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Former East Carolina
coach Skip Holtz, now head coach at Lousiana
Tech, touched on a wide range of topics at
last week's Conference USA Media Day in
Dallas. While acknowledging the growing
financial disparity between the so-called
power leagues and the non-BCS conferences,
he expressed his belief that the competitive
gap on the field is getting "closer and
closer." After leading ECU to back-to-back
C-USA titles in 2008 and 2009, Holtz headed
up the program at BCS member South Florida
the last three years. |
(Al Myatt
photo. ©2013 Bonesville.net. All rights
reserved.) |
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By
Al Myatt
©2013 Bonesville.net
All rights reserved.
View the Mobile Alpha version of this page.
After winning two Conference USA football championships
at East Carolina, Skip Holtz left the Pirates for the perks of Big East
membership at South Florida.
Following seasons of 8-5, 5-7 and
3-9, the Bulls dismissed Holtz, but he quickly landed the head coaching
job at Louisiana Tech, which has a history of hiring the sons of
noteworthy coaches.
The Bulldogs' previous three coaches included
Jack Bicknell, Jr., who played for his dad at Boston College, Derek
Dooley, the son of former Georgia coach Vince Dooley, and Sonny Dykes,
whose dad, Spike, directed Texas Tech from 1986 to 1999.
Holtz's
father, Lou, of course, guided Notre Dame to its last national
championship in 1988 among his many successful coaching stops.
The younger Bicknell, who snapped to Doug Flutie for the famous Hail
Mary to Gerard Phelan to give BC a 47-45 win at Miami in 1984, is now
offensive line coach for the Pittsburgh Steelers. After a stint at
Tennessee, Dooley coaches wide receivers coach for the Dallas Cowboys,
where he works with former Pirate star Dwayne Harris. Dykes left the
Bulldogs after the 2012 season to coach California.
That opened
the door for Holtz to continue Louisiana Tech's legacy of coaches with
well-known coaching dads.
"I'm sure as a school they've probably
looked at it and said 'You know what? There are coaches who have grown
up around this game their whole life,' " Holtz said at the Conference
USA football media gathering at the Dallas-Fort Worth Marriott North
last week. " 'This has been a way of life for them.' They've had success
with it and they've hung with it.
"I'm excited that they have."
Holtz has warmed to the task of reloading the Bulldogs rather than
kicking back with his $2.5 million buyout from USF over the next five
years.
He acknowledges that being the son of a famous coach can
have its advantages.
"The blessings are a lot of the
opportunities that we have growing up around this great game, having
somebody close to us that can give us the 30,000-foot view that has the
experience like my father does or like Coach Dooley did or Coach Dykes
did," Holtz said. "I think all of those are huge advantages. Probably
the negative is expectations. When you get into a profession, especially
that your father is in, sometime it's hard to get out of that shadow.
"I think if you ask every one of us, we're not trying to be the next
Coach Dooley or Coach Dykes or Coach Holtz as much as we're trying to be
the best coaches that we can all be."
Holtz is transitioning from
a BCS program to one of the so-called have-nots in college football.
"We've talked about in some ways the finances with some conferences
are getting farther and farther away from each other but I think on the
field it's getting closer and closer from a competitive standpoint,"
Holtz said. "That's why I think when you look at a school like when we
were at East Carolina and we had some of the success against a Virginia
Tech or North Carolina or N.C. State, when you look at Louisiana Tech
and some of their wins, you know how they played (Texas) A&M down to the
wire. ESPN has been playing it over and over and over. ... But when you
look at the wins against Illinois and the wins against Ole Miss and some
of the wins that we've had in our program, I think the play on the field
is getting closer and closer.
"I don't think there's that big of
a difference between coaching at an East Carolina or coaching at a
Louisiana Tech or one of the holier of the holy places. I think there
are some challenges. Every job has its points. But I think every coach,
no matter where you are, you've got to find a way to highlight your
strengths and hide your weaknesses. That's the biggest challenge that we
have. I don't care whether you're in Ruston, Louisiana, Greenville,
North Carolina, Storrs, Connecticut or in South Bend. There's warts in
every job that you have to be able to overcome to be able to win."
