Dear Athletic Director Pat Hobbs,
I'm writing you this as a plea, because despite your willingness to proclaim Chris Ash as "Your guy", it's become apparent to the fanbase that he is anything but "the guy".
My family has been part of Rutgers athletics for decades, and each time we thought "Well, it can't get any lower than this", and yet somehow it always does. Just when things start going right for our alma mater, we turn into Charlie Brown and success is the football that Lucy pulls away at the last second.
We've been season ticket holders in football since the 70s, and myself bought my own tickets when I was beginning my Undergraduate studies at Rutgers back in 2006. I guess you can say that throughout my Undergraduate and then Graduate studies I saw more success than my Father and his Uncles did throughout the majority of their entire lives. It's not to say that I haven't also been apart of the low points, those including the final days of Doug Graber, Terry Shea's entire tenure here, the early years of Greg Schiano, the Kyle Flood debacle which destroyed the foundation of what Greg Schiano spent a decade plus building, to now Chris Ash. Who took that foundation that was pretty much rubble, and dropped a nuclear bomb on it. It's amazing how quickly Rutgers went from resembling a competent D1-A Power 5 Conference football member to now looking like a Pop-Warner squad helmed by a man who is in a consistent struggle of either looking confused or completely constipated on the sideline.
The bulk of the hardcore fanbase thought Terry Shea was as bad as it could get, and then Kyle Flood who got the job by being pretty much the only member of Schiano's coaching staff whom he didn't bring with him to Tampa Bay somehow eclipsed the ineptitude. Well, Chris Ash in true "You haven't seen anything yet" fashion decided to bring the ineptitude up to 11.
The comparisons are numerous, both Ash and Shea were "late" to getting to Rutgers. Both had glowing letters of recommendation to the greatest coaches of their generation, Shea had Bill Walsh, and Ash had Urban Meyer. Neither had recruiting chops, nor the personality to thrive in this part of the country. This is New Jersey, this is where we eat our own. Look around the country, how many other State flagship Universities would have their local paper writer story after story on why that University is bad and should feel bad, even if nothing bad was happening.
Chris Ash came to the job and belittled anything and everything Rutgers accomplished prior his arrival. He joked about how bad our facilities were, how we didn't have x, y, or z. He used this as an excuse to the early struggles. He alienated the players who were recruited by previous coching regimes because they weren't up to "snuff" according to him, and that it was a 3, then a 4, then a 5, and now I believe we are up to a 6 year rebuild. There isn't a faster way to lose a locker room than to tell the men who committed to "THE UNIVERSITY" not a "COACH" that they aren't good enough and won't amount to anything until they are long gone.
I remember Chris Ash's first press conference. He gloated about how he was going to bring an exciting Power Spread offense to the banks of the Raritan, and bring along a hard nosed blue-collar defense that isn't afraid to get into the opponent's face. Well, how much of that actually happened? Chris Ash had to plead with Tom Herman to take Drew Mehringer off his hands when his "exciting, futuristic" Power Spread offense couldn't even fall forward for a 1 yard gain. He then goes out and hires Jerry Kill who accomplished a myriad of things at Minnesota, but let's be honest. He never was a true offensive mind, nor was he the steady play caller for the Gophers as well. That Power Spread offense? Well, that was gone, Ash did a complete 180 and went to this slow, plodding offense that was 3 yards and a cloud of dust. In true Rutgers fashion, another OC comes in and leaves, this time because of health issues Jerry Kill had. Ash in his third attempt brings a familiar name back to Rutgers in John McNulty. So let's get this straight, the man who promised us a cutting edge, exciting Power Spread offense we now are back to the retro-esque Pro Style offense that demands top notch recruits, and perfect execution to get the job done. It's understandable for the offense to be behind the defense because of the constant change of coordinators, philosophies, etc. However, this leads to the biggest problem, the defense.
