Sports

Time still of the essence for Lynch

POSTED AT 11:38 PM ON Oct. 28, 2009 | PRINT | Email | SHARE | COMMENTS (12)

article STORY: Glass: Bill Lynch will stay as coach

Amid a sea of disappointments and subsequent speculations, IU coach Bill Lynch finally found a lifeboat.  

Casting the buoy is IU Athletics Director Fred Glass, who made it part of his Wednesday agenda to tell the Indiana Daily Student his intentions of retaining Lynch as head coach, at least until the final two years of his contract expire.  

The problem, though, might not be with the actual contract, but in the fact that there is a contract to begin with. After leading IU to its first bowl game in more than a decade, everyone got swooped up in the excitement and Lynch was given the title of head man and an extension by former Athletics Director Rick Greenspan.

It wasn’t Glass’ decision to do so, but he said he is set to make sure contracts mean something at IU again. Lynch has two years remaining, and Glass will simply let those years play out, for better or worse.  

It’s a noble, if not untimely, stance to take.  

But he’s now put himself in a tough situation.

If the team struggles so badly that Glass is forced by his self-proclaimed IU fan personality to look for a new coach, he’ll come off as a hypocrite whose word means nothing to those future coaches.

If he sticks by his conviction, and the team does continue to struggle, he’ll lose fans faster than you can say “Kicks for Keeps."

Glass said he doesn’t want to speculate on what would happen if the team doesn’t improve. He doesn’t want to get into the “what-ifs.”  

Yet he also wanted to make the point that, save a few unfortunate plays, the team could be bowl eligible already. He has a point, as the losses at Michigan and Northwestern were both lost by three points or less, and in both games, IU had complete control of the game at one point.

But what happened to not thinking about the “what-ifs?”

After all, the team has been equally inconclusive in victory. In wins against Eastern Kentucky and Western Michigan, a late-game fumble in their own red zone saved points and, possibly, the game for the Hoosiers.   

From a pure “what-if” standpoint, the Hoosiers could be 2-6 just as easily as they could be 6-2.  

Just speculating on how many games the Hoosiers could have lost isn’t sufficient justification for a fire, but thinking about how many games they could have won isn’t enough to keep a coach, either.

You can point out how close the Hoosiers have been to breaking through, but the simple fact is they haven’t. Good teams don’t make excuses for losing; they put themselves in a position to win.  

To Lynch’s credit, he has done a pretty decent job trying to push that idea. He always preaches that one play doesn’t make a game, and he seems to be trying harder this year to make the team forget losses.  

Eventually, IU needs a coach that won’t have to work on getting past losses as frequently. Whether that turns out to be Lynch or not depends only on time.  

For now, there will be no great flood pouring from the IU Athletics office, wiping out the IU coaching staff, but Lynch has to turn it around.

With the time he is getting, he will be expected to build a consistently successful program.

Losses are his riptide, and if Lynch doesn’t turn it around, he’ll drown out just as countless others have done in Bloomington.

PRINT | Email | SHARE | COMMENTS (12)



POST A COMMENT:



Name:
*
Email:
*
E-mail address will not be published.
Comments:

Verify image:
Security Text
  *
 
 
All Comments  (11)

11. Posted by Mike P. at 8:21 AM on Oct 30, 2009 | Report this comment

Ryan, I think you hit a lot of stuff right on the head here. There are many more things you could had used to go anti-Lynch here. At 4-4, Lynch's team has been outscored in every quarter (as a whole product) this season. Coming out of half time when the largest adjustments are made, this team has scored a dismal 13 points in the 3rd quarter having been blanked in 5 of the 8 game including the last 4 straight. You could also use the argument the failed to score in the 2nd half against an FCS team as well as Northwestern. If it wasn't for a garbage time 4th quarter TD against OSU and then in Virginia, when the games were out of hand and didn't matter, they could be blanked in the 2nd half of half their games this season! What is done in practice and in the film rooms to prep for games has never been the issue. It is the product on the field, and the lack of meaningful adjustments being made. heyheyhey, I will repeat a direct quote from the article: "The problem, though, might not be with the actual contract, but in the fact that there is a contract to begin with." Right there is the suggestion that Lynch should never have received a contract to begin with.

