Dear Jon,

 

Dear Jon,

It’s me.  Again.

I know it’s been five years since we last spoke, and I still can’t get you off my mind.  I know we’ve got a history, and I see what you’ve made of yourself.  It makes me sad, and proud, and hopeful.  Maybe someday we can make it work again, you know?  Maybe now, perhaps?

Ah, listen to me… an old softy.  But I have to get this off my chest.  It’s why I’m writing you. You have to know how I really feel, one last time.  If we’re ever going to make this work, I feel like I’m going to have to be the one who is the aggressor.  We’ve flirted for years, but it’s never gotten serious.  We’re getting old, and I don’t turn the heads like I used to, that’s for sure.  It’s been nearly 19 years since somebody nice has given me any jewelry.  You remember that big, beautiful ring, but even they collect dust all these years.  Nobody remembers it now.  Heck, I see kids ready to go to college that don’t even remember that I was a looker in my prime.

You remember, Jon.  You were here for some of my glory days.  I’m hoping you still remember, and that’s why I have to write this.

Everyday, I look at this big, beautiful house I’m living in by the river, and it’s become this cavern of sadness.  I wake up every day, and it’s this mausoleum.  People just drive by and shake their heads.  They remember the good times, too.  I’m talking family, Jon.  Family! They can’t believe what a sad place this has become.  It’s been in my family for generations, and it’s pathetic the shape it’s in.  You should have seen it when my friends from Massachusetts came to visit earlier this year; even then, it felt so empty.  Especially in the fourth quarter.

You know about the guy I was seeing.  Butch.  I know you two were cordial, and I’m happy about that.  You were around more, and I loved seeing you, no matter how much it hurt. Butch had some good qualities.  He was a little corny, but he cared about me, you know?  After those previous two forgettable relationships, I needed that.

These last few weeks have been difficult.  Looking back, I’ve been fooling myself so long, and I feel so stupid.  I wanted so bad for him to be the one, when all this time, I couldn’t stop thinking about you.  I have to say that out loud, and you need to hear it.  If you don’t, I fear our time will pass for good.  Butch and I were officially over Sunday, as I’m sure you heard.  But I was done with him months ago.

By that weekend when my Massachusetts visitors came down, I knew.  Heck, I was sure the week before on our vacation to Florida, especially at the very end, right before we came back to Knoxville.  What an angry trip home that was.  I quit saying Hail Marys, Jon.

If I’m honest with myself, I’ve had feelings it wasn’t going to end well with Butch dating back a couple years now.  You can’t just let strangers from Oklahoma come into your house and take it over like they own it.  I’ve worked too hard to make this a home, and he did that; it was shameful.  Then, you should have seen what happened when we headed to Florida the week after!  I can’t even talk about it still without tearing up.

Yes, we go back to the same place every other year down there.  It’s not on the beach; it’s hot, sweaty and full of rednecks, but for some reason, we had to go.  People wear jorts there, for goodness sake.  I know you live in that state, and I know you’d love to come home.  For years, it looked like it would be a better trip, going to Florida.  But Butch just made it worse.

I hope those days are over now.  I’m finally free, Jon.  And I’m happy.  And I don’t know what the future holds, but I no longer have to feel as I’ve felt, like I’ve got to defend Butch and try to make him into something he’s not.  I’m reinvigorated!  I feel like a champion of life, like I’m rebuilding my life, brick by bri…

Ahh, there I go again.

I have to laugh.  He’s brainwashed me so long, that even though I’ve reached the next chapter, I still hear his voice.  It makes me shudder, but right now, I feel I’ll always hear his voice without a drastic change.

Which brings me to you, Jon.  Again.  After all these years.  I know you have feelings for me still.  You wouldn’t come around so much if you didn’t.  You wouldn’t call all our old buddies, some of those guys who helped make those good times great way back then and be trying to get the band back together.  I know you look at the old place and you hear about how I’m going to fix her up.  $340 million should do it, huh?  And all those old friends can come back, Jon.  I want them back.  I may even NEED them back.

But it means nothing without you.

Every time I see you tip back a Corona, it takes me back to when we were young again.  I sit by the television on Monday nights, just waiting to catch a glimpse of that wisp of blond hair, trying to see what color tie you’re wearing, what subtle hints you may drop during the game.  It’s always fun to hear you talk about a game, but I know where your heart is.  Or, at least, I think I know.