For a coach who is a defensive mind first and foremost to have so many struggles installing a defense is truly frustrating. The defensive coaching staff as a whole has stayed the same, and the philosophy has as well. So this is where things get really ugly, an offense cobbled together by John McNulty in a few months is in a much better spot than the defense that Chris Ash has been putting together for the last THREE YEARS! The running joke of a previous coach at Rutgers, that being Doug Grabar was "Hey Oug where is the D?" Making fun of how badly his defenses tended to be, the difference was his offenses more often than not did enough to keep Rutgers in most games. The advantages Chris Ash has over every pretty much every other man who was a Head Coach for Rutgers is astounding. Terry Shea, as bad as he was, if he had the academic support team Chris Ash has, and the monetary support as well might have actually been a decent coach.
I assume you have experience in basic finance. Does the sunk-cost fallacy mean anything to you? The buyout of Chris Ash's contract may seem exorbitant, but it might be worth it to spend that money up front versus keeping him here, while making no progress, all the while season ticket membership take a sharp decline again, just as it has every year under Chris Ash. The amount of money you would lose with the season ticket membership taking a nosedive, single game ticket sales, sponsorships, donations, and most of all basic interest in the football program and university. You do realize that having a competent, exciting athletic program makes money for the university. Do you know the increase of applications a school like Appalachian State had after it upset Michigan? Or the increase of applicants for the University of Central Florida had after their storybook season last year? The oldest slogan in business is that you have to spend money to make money, can't be more true.
Today Rutgers lost again, this time to an Illinois squad that hasn't won a Big Ten conference game in over 700 days. This was perhaps Chris Ash's last and best chance to get a win this season, as the schedule does anything but get easier for him from here on out. I truly expect the month of November to be amongst the worst college football I've ever seen especially when you are facing a murderers row of opponents. If Rutgers scores more than 14 points in that entire month I will be gobsmacked.
I just ask you to take all things into account. Don't buy into false hope, that set Rutgers back when during a cold November night, a Kyle Flood lead team backed into a win against USF and made Rutgers bowl eligible. Julie Hermann tried to garner donor support to dispose of Kyle Flood, but she couldn't drum up enough support. My Father, Uncles, and myself answered the call, we may not have a wallet like Greg Brown or Jeff Towers, but we were willing to put up a decent chunk of change to have change occur. It was just disappointing that others weren't willing to answer the call. Couple that with the fact Rutgers is a small time operation that couldn't fire someone who got a team bowl eligible. The cracks were showing then and there, and that extra year of time Kyle Flood bought himself set this school back more than you'd believe.
Now the fanbase is cheering such simple things as actually getting a first down prior to the second half, not getting shut out, not giving up 50+ points. That is how low the bar has fallen. It's just frustrating to see the progress other varsity sports at Rutgers has made versus how far the football team has regressed. You made the right call with Coach Pikiell, not every decision pans out, there is no harm in admitting you made a mistake. Do the right thing, survey the scene, because just know this. Every single school in our conference, and near us proximity wise is going to negatively recruit against us every single day Chris Ash is still in power. Cut your losses, cast out a wide net, and don't fall in love with the first person who might give you a decent interview.
Myself, and my family are now at a crossroads with Rutgers Football. The gameday experience has nosedived, the product on the field is an even bigger disaster. We truly believe that Rutgers has potential to be a sleeping giant when it comes to athletics, but the vision isn’t there. Look at the recruits Schiano was pulling in when we were stuck in a floundering Big East. Could you imagine the caliber of athlete he could sell Rutgers on with the same advantages that has been bestowed to Chris Ash? Instead, we are now fighting with lower tier MAC schools for talent along with Patriot League schools. Which is hilarious in a sad way because when Greg Schiano took the job, he said our facilities, support, and pretty much everything else was on par with a Patriot League Conference member from his playing days at Bucknell.
Sincerely,
Peter xxxxx
Rutgers SAS '10
Rutgers Graduate School of Education '11