2016-09-27



For the first time in more than a decade, the Tigers are officially hunting for a new head coach. Follow along!

LSU fired Les Miles after more than 11 seasons, two SEC titles, a national championship, and endless drama of the good and bad varieties.

This means one of the country's premier jobs is now open. The state of Louisiana produces some of the country's most elite talent, and LSU gets to sit in the middle of it as the state's only Power 5 program. It also has access to Houston and the rest of Texas, plus Florida and the rest of the Southeast. Its next head coach will be able to recruit with a 100,000-seat stadium, a rabid fanbase, and one of the country's best NFL lineages.

Knowing LSU, you can expect a fascinating coaching search, to say the least.

We'll update this tracker as reasonable info emerges. For now, here's the starting point of everything major to know after the first couple days or so.

The widely reported favorites

Tom Herman, Houston

The country's most highly sought coaching candidate has denied contact.

.@CoachTomHerman says he has not been contacted about other jobs and said his agent has not been contacted by #LSU. @UHCougarFB pic.twitter.com/Stobta7ty5

— Mark Berman (@MarkBermanFox26) September 26, 2016

Jimbo Fisher, Florida State

Fisher was reportedly the top target last year as well. Athletic Director Joe Alleva admitted to "inquiries" into potential hires, but denied reporting that LSU was already negotiating with the FSU coach despite having not yet fired Miles.

"I'm not talking about LSU," he said Monday.

Tomahawk Nation has the Fisher-specific FAQ.

Ed Orgeron, LSU interim

He'll get two months to prove himself, and even though a successful interim run at USC didn't land him that job (probably should've, huh?), his ties to Louisiana and LSU are as deep as they can be.

Steven Godfrey wrote: "According to one source close to LSU, making a coaching change on an interim Ed Orgeron would always be easier than making one on Miles."

One source indicated to me that Orgeron is a legitimate candidate for the FT job. "If he does well, they'll adjust his contract" #LSU

— Sam Spiegelman (@samspiegs) September 25, 2016

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LSU oughta look into them, at least

Lane Kiffin, Alabama offensive coordinator

Bruce Feldman writes:

It's possible, especially if the Tide rolls to another national title. Kiffin has done an outstanding job helping Nick Saban win another national title and seems to get the offense going regardless of having to break in three new QBs the past three seasons. I know Kiffin has learned a lot from his time under Saban and would be a more organized head man than he was at his previous stops.

Several SEC teams have tried to beat Saban by hiring Saban assistants. Kiffin would be a similar approach, but without the same you-hired-a-bootleg-Saban vibe. One huge question would be exactly how much he's matured since his previous head coaching jobs.

Mark Dantonio, Michigan State

He's appeared on a couple internet lists. Great coach, and it's easy to think, "What could he do with a five-star roster for a change," but I'm not sure what about his preferred style over the years would make anyone think he's all that different from Miles.

Larry Fedora, North Carolina

Feldman again:

Fedora's a Texas native, who I think would love the chance to coach at LSU. He's done a good job at UNC and did very well not far from LSU while he was at Southern Miss.

Gary Patterson, TCU

The Horned Frogs' modern architect appears in these rumors annually, to no avail, and had this to say about LSU firing Miles:

"I think it's not fair to the university and the players and the program," Patterson said. "If they were going to do that, they should have done it a year ago. To do it in the middle of the season, I think it's not fair to anybody. It's not my place. I've got my own problems. So you go about your own business. But I think the guy is a good football coach. He's won a lot of games. I think he's been good for LSU. I wish him well. And I wish LSU well."

Bobby Petrino, Louisville

We've gone full circle. Any SEC West job opening must once again include the former Louisville and Arkansas coach, former Auburn candidate, and current Louisville coach's name. He said this about LSU:

"I'm not interested in going anywhere," Petrino said during a new conference to advance Saturday's huge game at Clemson. "I'm very fortunate to be the head coach here at the University of Louisville, very happy about that, very glad I have the support of our athletic director Tom Jurich. [...] This is the job I want. This is where I'm going to be."

Heard that before, for what it's worth.

Jeff Brohm, Western Kentucky

In case you want to hire a version of Petrino without all the baggage. CBSSports.com proposed him as a candidate.

Dan Mullen, Mississippi State

Also on a few internet lists.

LSU's a better job than any of the ones he's reportedly interviewed for over the last few years. Would need a huge finish to this season, though, since it'd be hard to get excited about hiring a coach who'd just gone 5-7 with a loss to South Alabama and a loss to the guy you just fired.

Willie Taggart, USF

He's a good coach who'll almost certainly have a Power 5 job soon. He's included here so that I can show you this evidence that he's a cultural fit (though he's also No. 4 on Bovada's betting odds, behind Herman, Fisher, and Fedora):

Uncanny.

Mike Gundy, Oklahoma State

He's thought about leaving his alma mater, where he's been the head coach since 2005, for the SEC before. This would also mean hiring two straight Oklahoma State head coaches. Not exactly a denial of potential interest:

"The best response to that would be what Mike Leach told me a long time ago. I was talking to him before a game and I think it was maybe his 10th year or something out at Texas Tech. He said. 'You know, if you stay at one place long enough, you're eventually going to get fired in coaching.' I said. 'What do you mean?' He said, "Well, you'll see. You just hang around a place long enough as a coach, they're eventually going to get tired of you and fire you.' I think that's probably the best example of what happened yesterday.'

Wait, what are these names doing here?

Chip Kelly, San Francisco 49ers

This sounds bonkers, but NOLA.com reports, "One of Kelly's former players and an assistant coach during his tenure with the Philadelphia Eagles said Kelly remains enamored with the possibility of coaching a major SEC program."

Kliff Kingsbury, Texas Tech

Bookmaker.eu listed him at No. 3 on its odds board, behind Fisher and Herman. LSU fans would like a coach who can produce passing yards, but you'd have a tough time talking them into a coach who's never fielded a good defense.

David Shaw, Stanford

He's long made it clear it's gonna be really hard to get him to leave (and he's similar to Miles in some ways, plus has said some stuff about academics that'd be tricky to explain in the Southeast), but it had to be asked.

"Are you serious? The answer is no," was the reply.

Hugh Freeze, Ole Miss

His on-field record makes him a candidate, and the chance to swipe from a rival is always nice. He's also still waiting on NCAA sanctions at the moment. If that clears, move him up into a group above this one.

Bill O'Brien, Houston Texans

The former Penn State head coach has appeared on a few candidate lists. He has an offensive background, which you have to think LSU will prize, but hasn't produced much memorable quarterbacking since leaving Tom Brady.

Urban Meyer, Ohio State
Nick Saban, Alabama
Bob Stoops, Oklahoma

Football Scoop reports these three are among the coaches whose interest LSU plans to gauge via "representatives." Meyer and Saban ain't happening, and Stoops would be viewed by most LSU fans as an extremely Miles-esque hire, in terms of meeting high annual expectations.

Art Briles, formerly at Baylor

No.

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