Sometimes, when I lay down at night, I catch myself whispering “Spider 2 Y Banana” and laugh to myself.  I have to, to keep from crying.

You’re not getting any younger, Jon.  And I may never be what I used to be, but I know with you back in my life, I can be great again!  Come on back to me, Jon!  I may sound desperate — and I’m not trying to — because I’ve still got a shadow of my pride; all these sad years haven’t taken that from me yet.

We can bush hog that patch of land over in Jeff County that you own, build a nice house, be near your son.  Yeah, I know he’s back up here, living close to me, doing well.  I’m taking good care of him.

I can even co-exist with Cindy.  If you remember, we loved each other once.  She’s always loved me.  She cheered me on back in our day, back when we were all one big, happy family.  Now, in the evening of your lives, it’s time for us to all spend some time together again.  Whaddaya say, Jon?

If you aren’t in love with me anymore, Jon, I need to know.  Right now.  Lay it on the table. Don’t string me along.  There are others out there who will love me for who I am.  There’s this fella down in Starkville, a little hunchbacked, but he’s got that sparkle in his eye and that smart-aleck wit I love.  Then there are a couple of young guys I’m courting — one in Orlando and another in Memphis — that haven’t quite reached their prime, but they’ve got potential.

I’m just jettisoning off everywhere looking for the right man.  You know I can’t be alone, after all. I’ve even entertained the thought of Lane again.  I know, I know.  That one-night stand has taken me years to get over, but he still just knows what to say to the ladies!

Still, they’re all poor substitutes for you.

I’ve heard all the rumors about that dead-end job you’re in now.  I know how much they love you, but we all see that company is hemorrhaging money, and they can’t keep you forever. You’re too good for them, Jon.  Yeah, sure, you could go back to Tampa, or Indianapolis, or God knows where else if you wanted.  But did you really love that, Jon?  They made you grimace; I remember that ugly face you made!  That’s not my Jonny!  Then, they called you names for making it.  Uck, I always hated “Chucky.”  What kind of name is that?  May as well be named Lyle!

No, you were meant for the mountain air.  You were meant to talk ball and wear orange and dip Copenhagen and be yourself.  We were meant for each other, Jon.

Think about it. You know where I am.

XOXOXO

Love,

Tennessee Football

Tennessee Vols coaching candidate D.J. Durkin

As Tennessee embarks on its fourth coaching search in ten years, here’s a quick look at Vols coaching candidate D.J. Durkin.

D.J. Durkin’s coaching experience (39 years old)

This is Durkin’s second season at Maryland, where he’s trying to turn around the Terrapins. He was 6-7 in his first season and is off to an okay start this year. He was 1-0 as the interim head coach at Florida. He was a graduate assistant at Bowling Green and Notre Dame before becoming a defensive assistant at BGSU in 2005-06. From 2007-09, he was a defensive assistant under Jim Harbaugh at Stanford and moved on to Florida where he coached linebackers and special teams from 2010-12 before taking over as defensive coordinator in 2013 and ’14. He was Michigan’s defensive coordinator and linebackers coach in 2015 under Harbaugh before getting his first head coaching opportunity.

GRT taxonomy of college football coaches: Great Coordinator (with some (mediocre, so far) Power 5 head coaching experience)

Why the Tennessee Vols might want D.J. Durkin

Yes, Durkin is an under-the-radar hire that may be down UT’s list, but he’s a great defensive mind who has done a good job as a head coach despite a 11-11 overall record. Maryland isn’t a bad job, but it was in disarray when he took over. He’s doing a good job recruiting there, too. He’s young, and he’s had a lot of experience in the SEC during his days at Florida. Several coaches would vouch for him, including Urban Meyer (who was his boss at Bowling Green), Harbaugh (boss at Stanford and Michigan) and Will Muschamp (like that matters). Another underrated-but-natural advantage is Durkin likely would bring bright, young innovative offensive coordinator Walt Bell with him. Bell is going to be a coaching star with an opportunity to be a head coach sooner rather than later. Bell is from Dickson, Tennessee, and went to MTSU. He’s done an incredible job as an offensive assistant at North Carolina, Arkansas State and now Maryland.