The life of a coach's son can involve a significant degree or
travel.
"I kind of moved around all over but Fayetteville
(Arkansas) was where I went to high school," Holtz said. "The hard part
for me is once I left to go to college in South Bend, my family moved
from (Fayetteville). I don't have a lot of family in Fayetteville to say
that that would be home. That's not where we went back for Christmas but
it's definitely where I grew up.
"Now that I live in Ruston, a
lot of people have tried to make a big deal of moving from Tampa to
Ruston, and kind of the culture shock that you go in from the big city
like that to Ruston, but I grew up in a town like Ruston. Fayetteville
was a town of 25,000 people when I was there. The school was about 14-
or 15-thousand. It's a small town. It's a family atmosphere. I think you
can't talk about Ruston without talking about Louisiana Tech. The two
are kind of intertwined. ... It's a small town but it's got everything
you need to raise a family and have the opportunity to have a great
experience in college."
The kind of experience the Bulldogs have
on the gridiron in 2013 will depend on how effectively the Bulldogs can
deal with the loss of 31 seniors from a team that went 9-3 overall and
4-2 in the Western Athletic Conference.
When Holtz came to ECU
after the 2004 season, he took over a team that had gone 2-9 overall and
2-6 in Conference USA, but one of the advantages of coaching the Pirates
was solid leadership.
"There was a lot more stability at East
Carolina when I went there with Chancellor (Steve) Ballard being in
place and Terry Holland (athletic director) being there and being able
to start right from January as we were moving forward," he said in
comparing his start at ECU with his current status. "With this situation
(at Louisiana Tech), there's been a lot of change, even since I've been
there. A new president took over in July. A new athletic director was
just hired here a week ago.
"It's probably a different first six
months I've had here than I had there, but I'm excited about the
prospects and the future at Louisiana Tech. I'm excited about a lot of
the things that are in place. The excitement of stepping into Conference
USA right now for us, a team that has really longed for some of these
geographical rivalries that are being put in place for us — I think it's
an exciting time right now."
The Holtz era will begin on Aug. 31
with a game at N.C. State, home to the Holtz family from 1972 to 1975
when Lou was coaching the Wolfpack.
"Some great memories with the
Buckey (Dave and Don) boys, Stan Fritts, Roland Hooks, Ted Brown and so
many of those guys that were on those N.C. State teams," Skip said.
"Having walked back into that stadium, taken two different teams at East
Carolina over there to N.C. State to play, it's a lot different than
when I wore my No. 10 Willie Burden jersey and used to run up and down
that hill during game days, because that hill has disappeared.
"I
have some great memories from that time and having the opportunity to
grow up there. It'll be an emotional game for me. It'll be a time to
look back to when I was there, but for our players, they don't have
anything to do with that."
Holtz also has memories of ECU, which
include the C-USA championships in 2008 and 2009.
"Great people,
great people," Holtz said in retrospect. "Friendships that will last me
a lifetime. People that I still stay in touch with. I stay in touch with
the Crabtrees (Eddie, Nick and Eddie Sr.). The Steeles. Mike and Drew
Steele were a big part of our lives when we were there. So many people.
A lot of great memories. They're passionate about their football there
in Eastern North Carolina. I'm excited to see a lot of the positive
steps that they've taken, a lot of the facility improvements and a lot
of the things that have been done.
"I still haven't had the
opportunity to see the stadium expansion there."
ECU enclosed the
East end of the stadium after Holtz departed, a logical step in response
to the success the Pirates experienced under his leadership.
Louisiana Tech's first season in C-USA will be ECU's last in the league.
The Pirates will join the American Athletic Conference in 2014. The two
programs are in separate divisions in C-USA in 2013 and aren't scheduled
to meet during the regular season. They could face off in the C-USA
championship game on Dec. 7. If such a matchup were to be played in
Greenville, then Holtz could see the improvements at Dowdy-Ficklen
Stadium in person. The possibility has already occurred to the former
ECU coach.
"That's what I was thinking," he said with a laugh.