SEC Coaches On The Hot Seat
SEC Hot Seat
By: Kipp Branch
TheSouthernSportsEdition.com news services
We are almost at the halfway point in the SEC football season, and we have some head coaches who are starting to feel a little heat. Here are my top five SEC coaches are under a little heat.
- Jimbo Fisher/Texas A&M: We are three years into the Jimbo tenure in College Station and the results have not been what is expected.
Fisher is 20-10 through two and a half seasons at College Station.
Three losses to Alabama where the Aggies have given up 45, 47, and 52 points.
The saving grace so far for Jimbo is the 41-38 win over #4 Florida earlier in the month that has cooled off his seat somewhat.
Auburn and LSU appear down this year, so wins over those two are a must at this point.
The Aggies need to win 8 or 9 games in this shortened season in a down SEC West.
The Aggies are 3-1 on the season. The win over Florida did wonders for the Aggie nation.
- Derek Mason/Vanderbilt: James Franklin seems to be the only coach in decades to be able win in Nashville.
Mason is 27-50 at Vandy with a couple of bowl appearances.
The thing is since 2018 Vandy has only won three games.
Vandy went 3-9 in 2019, and it does not look like they will win a football game in 2020 sitting at 0-3 on the season.
The best shot at a win may come at Mississippi State on November 7th. If let go Mason will catch on in the SEC as a defensive coordinator.
3.Jeremy Pruitt/Tennessee: The Vols started out at 2-0 then have had two bad losses in a row at Georgia 21-44 and a blowout loss at home to Kentucky last week 7-34.
Word has leaked out that Pruitt fired an assistant coach during the Kentucky game, which is just not a good look.
Pruitt is under pressure to make a QB change, and you have Alabama coming to Neyland Stadium this week. Tennessee has lost 13 straight to Alabama.
Alabama, Florida, Auburn, and Texas A&M are still left on the schedule.
The perception is that things are a little hot in Knoxville. Can Tennessee salvage a winning season in a ten game schedule?
The jury is out on whether Pruitt will make it in Knoxville. Would Pruitt be gone in the Vols finish 3-7 in 2020?
- Gus Malzahn/Auburn: Championships are expected to be won at Auburn.
Gus has been the head coach at Auburn since 2013. Malzahn is 64-33 during that window with one SEC Title in that span.
Auburn recruits as well as anyone in the country, but that does not seem to translate to the football field.
Malzahn signed a $49 million dollar contract extension after the 2017, and if Auburn and Malzahn part ways then Gus is owed $21 million in a buyout.
Gus can’t beat Georgia 2-7 against them currently, and just lost to South Carolina for the first time since FDR was President.
Bo Nix and Seth Williams were bickering in front of TV cameras in Columbia last week. It just feels like Auburn is in turmoil.
Malzahn is 2-7 in bowl games and has only won 10 games twice in 2013 and 2017.
Too much talent and resources at Auburn to accept the poor return on investment to date. How much more can the Auburn folks take?
1.Will Muschamp/South Carolina: Is there a coach out there with worst luck than Will Muschamp?
Muschamp was brought into Florida and told to clean it up after Urban Meyer ran Florida into the ground with off the field issues.
He was hired at South Carolina after Steve Spurrier quit on them in the middle of the 2015 season.
Muschamp got a huge win over Auburn last week at home, and a huge win over UGA in Athens last season.
He is 28-27 at South Carolina, but the losses to Clemson are mounting and the Carolina natives are restless.
I think Muschamp is a pretty good head coach that is not afraid to dig in and try and fix programs. Question is will he be allowed to do so in Columbia?