Why the Tennessee Vols might not want D.J. Durkin

Is he ready? There are definitely worse options out there, but the Tennessee fan base wanting a rock star wouldn’t be happy with the equivalent of a talented guy playing the club circuit. That’s what Durkin is right now. He may actually kill it at UT because he’s a good recruiter, a young guy who can relate to players, has a dynamic offensive coordinator and has a strong defensive acumen. But he’d have to handle the grumbling masses because he’s not Gruden or even Mullen for that matter. He also hasn’t managed his own program very long; this is only his second year. It’s a gamble.

Tennessee Vols coaching candidate Chad Morris

As Tennessee embarks on its fourth coaching search in ten years, here’s a quick look at Vols coaching candidate Chad Morris.

Chad Morris’ coaching experience (48 years old)

After a prolific run in the fertile grounds of Texas high school coaching, he got his big break as Tulsa’s offensive coordinator in 2010 where he began revolutionizing offenses as a Todd Graham disciple (much like Mike Norvell). From there, he made a name for himself as Dabo Swinney’s offensive coordinator at Clemson from 2011-14, helping to bring that program to the forefront of college football. He took over a downtrodden program at SMU, and the Mustangs will have a winning record this year. It’s been a long rebuild; he’s 13-21.

GRT taxonomy of college football coaches: Great Coordinator (with some (mediocre) Mid-Major head coaching experience)

Why the Tennessee Vols might want Chad Morris

You want instant offense? He’s an undervalued name out there who was once one of the hottest coordinator commodities in all of college football. He is great with the spread and has already performed wonders as the OC at a top-level school. It was only a matter of time before he built up SMU, but there’s a defined ceiling there. Can he ever make it higher in Dallas than winning the conference? You know he’d love the opportunity to excel at a top job. He’d need a premiere defensive coordinator, but his ties in Texas and in the Southeast would be a bonus in recruiting, and the Vols would definitely rejuvenate a stagnant offense.

Why the Tennessee Vols might not want Chad Morris

Again, this is a very realistic hire, but it seems that he would be further down the list. Morris is interested in this job, as well as openings at Ole Miss and the potential one at Arkansas. As a Texas A&M graduate, that’s a dream job, but will the Aggies dip that far down? For that matter, will the Vols? Morris would need to make a slam-dunk hire as a defensive coordinator, but he has ties to Clemson assistant and former UT player Marion Hobby, so that would be a possibility. Still, he has gone to Dallas and been a forgotten man for a bit. Vols fans would need years and wins to warm up to him. Do we have that kind of time?

 

Tennessee Vols coaching candidate Joe Moorhead

As Tennessee embarks on its fourth coaching search in ten years, here’s a quick look at Vols coaching candidate Joe Moorhead.

Joe Moorhead’s coaching experience (43 years old)

College assistant at Georgetown, Akron, UConn, and Penn State. Hired to be Nittany Lions offensive coordinator in 2016 after serving as Fordham head coach from 2012-15.

GRT taxonomy of college football coaches: Great Coordinator

Why the Tennessee Vols might want Joe Moorhead

He’s arguably the best offensive coordinator in college football. With the struggles Tee Martin has experienced this year at USC and with Brent Venables looking for an ideal scenario for his first coaching gig, if the Vols go in the direction of an assistant, why not Moorhead? UT’s fans likely would go crazy, but Moorhead has head coaching experience and can develop offenses and put up points.

Why the Tennessee Vols might not want Joe Moorhead

Tennessee needs somebody to galvanize its fan base and unify everybody, and this wouldn’t be it. Moorhead has zero experience coaching in the South and very little head coaching experience, period. He’s going to get a chance to be a head coach soon, but should that be in the SEC? Likely no, and he’d be way, way down the list.

Tennessee Vols coaching candidate Mike Bobo

As Tennessee embarks on its fourth coaching search in ten years, here’s a quick look at Vols coaching candidate Mike Bobo.

Mike Bobo’s coaching experience (43 years old)

This is Bobo’s third year as the head coach at Colorado State, where he inherited a good program from Jim McElwain. He’s just 20-17 in three years (as of November 13), but he has kept the offense humming along. Prior to taking that gig, he was the offensive coordinator at Georgia for eight years and was an assistant at his alma mater before that. He was also a quarterback coach at Jacksonville State. Of course, he was the starting quarterback for the Bulldogs in his playing days.

