Tuesday, we coined the term trophy coordinators, applied to college football's answers to trophy wives, hotshot coordinators hired to be paraded around on the arm of a head coach in need of a boost. So what does a trophy coordinator think about the term? How hard is it to come into a new team with the expectation of turning around a program? We caught up with former Auburn coordinator and current Middle Tennessee State offensive coordinator Tony Franklin to find out.
Franklin started the 2008 season as Auburn's new offensive coordinator, bringing with him the spread system he launched at Troy that won two consecutive Sun Belt titles. He lasted six games at Auburn and became a cautionary tale for both college football fans and hopeful coordinators.
So, what's the most important detail when it comes to installing a new offense after arriving as a heralded coordinator?
"I think it depends on whether your head coach is really committed to the system," Franklin told FanHouse. "I've had two experiences with head coaches now, Larry Blakeney [at Troy] was committed to it all the way. Tommy Tuberville (at Auburn) wasn't. On the one hand, a coach was patient, didn't meddle, and was willing to eat crow until it worked. On the other hand, the coach wasn't willing to give it time."
Asked to assess Tommy Tuberville's offensive options at Auburn, Franklin said there were two.
"You either sit tight with your offense, stay on board with what you're doing and fight like hell or you go get something that's shiny and new and hope like hell it works. But you can't do both."
Unlike Tuberville, who fired Franklin after six games, head coach Larry Blakeney at Troy took the second path and remained committed to the spread offense. Even when it didn't run smoothly at first.
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"Early on with the offense, we lost to Nebraska 56-0 and then we lost to UAB 21-3. The offense was awful. After the UAB loss we went into the locker room and the defense had played well. And if the defensive staff had been bitching, moaning, griping, or complaining it could trickle down to the players. Then the players start to do it and you can start to have an issue. Coach Blakeney stood up in the locker room and he was really direct and he said, 'We're going to do this and it's going to work.' "
"Then, Elbert Mack, who's now a corner for the Tampa Bay Bucs, stood up and said he believed in what we were doing on offense. That did it. From there we won seven of our next eight. We got better each week."
In the game at Nebraska, the Troy offense put up just 140 yards on 51 offensive plays and scored no points. By the final game of the season, a bowl win against Rice, the Trojan offense was a well-oiled machine, cranking out 376 yards and 41 total points.
In 2007, Troy played three SEC teams on the road, scoring 26 against Arkansas, 31 against Florida, and 34 against Georgia. They also scored 41 points to beat Oklahoma State by 18.
Tuberville took note of this success against SEC defenses -- Troy's offense outperformed Auburn's against similar opponents -- and brought Franklin to Auburn.
From there, disaster ensued.
"I don't blame anybody for jumping ship," says Franklin, "that's human nature and self-preservation is the rule of the game. But if Larry [Blakeney] had been at Auburn it would have worked."
At his new location, Middle Tennessee State , Franklin is optimistic success will come quickly.
"It's going to be easier and faster here," he says. "We have a lot of quality receivers. They've been recruiting for it here. At Auburn we had a lot of tight ends and fullbacks on scholarship and you can't really use those guys in the offense unless they're good receivers as well, like Tommy Trott at Auburn. Not unless you have a really great quarterback. If you've got a really great quarterback anything can happen overnight."
Asked to assess the pressure that comes if a head coach installs a new offense like Auburn and Tennessee did last year, Franklin acknowledges that the SEC doesn't allow as much time for things to get working.
"They feel pressure to win every game. Even if it means that you aren't as good down the road as you could be. Both of those coaches [Tuberville and Fulmer] are good at what they do and have had a lot of success, but they didn't have time to let a new offense work. The best way one of these new offenses can work at a big school is if the head coach is installing it himself, like Rich Rodriguez at Michigan. Otherwise there's probably going to be griping."
Franklin explains that arriving as an offensive savior comes with pressure, even if he's not sure the trophy wife and trophy coordinator correlation works completely.
"I don't know if it's like a [trophy] wife. These guys are trying to save their jobs. Human nature is about saving your job. If you need a trophy to do it, I guess you'll do it."




















Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
8-28-2009 @ 8:50AM
Dustin said...
Does anyone really care what Tony Franklin has to say? The guy talks too much and needs to shut up and do something worth a crap before he tells anyone why things work and don't work..He loves to pat himself on the back before he does anything.. He can thank Blakeney for his success. I doubt he'll have anywhere else.
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8-28-2009 @ 9:49AM
pingbalata said...
I would have liked to see Franklin have the entire season to see what he could do. The players Auburn had were not recruited to play the spread...they were a power running team. You cant take parts for a Ford 4 wheel drive pickup and build a Porsche out of them I dont give a damn how good a mechanic you are.
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8-28-2009 @ 11:00AM
juscallmebrett said...
All I know is Auburn needs some serious help to get back in the S.E.C. race. They have managed to lose all credibility in history and being a top ranked school.
ROLL TIDE and long live King Saban and his knights!
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8-30-2009 @ 6:35PM
txwareagl said...
LoL. "If larry blakney were at auburn, it would have worked."
Larry only has himself to blame for not being a coach at Auburn.
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8-31-2009 @ 7:41AM
imedajinsokt said...
From today's Chronicle of Higher Education lead article on the SEC's athletic dominance:
"Academics have never been the Southeastern Conference's strongest suit. Just two SEC universities, Florida and Vanderbilt, are members of the prestigious Association of American Universities. That is the fewest AAU members in any of the six Bowl Championship Series conferences (the Big Ten has the most, with 11).
"Until recently, high-profile athletes in many SEC programs struggled in the classroom. Five years ago, when the NCAA introduced its Academic Progress Rate, which measures athletes' semester-by-semester performance, just 44 percent of all the SEC's baseball, football, and men's and women's basketball teams were meeting the NCAA's academic-eligibility requirements.
"Since then the conference has made significant strides. Now 79 percent of the league's teams in those sports are meeting the NCAA mark. But measured against the other Bowl Championship conferences, the SEC still scores the lowest."
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8-31-2009 @ 7:52AM
imedajinsokt said...
And...
"Gordon Marino, a professor of philosophy at St. Olaf College, left his job there a few years ago to take a position at the University of Florida.
"'I must have been extremely naïve to think that unparalleled sports success would translate into economically healthy academics," he wrote in the St. Petersburg Times after quitting and returning to St. Olaf. "The Gator Nation is like a third world country with the sports in clover and their academic programs in the weeds."
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9-21-2009 @ 5:23PM
victor said...
Who cares what Franklin has to say, oh yeah, Tony Franklin does.......
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