Former Texas Tech coach Mike Leach has accepted Minnesota's vacant head coaching job. Now, he just needs someone to offer it.
Well, maybe it's not quite that simple. But the controversial coach, out of work the past 11 months after being fired over his treatment of a player with a concussion, made it clear Wednesday in a telephone interview that he believes he could turn around the Gophers' legacy of football mediocrity. And he would welcome the chance.
"It's like buying real estate -- you want a situation where it's undervalued so you can turn it into something," said the 49-year-old Leach, who also has expressed his desire this week to become the new coach at Miami (Fla.). "That's a program that's underutilized, that has a lot of advantages but is just lying dormant. ... I would enjoy the challenge."
And a certain segment of fans would enjoy watching it. As the names Brady Hoke, Troy Calhoun, Al Golden and a dozen others are vetted and debated around Minnesota, one name constantly is promoted on radio shows and fan sites, despite unsubtle hints on campus that he's not a candidate: Leach.
"Minnesota's fan base would explode if Mike Leach got the job," said Zach Johnson, publisher and operator of the Gopher Illustrated website. "He's the one guy that everyone comes back to. Dan Mullen [of Mississippi State] or Jim Harbaugh [of Stanford] might be more popular hires, but talking realistic candidates, he's by far the most popular."
With everyone but university administrators, anyway. Athletic director Joel Maturi, who hoped to make a splash with his next hire, immediately ruled out the candidate who would be a human cannonball. Maturi has not contacted him, Leach said, despite the fact that he went 84-43 and never had a losing season in his decade in Lubbock. And university President Robert Bruininks mentioned Leach by name in October when he said some candidates "have some things in their background that would make them a risk, like a Mike Leach. ... I don't think we need a checkered background."
Leach said his background includes things like a 79 percent graduation rate at Texas Tech, and 10 consecutive bowl trips for the Red Raiders.
"Those are things that are important to universities, aren't they?" Leach said. "We had an exciting brand of football that wins. We went to bowl games and won. We graduate our players -- [ranked] sixth in the nation. And when was the last time you heard about one of my players being in trouble?"