GRT taxonomy of college football coaches: Great Coordinator (but with some (mediocre) Mid-Major head coaching experience)

Why the Tennessee Vols might want Mike Bobo

Bobo is a pretty strong offensive mind who knows the ins and outs of the SEC. He’s a dynamic recruiter who had a ton of success luring elite players to Athens, and he developed them well once they got there. He wasn’t always known for his play-calling acumen, but his familiarity with the league would serve him well. He also has built a strong staff in Colorado that includes former Vol Terry Fair.

Why the Tennessee Vols might not want Mike Bobo

Georgia fans weren’t in love with him as an offensive coordinator, plus he played ball at one of your biggest rivals. Come ON! There’s an argument to be made the Rams have taken a minor step down since he took over for McElwain, and though there have been some strong showings, CSU isn’t consistent. What kind of staff would Bobo build in Knoxville? Plus, this is not the kind of hire that would unite ticked-off fans.

Tennessee Vols coaching candidate Les Miles

As Tennessee embarks on its fourth coaching search in ten years, here’s a quick look at Vols coaching candidate Les Miles.

Les Miles coaching experience (63 years old)

After a strong tenure as Oklahoma State’s head coach, Miles took over at LSU for Nick Saban and had a great run at LSU before falling out of favor. He won a national championship and compiled a 141-55 record. The Tigers also played for another national championship. Miles was an assistant for Oklahoma State, Michigan, the Dallas Cowboys and Colorado. He served a term as the Cowboys offensive coordinator.

GRT taxonomy of college football coaches: The Proven Winner, Level One – National Champion (but with a recency problem); On Hiatus

Why the Tennessee Vols might want Les Miles

Miles can coach, he knows the SEC and he can recruit his hat off. He’s one of the most beloved characters in the SEC, and if he could hire a dynamic offensive mind to help take his scheme to the next level — something that was ultimately his downfall in Baton Rouge — he could work out. He’s a fit in the studio, and Miles is great on Twitter. He wants to coach again, but will the Vols go in this direction?

Why the Tennessee Vols might not want Les Miles

The fears that his offensive scheme is antiquated were real in his latter years in Baton Rouge, but Miles is a legit great coach. He’s a gambler, and when that backfires, fans turn on him. He’s also the kind of guy who can win a press conference or wear on you with his befuddling comments. Would that be something UT wants to endure after having the King of Coachspeak and Cliches lead your team? It may wear thin.

Tennessee Vols coaching candidate Lane Kiffin

As Tennessee embarks on its fourth coaching search in ten years, here’s a quick look at Vols coaching candidate Lane Kiffin. Really? Yes, really. (Well, kind of.)

Lane Kiffin coaching experience (42 years old)

He’s been a head coach for the Oakland Raiders and then — as we all know — in 2009 with the Tennessee Vols before bolting like a thief in the night to go to USC where he failed. He resurrected his career as Nick Saban’s offensive coordinator in Tuscaloosa, and he’s tearing it up in his first season as Florida Atlantic’s head coach. Prior to taking over at Oakland, he was an assistant (including offensive coordinator) at USC, and also coached at Fresno State, Colorado State and with the Jacksonville Jaguars. Son of legendary defensive coordinator Monte Kiffin.

GRT taxonomy of college football coaches: Great Coordinator; Guru (offense); The Proven Winner, Level Four – Mid-Major Champion

Why the Tennessee Vols might want Lane Kiffin

He’s family, and you always forgive family, right? Haha. In all seriousness, though, Kiffin is an offensive genius who is good with Xs and Os, knows how to develop quarterbacks and score points. He was an immature mess the first time around with the Vols, but if he plays by the rules [huge if] and has some kind of maturity exit clause in his contract, there would be much, much worse hires. Still, there would be a lot of people — A LOT — who’d find it difficult to forgive and forget. One thing to remember is John Currie helped bring him in, though.

Why the Tennessee Vols might not want Lane Kiffin

Honestly, when it comes to Tennessee, Kiffin carries more baggage than Petrino. He left UT saddled and scrambling to avoid NCAA sanctions. He ran his mouth, recruited players who didn’t have staying power, replaced UT traditions with pictures of USC players and did a lot of immature things. Has he grown up? Can he follow the rules? Is he worth the gamble?

Tennessee Vols coaching candidate P.J. Fleck

As Tennessee embarks on its fourth coaching search in ten years, here’s a quick look at Vols coaching candidate P.J. Fleck.

