The analogy I would use is that if you come home and your pipes have burst, you get the water turned off and fix the plumbing before you start replacing the drywall and repainting. I am worried that the last several years have done so much damage to the program that a completely new coach who needs to sell himself AND Rutgers won't be able to have success before they lose momentum because of on the field losses.That sounds like an argument that we should be nearly throwing in the towel to slow, but not stop the bleeding. That's basically what RU did when they hired Flood. And I am not comparing Flood and Schiano.
If Rutgers is going to go for it and fire Ash, then go all the way at the next step.
Here's another analogy. You don't get the same person to fix your money losing company as you do to take your successful small company and make it bigger. I think Rutgers may need a "turnaround CEO"before we can focus on growth.