I think these takes are a bit more in line with my thinking.
They are both from CFN's Instant Analysis piece on the hiring of Turner Gill
Richard Cirminiello
Whether or not a coach winds up being a success will often depend on the fit. From afar, Auburn and Turner Gill never looked like a good one when that rumor was bandied around last December. Kansas, however, looks like a real nice match for the coach and his new employer.
In four seasons with Buffalo, Gill proved his coaching mettle by going 20-30 and winning the 2008 MAC championship. I know what you’re thinking, 20-30? Don’t be fooled. Those 20 victories came at a school that had won just five times in the four years before he arrived. Five games. He also guided the Bulls to their first bowl game, earning the nickname Turnaround Turner.
Now, Auburn was sniffing around Upstate New York after Tommy Tuberville was let go last year, but why would Gill have wanted to step into that hornet’s nest? A new region of the country, a slew of more experienced coaches to contend with, and a date with Alabama and Nick Saban every November. While Gill might have been the right man for the job, coaching at Buffalo for one more season ended up being his best possible move. You see, by staying put, he now gets a chance to go home...sort of.
Lawrence is only about three hours south of Lincoln, where Gill was an iconic figure as a quarterback for the Huskers. In fact, he still has an ardent following in the area, which will surely help during the recruiting process. Wear a Buffalo Bull cap or jersey in certain parts of the region, and you’ll quickly notice folks tripping over themselves to help you. He’s that beloved for his career as a player and a coach at Nebraska. And in the aftermath of the Jayhawks’ messy divorce with Mark Mangino, who was accused of abusive behavior, Gill’s temperament is exactly what the program needs at this time. He’s a walk-softly-but-carry-a-big-stick kind of guy, a father figure to some, who’ll instill a family atmosphere at Kansas. He’s tough, disciplined, and passionate about the game, yet doesn’t feel the need to be, well, a bull in a china closet. In short, he’s exactly what the Jayhawks need at this stage of their evolution.
Kudos to Kansas’ Lew Perkins, one of the country’s best athletic directors, who didn’t need Gill to be coming off his best season to know that the guy can coach at a high level. The Jayhawks have their man, and Gill has a chance to be a star again in Big 12 country.
Matt Zemek
1) This is an even better hire for Kansas than Brian Kelly is for Notre Dame. First of all, the KU program – on the heels of the ugly and stormy tenure of Mark Mangino – has managed to attain a coach who knows how to relate to young men in a positive, holistic and deeply meaningful way. The bond between Gill and his University of Buffalo players – seen most visibly in a tearful postgame scene at the 2008 MAC Championship Game in Detroit – offers a strong testimony to Gill’s character as a man, a leader, and a football teacher. He’ll wash away the negativity brought about by Mangino’s acerbic, acidic and abrasive methods.
Secondly, Gill knows how to recruit the Big 12 and is uniquely situated to make Kansas competitive with a certain program in Lincoln, Nebraska… the preeminent program in the Big 12 North Division.
My final take: I'm not saying Gill is going to be a success, in fact my gut feeling is that he'll never win more than 6 games a year at KU, but they are bringing him in to right the ship and make it a clean program. If they win more than two games, including a Big 12 game next year they will be ahead of where Mangino had them in his first season. Mangino had an o fer in conference his first season and was 23-41 in the Big 12 during his career, so while BCS bowl appearance and four bowl trips were nice, he's not quite the legend he's being made out to be by some commentators. Also FWIW, if Nebraska would have had a shitty offense during the Callahan that ranked near the bottom of the country like the Defense did, Turner Gill would have been hired to be the head coach of Nebraska in late 2007.
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