10. Posted by heyheyhey at 9:28 PM on Oct 29, 2009 | Report this comment

You know what's funny? I clicked on this link from the hoosier scoop, and Hugh said you suggested that Lynch should have never gotten the contract. I don't see that in here. I see you mentioned Greenspan, not Glass, gave it to him. I see that you mentioned he got the contract in the midst of excitement, though, and I kind of disagree. I think he should have gotten it no matter what, but 4 YEARS? that's where you can tell it was mre of an emotinal sign than a logical one. lynch should have gotten two years (i.e. end of this year)...if he had that, I can guarentee Glass would nt re-sign him. Good stuff, regardless.

9. Posted by Brian Davidson at 3:44 PM on Oct 29, 2009 | Report this comment

As a season ticket holding alum making the 4 hour drive every week to sit in a half filled Rock, I can't begin to express my frustration with this announcement. What is the point of making an announcement now? To stop our stellar recruiting class from decommitting? They aren't that stellar. He was given the opportunity because of what he accomplished taking over from Coach Hep. No one seriously believes he could have come anywhere near a BCS job given his past coaching record. He has done nothing since receiving that opportunity. If he wins out this year, fine, he deserves to stay. But in no way had he accomplished enough to earn this vote of confidence.

8. Posted by HoosierFan at 3:35 PM on Oct 29, 2009 | Report this comment

Go Hoosiers!

7. Posted by Pete_Mote at 3:23 PM on Oct 29, 2009 | Report this comment

I say extend Coach Lynch's contract. The Big 10 needs tough firery coaches like him in the league. Of course Iowa will throttle IU this weekend, much like they did last season at beloved Memorial Stadium. But the heck with that, we still have our basketball team to look foward to. Don't we?

6. Posted by Pete_Mote at 3:22 PM on Oct 29, 2009 | Report this comment

I saw extend Coach Lynch's contract. The Big 10 needs tough firery coaches like him in the league. Of course Iowa will throttle IU this weekend, much like they did last season at beloved Memorial Stadium. But the heck with that, we still have our basketball team to look foward to. Don't we?

5. Posted by mandyAmanda at 12:35 PM on Oct 29, 2009 | Report this comment

I agree that hiring him was a pretty obvious move in 2007. But its clear this guy has no clue. Even if Lynch could turn the program around if we keep him, I think we should fire him anyway. The fans are angry, and they need a scapegoat to vent their anger upon. Somebody has to be the fall guy. Personally, I think Lynch deserves to be it. But even if he doesn't, I think Lynch should be fired as a symbolic way of telling the IU fans that this kind of losing isn't something we accept at IU. We can find someone else. Fire Lynch, and do it Donald Trump style too.

4. Posted by Mfancoach at 11:34 AM on Oct 29, 2009 | Report this comment

Speaking as a coach, Bill Lynch has done a more than admirable job with the Hoosiers. It's just one man's opinion, but I belive with time and continued support, that IU is going to be glad they kept Coach Lynch around.The tough losses at Michigan and Northwestern may be hard to swallow. But Michigan is extremely talented and IU competed with them due to an extraordinary week of preparation (coaching). When looking at Northwestern, they had MSU beaten at E. Lansing, NW is not chopped liver. Over the last few years NW has completed very similar comeback wins against both UM and MSU. As well as Minnesota. Impatience is the wrong reason to let any coach go.

3. Posted by Hoosier Hound at 10:29 AM on Oct 29, 2009 | Report this comment

You emphatically state that what-ifs are not important, that results are what counts. Well, the results show that Bill Lynch is the only one of five coaches in a decade and a half to take IU to a bowl game. It was right to give him the contract after 2007, and it is the right call to give him the time to be successful.

2. Posted by Beff at 9:26 AM on Oct 29, 2009 | Report this comment

Once again, what was IU supposed to do? "Bill, you took over a program reeling from the passing of our football coach & managed to take them to our 1st bowl game in 14 years. We appreciate your hard work but we just cannot keep you." IU isn't supposed to offer a contract to a coach running a clean program after they gave one to Kelvin Sampson? It wasn't about getting swooped up in the excitement. IU was in no position to not offer Lynch a contract.

1. Posted by mandyAmanda at 4:5 AM on Oct 29, 2009 | Report this comment

I don't like the "but for a few unfortunate plays" line. I'm sorry, but for this or but for that the world would be different. And if a few plays that went our way went the way of the opponent, our record would be even worse. What matters is what happened. And what happened isn't good. I don't care about "making contracts mean something." That's silly. Even if we fire Lynch, or any other coach, they still get paid. If we want to attract people to IU, we need to build a good program not a program where "contracts mean something."


Email

Your Name: *
Your Email: *  
To Email: *  
Subject: IDSnews.com | Time still of the essence for Lynch
Comments:
Verify image: Security Text



*