Tulane loses its OL coach and its special teams coordinator
- By Guerry Smith
- Joe Kennedy's Wave Crest
- 2 Replies
I requested George Barnett for the post-practice Zoom call today when I arrived at practice, totally unaware he had departed for Iowa. It was not until I was checking emails whlle waiting for the media conference to start that I discovered the news, which at least gave me time to prepare for talking to Fritz.
Needless to say, this was not good timing. Barnett's career at Tulane will consist of one game, the Potato Bowl loss to Nevada that turned into a debacle for the offensive line when Joey Claybrook got hurt in the third quarter. Now he's gone two days into spring practice after coaching his unit on Wednesday, forcing Willie Fritz to find someone else when everyone worth anything already has a job. He'll probably have to poach someone just like Iowa poached Barnett. It is understandable that Barnett would want to return to the his roots in the midwest, where he has coached almost his entire career, for a higher paying job in a Power Five conference, but the whole deal of coaches preaching accountability to their players and then bolting never has sat well with me. They talk a good game, but really they are just used car salesmen and do not hold themselves to the same standards they ask of their players.
Tulane does not have an assistant offensive line coach, so this will create issues for the short term. It is not a huge deal for the long term if Fritz can find a comparable coach--and Barnett received rave reviews from his the players he worked with at Miami (Ohio) and from fellow coaches in the industry--presumably one that will really want to coach at Tulane.
Fritz took the high road when he addressed Barnett's departure, which was first reported by Pete Thamel of Yahoo Sports this morning, at the beginning of his conference:
"George has just been here for a couple of months and he had the opportunity to get the offensive line job at Iowa back there where he's from, so we wish him well," Fritz said. "We'll be on the lookout for another coach. When I walked in, my IPhone was blowing up with all sorts of people. News travels fast nowadays. I was already working towards it a little bit when I thought he had that opportunity. One of the things I try to do when we hire assistant coaches is get great input from the coordinator on that side of the ball. It's important for those guys to feel great about everything. I want them to feel very comfortable. I don't want anybody to have any regret or excuses as why things weren't happening the way they wanted them to happen, so I'll get a lot of input from coach Long. He's been in this game for quite some time and knows a lot of people as well. We'll hire the best guy and proceed forward, and hopefully we can get a guy sooner rather than later."
Asked about the unusual timing of the move, Fritz said it had happened before.
"I've been doing this a long time, and unfortunately I've had it happen a few times. It was a possibility here a few days ago. I never stand in anybody's way. I want everybody here to be 100 percent into the Green Wave. If he got an opportunity that he feels like is a great situation for him, a better situation, heck, I'll give him an opportunity to do it."
The offensive line did a lot of one-one-one drills in the end zone today, and I'm not sure who was coaching them since I was not aware Barnett was gone at the time. The guy coaching them is Tommy Gerhard, who was a graduate assistant at Miami under Barnett the past two years after spending his playing career at Wittenberrg College in Ohio, graduating in 2018. Slade Nagle, Tulane's tight ends coach, helped out along with Long, who coached tight ends from 2010 to 2019. That stopgap will work until a new guy is hired.
"We are going to try to go pretty quick, if it's the right guy," Fritz said. "It's always important to have veteran players. I grabbed the offensive line and talked to them after practice a little bit. I told them they are stuck with me, and they told me I needed to put some weight on if I was going to go over and start working with the guys on the offensive line. We've got some great veteran leadership over there. Part of life and part of this game is change. You have to do a good job of responding to change. I told them they have to trust me that I'm going to bring a great replacement in for them."
Tulane also lost special teams analyst/recruiting coordinator Chris Couch, whom UL-Lafayette has hired to be its special teams coordinator/director of quality control. Couch was not a full-time assistant for Tulane, but it does not sound like his job with the Cajuns is a significant upgrade in responsibilities. He had been with the Wave since 2016.
"He did an absolutely outstanding job here," Fritz said. "He did a good job in everything I asked him to do. We wish him nothing but the best of luck. He's done a super job for us. With the kicking game, its something I'm heavily involved in. Slade Nagle will jump in there. He's very involved in the kicking game and he'll do a little bit more while we're conducting that search."
