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Author Topic: Bill Stewart announced the head coach at WVU  (Read 1581 times)
curtisthegoalie
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« on: January 03, 2008, 01:51:24 PM »

I've been hearing a clip on the radio all morning of some guy ripping this hire, but i keep missing who it was.  Who is it?

and does anyone have the quote?
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BigRedArmy
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« Reply #1 on: January 03, 2008, 01:55:40 PM »

Bill Stewart took over for RR and coached WVU in the Fiesta Bowl.
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« Reply #2 on: January 03, 2008, 02:08:58 PM »

Quote from: "curtisthegoalie"
I've been hearing a clip on the radio all morning of some guy ripping this hire, but i keep missing who it was.  Who is it?

and does anyone have the quote?


Good for Bill.  WV AD must not have read the book that says you have to go out and hire a big name coach with no ties to your program.
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GAHusker72
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« Reply #3 on: January 03, 2008, 02:31:26 PM »

http://sports.espn.go.com/ncf/news/story?id=3178538


SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. -- Bill Stewart was promoted to head coach of West Virginia on Thursday, hours after leading the Mountaineers to a stunning victory over Oklahoma in the Fiesta Bowl.




Stewart was introduced in the morning as he and his team were preparing to return home. He was appointed interim coach in mid-December after Rich Rodriguez bolted for Michigan.



Stewart's five-year contract will pay $800,000 a year with incentives. Rodriguez signed a seven-year deal in August worth almost $2 million a year.



"We saw all the characteristics of a head football coach -- leadership, loyalty, courage," athletic director Ed Pastilong said less than 12 hours after the 48-28 victory by the Mountaineers.



Pastilong, who has known Stewart for 39 years, said "there isn't a mother or father watching today who wouldn't be proud to have their son play for this man."



West Virginia Gov. Joe Manchin was among the crowd of boosters and staff packing the hotel ballroom for Stewart.



"I'm West Virginia born, West Virginia bred, a West Virginian all my life, really," Stewart said when introduced.



Stewart never had a formal session with the search committee when Pastilong called him to his room after midnight to offer him the job.



"I think I've been interviewing for the last 2½ weeks," he said. "It's been the longest interview in America."



Stewart has not signed a contract but agreed to terms with a handshake.



"I don't have a lot of experience in these negotiations and things. That's my agent right down there," he said, pointing to his wife, Karen.



Stewart had the backing of the team, including Pat White. The quarterback began stumping for Stewart on the field after running for 150 yards and throwing for 176 and two touchdowns in the victory over the No. 3 Sooners.



"He deserves it," White said. "A great man. A great coach. All the players respect him and all the players love him. You couldn't ask for a better man to lead us to victory today."



Stewart said he wanted the entire staff to return.



Pastilong said "a large number" of candidates were interviewed, but he declined to identify them. He said Stewart was among those considered from the start.



"He obtained this position the old fashioned way -- he earned it," Pastilong said. "Billy led us to our biggest football victory in the school's history against Oklahoma. And he, his coaching staff and his support staff are outstanding Mountaineers, leading us through a tough time. Our future is bright, and we look forward to even more success under Coach Stewart's leadership."



WVU president Mike Garrison said Stewart fully appreciates the school.



"At this university, loyalty and trust are important," Garrison said. "We know we now have a coach who truly values the opportunity to work as the head football coach at West Virginia University."



Fullback Owen Schmitt, who scored on a 57-yard run, called Stewart the "glue" that kept the No. 11 Mountaineers together during a rocky month.



"We're a family," Schmitt said. "That's why we prevailed."



The 55-year-old Stewart earned $139,000 this year in his position that also included coaching tight ends and fullbacks and being the special teams coordinator. He came to West Virginia as quarterbacks coach in January 2000 after two seasons as offensive coordinator in the Canadian Football League.



Don Nehlen, the retired Mountaineers coach who hired Stewart, was glad his former assistant had landed the job.



"He's just such a good person and the kids love him," Nehlen said. "It's such a good fit with the program."



A message left for Rodriguez early Thursday was not immediately returned.



Not everyone with an intererst in West Virginia football was pleased by the hire, however.



West Virginia booster Ken Kendrick, who was outspoken in his support of Rodriguez following his departure, called it a "sad morning."



"He is so overmatched it's not even funny," said Kendrick, managing partner of baseball's Arizona Diamondbacks. "He's a nice guy and a father figure. But they had a wonderful architecht and they hired the painter to build the next house. I want Bill Stewart to win and I want our program to be successful. But I feel bad for our future. I'm very concerned."



Stewart was head coach at VMI from 1994-96, compiling an 8-25 record. He also had stints as an assistant at Salem College, North Carolina, Marshall, William & Mary, Navy, Arizona State and Air Force.



Stewart was a captain for Fairmont State, which won the West Virginia Conference championship in 1974. He began his coaching career at Fairmont as a student assistant coach.



Information from The Associated Press, ESPN college football reporter Joe Schad and ESPN.com senior writer Pat Forde was used in this report.
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« Reply #4 on: January 03, 2008, 03:24:01 PM »

My understanding is that one of the reasons that Rodriguez left is because certain verbal promises that he was given when he signed his contract extension last year never came true.  Things related to facilities and salaries for his assistant coaches.

The fact that WVU is only paying Stewart $800k seems to be congruent with that - - that WVU is trying to do things on the cheap without a real commitment to the program.
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njmcm
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« Reply #5 on: January 03, 2008, 03:57:54 PM »

Good for Stewart.  He seems to have put in his due.
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helenahusker
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« Reply #6 on: January 03, 2008, 04:37:33 PM »

Wonder if we might posit that Stewart is to WVU what Bo was to the 03 'skers - ie, the "glue" that held the team together - and note that Bo and Bill are something of mirror opposites - one older, working his way in, and one younger, working his way up - both fan favorites to a "trauma-bounded" fan base and team as a result of the exit of the well like HC - and watch to see how Stewart does as a comparison of Bo being hired instead of Callahan.

Having "posited" that question, I have to say this is going to be a long season since trying to extrapolate a WVU hire onto a hypothetical of our current HC four years ago. . . . .  Sheesh.  I need to out more. . . . :oops:  8O  :wink:
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« Reply #7 on: January 03, 2008, 06:06:14 PM »

Nah, helena -- you don't need to get out more, b/c then we'd miss your posts.  You make a good point about the things in common b/w the Coaches.  Both interim for a bowl, both "get it" at the respective schools.  I noted that both sealed the deal with a handshake; paperwork wasn't a first priority.  Watching the game, you could also see that Stewart is infected with the same enthusiasm as Pelini during a game.
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