On many occasions over the past 18 months, P.J. Fleck has highlighted voluminous coaching turnover in explaining the Gophers football program's half-century slumber.
Replacing coaches every few years, he says, isn't the recipe for success. His "cultural sustainability" blueprint sounds wonderful in theory, but Big Ten football requires a measure of competence, as well.
Sometimes, the situation requires more than catchphrases. This is that moment.
The Gophers defense under coordinator Robb Smith became so discombobulated and lacking basic fundamentals that Fleck risked losing credibility if he didn't do something drastic.
Fleck fired his longtime friend Sunday in what might have been a difficult personal decision but was his only logical choice professionally. The situation wasn't just going to improve magically. Smith clearly had no answers.
Less than two years on the job, Fleck already has dismissed one of his hand-picked coordinators. That qualifies as a notable swing-and-miss on his record.
Fleck couldn't continue to harp on youth without acknowledging what everyone else witnessed with their own eyes: A defense that was regressing like a runaway train, culminating with a performance Saturday at Illinois that it joins Nebraska 1983 in the Gophers' Hall of Misery.
At least that star-studded Cornhuskers team featured Mike Rozier, Irving Fryar and Turner Gill on offense.