Beat 'Em, Then Join 'Em: Non-League Game Becomes Coaching Job Audition
"Success is simple. Do what's right, the right way, at the right time." - Arnold H. Glasow
Overlooked amid several coaching changes this year - LSU, New Mexico and Seattle - is possibility the job switches stemmed from a one- or two-game job audition. The shifts resemble 1970-71 when Digger Phelps guided Fordham to its winningest season in school history. But what likely really impressed Notre Dame's administration was a 94-88 victory that season over the Irish. He was UND's bench boss the next campaign and went on to win seven games against nationally top-ranked opponents in his career at South Bend.
Non-conference schedules frequently are frustrating for fans of power league schools because of what seems like feasting on a steady diet of cupcake opponents. But you never know when a single game can become a career changer. Similar to almost any job, timing is everything. Following is an alphabetical list of impressionable coaches such as Jim Hayford, Will Wade and Paul Weir generating such favorable reviews after defeating a school in a non-conference game they were hired by that institution in the same role before the next campaign:
*Competed in season-opening Military Classic before VMI defeated The Citadel twice in Southern Conference competition.