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What if Ara Parseghian had kept coaching?

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  • What if Ara Parseghian had kept coaching?

    NBCSports.com, MN
    Dec 31 2006


    What if Ara Parseghian had kept coaching?

    By John Walters
    NBCSports.com
    The only thing gaudy about Penn State is its head coach's victory
    total.

    Joe Paterno, now in his 41st season as the head coach in Happy
    Valley, has a career record of 355-117-3. Paterno's 355 victories
    rank second in Division I history to Bobby Bowden of Florida State,
    who has 359 (Paterno, by the way, is 7-1 versus the Dean of
    Dadgummit, including last January's triple-overtime win in the Orange
    Bowl).

    Paterno celebrated his 80th birthday on the final day of autumn
    (December 21). And suddenly, for the first time since Amos Alonzo
    Stagg roamed the sidelines at the College of the Pacific during World
    War II, the term "octogenarian football coach" will be in vogue.


    Malcolm Emmons/US PRESSWIRE
    Ara Parseghian coached the Fighting Irish to two national
    championships in just 11 seasons.Paterno's legendary longevity got us
    to wondering. There's a legendary football coach living in South
    Bend. Like JoePa, this coach is enshrined in the College Football
    Hall of Fame. Like JoePa, this coach still has a full head of hair,
    and he began coaching at the college level in 1950. And, like the
    Nittany Lions' full-maned master, he is an octogenarian.

    So we asked Ara Parseghian, "How many victories might you have if
    you'd never retired?"

    "Well, first that's a purely hypothetical question," replied
    Parseghian, who is 83 and has lost nothing off his fastball. "And
    second, I did not retire.

    "I resigned the responsibility of coaching football at Notre Dame.
    But, to answer your question, I don't think I could have survived (he
    means that in the literal sense) as long as Joe did. I would have
    been gone a long time ago."

    Parseghian resigned the responsibility, as he puts it, a long, long
    time ago. He was just 52 years old when he left Notre Dame after the
    1974 season.

    He had spent 11 years in South Bend and guided the Fighting Irish to
    a pair of national championships. However, he had been a head coach
    nearly half his life by that point. In 24 seasons as a head coach,
    first at Miami of Ohio, then at Northwestern and finally at Notre
    Dame, Parseghian had compiled a record of 170-58-4.

    At the same point in his life, Joe Paterno had been a head coach at
    Penn State for 14 seasons. His record then, following the 1979
    season, was 131-29-1. That mark was undeniably impressive -- already
    Paterno had put together three undefeated seasons as well as a trio
    of 11-1 campaigns (like the one he had last year).

    No doubt Joe Paterno is one of the greatest coaches who ever lived --
    and outlived most all of his peers. But what if that one peer who is
    still among us, Parseghian, had remained in coaching? After all, at
    the same age (52) AraPa was already up on JoePa by 39 wins -- at
    least a four-season advantage.

    I did the math so you don't have to. Assume that Parseghian, whose
    career winning percentage at Notre Dame was .836, had won only 75
    percent of his games afterward.

    Assume that Parseghian had remained at Notre Dame as the head coach
    for the next 367 games, up to and including last Saturday's win at
    Georgia Tech.

    Assuming all that, Parseghian would have 445 victories. His win total
    would dwarf those of Paterno (355) and Bowden (366).

    (Of course, there are other assumptions we could make had Parseghian
    never left: Rudy would have gotten into a game a lot sooner; so would
    have Joe Montana; the term "Oust Faust" would never have come into
    vogue; the average sports fan would know a helluva lot more about
    Armenia. But I digress.)

    "I never thought about 400 wins," says Parseghian, who really only
    spent one season as an assistant coach at Miami, and then succeeded
    Woody Hayes when he departed to take the Ohio State job. "You sort of
    move in the time frame that you're in. You're not thinking of the
    future, not thinking about statistics. All you're thinking about is
    winning the next game."

    The pressure-cooker that is Notre Dame was also an undeniable factor
    in Parseghian's decision to get out of football when he did. "You
    look at some of the more successful Notre Dame coaches besides
    Rockne," says Parseghian.

    "Frank Leahy, Lou Holtz and myself. All of them left after 11
    seasons.

    You think there might be something to that?"

    Parseghian, who ran every day at lunchtime during his coaching days,
    was always vigorous. He'd been at Notre Dame about five seasons when
    Francis Powers, an Irish alumnus who was a writer for Collier's,
    approached him at a golf outing. "So," asked Powers, "has it gotten
    to you yet?"

    "At the time," says Parseghian, "I didn't know what he was talking
    about. I was fine. But after five more years, I knew. This job ages
    you."

    Sometimes it ages you all in one afternoon. Parseghian recalls his
    final regular-season game as the Irish head coach, at the Los Angeles
    Coliseum against Southern Cal. Notre Dame had erupted for a 24-0 lead
    late in the first half when it came time to punt the ball. "I
    instructed my kicker to kick away from their returner, Anthony
    Davis," Parseghian says. "If he was on the right side of the field,
    kick it left. If he was on the left, kick it right. He kicked it
    right to him."

    Davis returned that punt for a touchdown and, as you probably know,
    the Trojans scored the next 55 points.

    "There are so many facets to the game you cannot control," says
    Parseghian.

    "You can't control the officials. You can't control the weather, nor
    the turnovers, nor ..."

    Anthony Davis?

    "We led in that damn game 24-0, for goodness sake," Parseghian barks.
    "Yes, it's frustrating."

    Listening to him, you ascertain how coaching can age you. Then again,
    Parseghian sounds as if he's ready to coach 'em up this Saturday.

    All of which, by the way, makes Paterno's (and Bowden's) perseverance
    so incredible. Parseghian, in fact, has written him letters
    congratulating Paterno on his longevity. "It's one thing to say you
    could have coached such and such years and won so many games," says
    Parseghian. "But Joe's done it.

    That's what matters."
    http://www.nbcsports.com/cfb/78529/ detail.html
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