P.J. Fleck’s coaching experience (36 years old)

This is just his first year of experience at a Power 5 school as he tries to rebuild Minnesota after turning Western Michigan into the mid-major standard, a team that took Wisconsin to the brink in 2016 before a close loss in the Cotton Bowl. Before that, Fleck was an assistant at Ohio State, Northern Illinois, Rutgers and with Tampa Bay in the NFL. He enjoyed a standout career at Northern Illinois before moving onto the 49ers in the NFL.

GRT taxonomy of college football coaches: The Proven Winner, Level Four – Mid-Major Champion (but just once, and is currently 5-5 at his first shot at Level Three (as of November 13))

Why the Tennessee Vols might want P.J. Fleck

He’s a young offensive mastermind and motivator that has consistently proven he can recruit, develop and build winners. What is his ceiling? He’s still too young to know, but he led the Broncos to some big-time football games a year ago, and if you can lock him in, Fleck’s best years are likely in front of him. He’s young and aggressive, and he’d probably do well in Knoxville.

Why the Tennessee Vols might not want P.J. Fleck

So … about those slogans… If you’re sick of Jones and his brick-by-brick/life champions rhetoric, Fleck isn’t going to be a change of pace. He does “row the boat” after all. That stuff has worn thin in Knoxville, and there are people who’d check out at the first sign of blabber, especially when it has nothing behind it. But Fleck has proven his accountability, and he wouldn’t make excuses. Still, has he been at a big program long enough?

Tennessee Vols coaching candidate Mike Leach

As Tennessee embarks on its fourth coaching search in ten years, here’s a quick look at Vols coaching candidate Mike Leach.

Mike Leach’s coaching experience (56 years old)

Leach has experienced successful tenures as the head coach at Texas Tech and Washington State, both programs he brought from the doldrums but each teams with ceilings. It’s just hard to win a championship at either place. He was a wildly successful offensive coordinator at Valdosta State, Kentucky and Oklahoma prior to his coaching tenure. He also coached at Iowa Wesleyan, College of the Desert and Cal Poly.

GRT taxonomy of college football coaches: Guru (offense)

Why the Tennessee Vols might want Mike Leach

The Vols would put up points in bunches, and everybody would love Leach’s bluntness and quirkiness on the podium as long as he was winning. It seems his name always comes up as one of the pie-in-the-sky candidates for UT’s coaching searches, but it always seems a stretch to bring him down. It would be fun to see how his offense plays in today’s SEC. It’s said that he doesn’t get along with the Wazzu administration, and his athletic director just left for Nebraska.

Why the Tennessee Vols might not want Mike Leach

Leach isn’t exactly known for his running game acumen or defense — two things many of the old-school UT fans believe are important elements of playing “SEC football.” Plus, it’s unclear whether he could draw recruits to Knoxville. Would he be too stubborn to outfit his staff with the type of recruiters you must have at UT? Also, the first time Tennessee lost a game 50-45, the grumbles would start. This just seems like it has more chances of being a disaster than being a rousing success.

Tennessee Vols coaching candidate Justin Fuente

As Tennessee embarks on its fourth coaching search in ten years, here’s a quick look at Vols coaching candidate Justin Fuente.

Justin Fuente’s coaching experience (41 years old)

Wildly successful head coaching tenure at Memphis was parlayed into a gig at Virginia Tech, where he turned around a proud program with an ACC Championship Game appearance last year, and he’s followed it up with a solid 7-3 season so far for the Hokies (as of November 13). Prior to head coaching, he was an assistant (including offensive coordinator) at Illinois State and TCU.

GRT taxonomy of college football coaches: The Proven Winner, Level Three – Major Conference Contender (relatively new at Level Three, but proven at Level Four)

Why the Tennessee Vols might want Justin Fuente

There are few better offensive-minded coaches out there, and he is known for being a program builder. His system straight-up works, and though he’s quiet, he obviously knows how to motivate players, develop players and get the most out of them. UT fans would love the way the offense plays under him, and if he could make a strong defensive hire, he’d be a guaranteed hit in Knoxville. The only question mark is recruiting.

Why the Tennessee Vols might not want Justin Fuente

Other than some minor recruiting concerns, there’s the thought that he’s already at a destination job in Virginia Tech, which is a place that adores him. He doesn’t yearn for the burning spotlight of the SEC, and as a quiet guy, you could totally see him settling in to Blacksburg for a long, long time. He has a high buyout, but the number goes down in December. Can the Vols wait until then? If so, you’re essentially sacrificing a year of recruiting.