Notre Dame fires Tyrone Willingham
By LIZ CLARKE of The Washington Post
WASHINGTON—While conceding that Tyrone Willingham had exceeded
their expectations off the field with his integrity, character and players’
improved academic performances, Notre Dame officials abruptly fired their
football coach Tuesday after growing impatient with his inability to vault
the Fighting Irish back into the nation’s elite.
Willingham’s teams amassed a 21-15 record in three seasons, and
after a 41-10 regular season-ending loss to top-ranked Southern California
last Saturday, this year’s 6-5 squad had accepted a bid to the Dec.
28 Insight Bowl.
After conducting a year-end review of the program with outgoing president
Rev. Edward “Monk” Molloy and other top Notre Dame officials,
Athletic Director Kevin White told Willingham Tuesday morning that he
was being released with two years remaining on his contract. White joined
Willingham in informing Notre Dame players at 1 p.m., and White made it
official in an afternoon news conference that laid bare what the school
saw as Willingham’s sole shortcoming.
“From Sunday through Friday our football program has exceeded all
expectations in every way,” White said. “The academic performance
is at fever pitch; it has never been better. Tyrone has done some wonderful
things. But on Saturday we’ve struggled. The program is closer than
when he arrived; we’re making progress. But in the view of the university,
we just didn’t make enough progress. ...
“At the end of the day, the end game is we’ve got to do a
good job on Saturday. We’ve got to get back to the elite.”
Notre Dame had turned to Willingham, who had compiled sterling credentials
in seven seasons at Stanford, to repair its sullied reputation in 2002
after its first choice for the job, George O’Leary, resigned five
days after being hired, after inaccuracies on his resume were exposed.
Willingham’s first season got off to an 8-0 start and ended with
a trip to the Gator Bowl. His second-year squad finished 5-7. This year’s
team upset Michigan and Tennessee, but also suffered lopsided losses.
Throughout, White took pains to say, Willingham displayed integrity and
character—as did his players.
The news came as a shock and disappointment to many of Willingham’s
players, as well as advocates of academic integrity in college sports
and greater diversity in college football.
“It is a tragedy that the best schools seem to be no different from
the worst when it comes to the desire for a winning team,” said
Hodding Carter III, president of the Knight Foundation, which has funded
efforts to reform college sports since 1989. “As far as being a
nurturer of young men and a decent human being and, for that matter a
pretty good football coach, they fired somebody who does a good job ...
except for one thing. It’s not that you don’t get to look
for winning; the question is: what is the rope that people ought to be
given? I guess the answer is, it doesn’t matter where you are.
Assume nothing except that, if you don’t have a big-time winning
record, you’re in trouble. And I think that is really too bad for
higher education and the sports within it.”
Willingham becomes the third black coach to depart the Division I-A ranks
this season following the firing of New Mexico State’s Tony Samuels
and the resignation of San Jose State’s Fitz Hill. That leaves two
black head coaches (Karl Dorrell at UCLA and Sylvester Croom at Mississippi
State) among the 117 in Division I-A football, where 51 percent of the
players are black but less than 2 percent of head coaches are.
That’s a dramatic decline from 1998, when there were eight black
coaches in Division I-A.
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