On-the-job training starts for Alabama coach Shula
  Focus is on football, not the Tide's problems, in his first game vs. USF.
By BRUCE LOWITT, Times Staff Writer
© St. Petersburg Times
published August 27, 2003

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With an inheritance like this, a lot of coaches would have been happy to be left out
of the will.

Mike Shula, though, couldn't be happier with the burden he's shouldering as Alabama's
Crimson Tide opens its 109th football season Saturday against South Florida, a program
102 years younger.

While USF's program is ascending, Alabama's is in turmoil.

The most recent tide turned in the coach's office. Dennis Franchione bolted in
December for Texas A&M after all but swearing he'd be back in Tuscaloosa this season.
His successor, Mike Price, was fired in May for, among other things, spending hundreds
of dollars at a topless bar. Shula was hired within the week.

There's the matter of Alabama being barred from a bowl game and national championship
eligibility this season, 21 lost scholarships through 2005 and five years' probation
because of sanctions over recruiting violations (a booster paying more than $100,000
to a Memphis high school coach to steer a star player to Alabama) and other financial
indiscretions in the 1990s.

Oh, and there's the pressure of Shula's name and his first head-coaching job. Alabama
is a football factory - his alma mater, no less - that usually doesn't hire coaches
for on-the-job training.

Both Shula and Alabama athletic director Mal Moore acknowledged the NCAA sanctions
will have an impact for a few seasons, but each minimized them.

"Without question they had an effect on some players and (potential) recruits," Moore
said. "Still, we were able to schedule a 13th game last year and this at Hawaii. You
know, Hawaii is a great trip, and I think that helped us offset (the loss of some
prospects)."

Shula said Tuesday he realizes that, "With the sanctions, we're behind a little bit,
but it's something that you accept when you come here. ... You don't think about it
while you're here now. When I took the job, those were the things I thought about and
factored into my decision.

"We've talked to our players as far as sanctions, the loss of scholarships, this and
that. We're not using anything as an excuse. We're about moving forward and doing
whatever it takes to get the job done."

Shula, who quarterbacked Alabama in 1983-86, never has coached in college and only at
assistant levels with the NFL's Bucs, Dolphins and Bears. He is the second of
legendary NFL coach Don Shula's sons to try coaching: Dave crashed and burned with the
Cincinnati Bengals (19-52 in 1992-96).

Mike Shula has gotten used to comparisons with his father. He pretty much ignores the
subject, as he did Tuesday.

"I don't have enough time to (think about) that," he said. "I've got to focus on the
job a hand, getting this team ready. To me it's special coming back to my alma mater,
a place I love, a place with great memories where I have a chance to win games and
(eventually) a national championship."

He acknowledged his name tends to opens doors. It also raises expectations.

"Whatever opportunity you get, you have to make the most of it," he said. "I'd like to
think I got this job because of my credentials."

At 38 he can hardly be considered a father figure to his charges. Uncle figure might
be more accurate. Dave's oldest son, Daniel, is a quarterback at Dartmouth.

It is Mike's 16th year of coaching and, he said, "by far the biggest age difference as
far as players I've coached. It took me 10 years to coach somebody younger than me.

(snip)

http://tinyurl.com/lc32

ScR


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