Washington staff must await fate
Assistants toil on, knowing Willingham is out
SEATTLE – Tyrone Willingham’s fate was announced Monday afternoon, but there are still a lot of questions to be answered between now and when the next Husky football coach is announced.
What happens to the assistant coaches? Do they keep recruiting? Can the staff keep this team focused and looking ahead to a date Saturday with the Pac-10’s top team with so much going on this week off the playing field?
More often than not, assistant coaches lose their jobs when head coaches are fired, and unlike Willingham, almost all of Washington’s staff is under one-year contracts (defensive coordinator Ed Donatell is the exception, as he signed a two-year deal when he was hired in the off-season), meaning they won’t get a buyout like Willingham should the next head coach bring in new assistants.
Asked if he’d like to stay at Washington, defensive line coach Randy Hart said, “Sure, I’d love to, but it’s not going to be my decision.”
Hart and Chris Tormey are the only coaches on the staff that were at Washington before Willingham came in. Tormey, the linebackers coach and recruiting coordinator, coached at Washington from 1984-1994, then returned in 2004, one year ahead of Willingham. Hart has been on Washington’s staff for 21 years.
While the rest of this season may seem like an audition for a job either at Washington or elsewhere for next year for the assistants, most say it’s too early to be worrying about anything beyond the next five games.
“Some of this is really fresh right now,” said offensive line coach Mike Denbrock, who was also on Willingham’s staff at Notre Dame. “I haven’t had a chance to process all of it right now. So, I don’t know if I have a specific answer to that question right now. There’s friends you have in the coaching profession that you stay in contact with and people that you talk to. But right now, we’ve got a job that we need to finish here. As far as the way I feel about it, we still have a commitment to the University of Washington for the next five weeks that we need to make sure we do a good job on. The rest will hopefully work out and take care of itself down the road.”
“I think as a general rule that everybody is going to keep their ears open,” said first-year running backs coach Steve Gervais. “We know the finality of it here with Coach Willingham. As a general thought I think that’s the conclusion everybody has come to.”
Gervais came to Washington after leaving a successful high school coaching career in Sammamish, Wash.
He said he knew this risk existed when he accepted the job, and has no regrets about leaving Skyline High School after winning a state title last season.
“No, absolutely not,” he said. “As I said last spring, it was a time in my life that I was looking for something different in the area of football and coaching, and I still look back on it as a great decision.”
Asked if he wanted to stay at Washington if the option presents itself, he said it’s too early to think about that.
“You know what, I’m not really going to even go there right now with that, because I want to finish this out,” he said. “We’ll see what happens down the road.”
Part of doing their job for the next five weeks will apparently include recruiting, said Tormey, a Gonzaga Prep graduate and former University of Idaho player.
“We’re going to keep recruiting,” he said. “That’s the directive we have right now. We’re going to go forward with that.”
What changes, however, is how the coaching staff recruits. They can no longer sell a recruit on Willingham or the current coaches, and instead must now sell the school, the program and the city of Seattle.
“Well, the University of Washington remains a great place and there’s a lot of things we can talk about – the tradition, the quality of the academics here, the area,” Tormey said. “It’s still an attractive option for a lot of kids. So, we just talk the University of Washington.”