refused to participate. Coach was a good guy, but a below average coach. RIP.
 
My favorite memory of Walden occurred when I went into Kelly’s on a Thursday before that start of the Big 8 men’s basketball tournament. There was Jim up on the stage leading the crowd in singing the ISU fight song.

Although he never took us to a bowl game, I know he gave it everything he had. RIP Coach Walden.
 
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Was Washington State a perennial Pac power before he got there? Here's another one for you. Johnny Majors had one win i g season at ISU and it wasnt his last. In fact he had 2 straight losing season before taking the Pitt job and winning 2 national championships.
Too bad for ISU that Walden did not turn out for ISU like Major's did for Tennessee. Walden had a losing recored at WSU and a losing record at ISU. He was a great guy, and did his best, just not a good football coach.
 
Was Washington State a perennial Pac power before he got there? Here's another one for you. Johnny Majors had one win i g season at ISU and it wasnt his last. In fact he had 2 straight losing season before taking the Pitt job and winning 2 national championships.
Reason why Majors was successful was his assistant coaches. Walden never had people like jimmy johnson and Jackie Sherrill. Johnny’s coaching tree while at Iowa state was the greatest of any coach we have ever had.
 
Walden was effectively tasked from day one with rowing upriver in a cardboard boat, only the NCAA took away one oar (Criner), then the university took away the other (Lester).

Never beat Iowa, but had the game in doubt in the 4th quarter several times, which was far better than the 45-point loss average of his predecessor. And sure, for every ranked win there was an equally stupefying loss -- which was not a unique occurrence among ISU coaches before or after.

Nebraska, never ranked lower than 11th
Oklahoma, ranked every year
Colorado, ranked 6/8 years (and at the height of the McCartney era)
Kansas, who even cracked the rankings and went to a bowl game under Mason
The very beginning of the K-State upward push with Snyder
Oklahoma State with the Sanders/Gundy/Dykes trio (first 2 years)
...and of course, Iowa

If nothing else, at least it was entertaining.
 
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My timeline might be off, and if it is I apologize, but when Walden was hired, wasn’t Fry pushing for Snyder to get the job? Just another “what if” in Cyclone history.

Once the administration started to get behind the athletic department, did we start to experience success (albeit slowly).
 
My timeline might be off, and if it is I apologize, but when Walden was hired, wasn’t Fry pushing for Snyder to get the job? Just another “what if” in Cyclone history.

Once the administration started to get behind the athletic department, did we start to experience success (albeit slowly).
Yep. But honestly at the time people thought Fry was the offensive genius and didn't want to hire his waterboy as our head coach.

And by "people" I mean idiots like myself lol
 
My timeline might be off, and if it is I apologize, but when Walden was hired, wasn’t Fry pushing for Snyder to get the job? Just another “what if” in Cyclone history.

Once the administration started to get behind the athletic department, did we start to experience success (albeit slowly).

snyder-isu.jpeg


Also tried to get Earle back from Ohio State, but couldn't agree on a number.
 
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Thanks for finding that -- Made to order! I was going to ask who was being considered. Lot of names in the mix, nothing jumps as inspiring, retrospectively.

Most of those in the main batch who had or eventually had "power league" experience were .500 or below at respective programs. Mason did OK at KU, but actually did better at Minnesota. Groh was at Wake, so you can't expect much; I think he went to NFL as asst then did OK at Virginia after that.

We have 20/20 hindsight w/ Snyder, but at the time he would've been another "who?" choice. If he could rebuild KSU, he could've done it at ISU, but that's also just a guess.
 
Thanks for finding that -- Made to order! I was going to ask who was being considered. Lot of names in the mix, nothing jumps as inspiring, retrospectively.

Most of those in the main batch who had or eventually had "power league" experience were .500 or below at respective programs. Mason did OK at KU, but actually did better at Minnesota. Groh was at Wake, so you can't expect much; I think he went to NFL as asst then did OK at Virginia after that.

We have 20/20 hindsight w/ Snyder, but at the time he would've been another "who?" choice. If he could rebuild KSU, he could've done it at ISU, but that's also just a guess.

The final five were Walden, Mason, Groh, Lynn Amedee (A&M OC under Sherrill) and Chuck Banker (ISU interim).

Urick also reached out to John Cooper, who declined but tipped Urick off to Walden.
 
Look at the Northwestern records before and after Ara was there, he took a total horrible program and took them to a .500 record at his time at the school. Saban got to MSU when they were under probation and went 34-24-1 and never had a losing season at MSU. Comparing either of those two to Walden is a reach and half.
I don’t think you realize how horrible the situation was. A President that actively hated and tried to tank athletics. Funded like a FCS team and facilities like a D3 school. Never on TV. Kids would turn down scholarships to walk on elsewhere. No coach was going to succeed. Not saying Walden was good but I don’t think a P5 program has ever been more poorly supported.
 
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The Jim Walden years are why I am such a die hard fan today. We had season tickets through all those bad teams because they were basically free and my Dad liked going to games. I remember the 6-5 team with Blaise Bryant as my favorite. The streaker game, the 0-10-1 season, tearing down the goal posts, beating Nebraska with Marv Seiler. And tailgating of course. A lot of good memories.
This probably sounds asinine to any fan of a P5 program, but there was a charm to those awful teams. Only the diehards were in the stadium. If we were within 17 points, the crowd legitimately thought we could still come back and win. You could hear the band and student section cheers clear as day lol. I was a kid, so it was still cool to see the pageantry of a college football game. The 90s were a magical time for college football, even if your team was absolute *******.
 

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