I will wait to put up my full practice report until tomorrow, but there were a lot of big plays in 11 on 11 today by both sides of the ball. Corey Dublin got all of his reps at center with the first-team offense while Sincere Haynesworth sat out, although Haynesworth participated in one-on-one drills.
Needless to say, this was not good timing. Barnett's career at Tulane will consist of one game, the Potato Bowl loss to Nevada that turned into a debacle for the offensive line when Joey Claybrook got hurt in the third quarter. Now he's gone two days into spring practice after coaching his unit on Wednesday, forcing Willie Fritz to find someone else when everyone worth anything already has a job. He'll probably have to poach someone just like Iowa poached Barnett. It is understandable that Barnett would want to return to the his roots in the midwest, where he has coached almost his entire career, for a higher paying job in a Power Five conference, but the whole deal of coaches preaching accountability to their players and then bolting never has sat well with me. They talk a good game, but really they are just used car salesmen and do not hold themselves to the same standards they ask of their players.
Tulane does not have an assistant offensive line coach, so this will create issues for the short term. It is not a huge deal for the long term if Fritz can find a comparable coach--and Barnett received rave reviews from his the players he worked with at Miami (Ohio) and from fellow coaches in the industry--presumably one that will really want to coach at Tulane.
Fritz took the high road when he addressed Barnett's departure, which was first reported by Pete Thamel of Yahoo Sports this morning, at the beginning of his conference:
"George has just been here for a couple of months and he had the opportunity to get the offensive line job at Iowa back there where he's from, so we wish him well," Fritz said. "We'll be on the lookout for another coach. When I walked in, my IPhone was blowing up with all sorts of people. News travels fast nowadays. I was already working towards it a little bit when I thought he had that opportunity. One of the things I try to do when we hire assistant coaches is get great input from the coordinator on that side of the ball. It's important for those guys to feel great about everything. I want them to feel very comfortable. I don't want anybody to have any regret or excuses as why things weren't happening the way they wanted them to happen, so I'll get a lot of input from coach Long. He's been in this game for quite some time and knows a lot of people as well. We'll hire the best guy and proceed forward, and hopefully we can get a guy sooner rather than later."
Asked about the unusual timing of the move, Fritz said it had happened before.
"I've been doing this a long time, and unfortunately I've had it happen a few times. It was a possibility here a few days ago. I never stand in anybody's way. I want everybody here to be 100 percent into the Green Wave. If he got an opportunity that he feels like is a great situation for him, a better situation, heck, I'll give him an opportunity to do it."
The offensive line did a lot of one-one-one drills in the end zone today, and I'm not sure who was coaching them since I was not aware Barnett was gone at the time. The guy coaching them is Tommy Gerhard, who was a graduate assistant at Miami under Barnett the past two years after spending his playing career at Wittenberrg College in Ohio, graduating in 2018. Slade Nagle, Tulane's tight ends coach, helped out along with Long, who coached tight ends from 2010 to 2019. That stopgap will work until a new guy is hired.
"We are going to try to go pretty quick, if it's the right guy," Fritz said. "It's always important to have veteran players. I grabbed the offensive line and talked to them after practice a little bit. I told them they are stuck with me, and they told me I needed to put some weight on if I was going to go over and start working with the guys on the offensive line. We've got some great veteran leadership over there. Part of life and part of this game is change. You have to do a good job of responding to change. I told them they have to trust me that I'm going to bring a great replacement in for them."
Tulane also lost special teams analyst/recruiting coordinator Chris Couch, whom UL-Lafayette has hired to be its special teams coordinator/director of quality control. Couch was not a full-time assistant for Tulane, but it does not sound like his job with the Cajuns is a significant upgrade in responsibilities. He had been with the Wave since 2016.
"He did an absolutely outstanding job here," Fritz said. "He did a good job in everything I asked him to do. We wish him nothing but the best of luck. He's done a super job for us. With the kicking game, its something I'm heavily involved in. Slade Nagle will jump in there. He's very involved in the kicking game and he'll do a little bit more while we're conducting that search."
I will wait to put up my full practice report until tomorrow, but there were a lot of big plays in 11 on 11 today by both sides of the ball. Corey Dublin got all of his reps at center with the first-team offense while Sincere Haynesworth sat out, although Haynesworth participated in one-on-one drills.