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Official: Bo Pelini new DC


Hatchertiger

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32 minutes ago, LSUDad said:

Another interview, Kyle Williams

I think this is the BEST interview about Bo Pellini because Kyle Williams is so experienced and smart.  13 years in the NFL, 6 pro bowls.  It doesn't get a lot better than that.   Kyle likes Bo, so I think we'll be good.

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1 hour ago, houtiger said:

I think this is the BEST interview about Bo Pellini because Kyle Williams is so experienced and smart.  13 years in the NFL, 6 pro bowls.  It doesn't get a lot better than that.   Kyle likes Bo, so I think we'll be good.

Kyle told a story at that breakfast, right before the draft he was talking with his father-in-law, Pat Tilley, Pat told him, about the only place you wouldn’t want to go,  the Bills. The weather, the wind and rain, blows right through you. It kills you. The draft, the Bills picked him in the 5th round. What a steal, 6 Pro Bowls. You can tell with that interview, a good speaker. 

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1 hour ago, LSUDad said:

Kyle told a story at that breakfast, right before the draft he was talking with his father-in-law, Pat Tilley, Pat told him, about the only place you wouldn’t want to go,  the Bills. The weather, the wind and rain, blows right through you. It kills you. The draft, the Bills picked him in the 5th round. What a steal, 6 Pro Bowls. You can tell with that interview, a good speaker. 

Even with 6 pro bowls, Kyle Williams is not a household name because he played in Buffalo.  If he had played in NY or LA, he may be as famous as Mean Joe Green.  I'm sure Kyle could have gone the free agent route to another team if he craved the fame and wanted to make a lot in advertising money, but apparently he just wanted to play football at a high level and he must have enjoyed his coaches and teammates.  You have to know who you are, and do what you are comfortable with.  Good for Kyle, a great Tiger!

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LSU football fans should expect a more aggressive defense under Bo Pelini

 
 
by Zach Ragan10 hours agoFollow @zachTNT

Ed Orgeron recently hired Bo Pelini as LSU football’s new defensive coordinator, replacing Dave Aranda.

The 2019 LSU football team was arguably the greatest in college football history.

But there’s one area where the Tigers could’ve been a bit better.

 

 
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For whatever reason, former defensive coordinator Dave Aranda wasn’t as aggressive as it seemed like he should’ve been at times. There were a lot of situations where LSU tried to get pressure with only three or four guys.

Even a great defensive line will have trouble consistently getting after the quarterback when only three or four guys are being sent.

As a result, LSU finished the season with 37 team sacks, which was 17 behind Ohio State (the Buckeyes led the nation in team sacks with 54).

The Tigers finished behind Temple, Southern Mississippi and Boise State, among others, in total team sacks. Buy Now!

It’s not like LSU was bad in pass rushing situations, they just weren’t as good as they could’ve been.

But that’s likely to change under new defensive coordinator Bo Pelini.

LSU insider Shea Dixon, who covers the Tigers for Geuax247, recently told The College Football Daily Podcast “I think we’re gonna see more of a shift towards LSU sending more guys”.

Dixon added “LSU has sort of wanted to go back to that (aggressiveness). Dave Aranda’s defense would never have been described as Uber-aggressive or anything of that nature.”

I think this is extremely important. LSU probably won’t be scoring nearly 50 points a game next season. They should still have an explosive offense, but there’s no way they’ll replicate 2019’s offensive output. That means they’ll have to rely on their defense more in 2020.

LSU’s defense wasn’t bad by any means in 2019, but I suspect we’ll see a defensive unit with a bit more swagger under Pelini.

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i have seen people happy about this, i have seen people not thrilled. some think he is too much a hothead. i know he has been, but i honestly don't know if that has been tempered and replaced with channeling it into coaching. i haven't had time to read through this thread,so if that has been discussed, well... that is my nickle's worth.

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6 hours ago, Just Me said:

i have seen people happy about this, i have seen people not thrilled. some think he is too much a hothead. i know he has been, but i honestly don't know if that has been tempered and replaced with channeling it into coaching. i haven't had time to read through this thread,so if that has been discussed, well... that is my nickle's worth.I'm 

I'm happy about it BECAUSE he's a fiery DC. I couldn't care less about him being a hothead as DC. Wouldn't want him to be my school's HC necessarily, but he's not, sooooo.

I wanna see LSU play an aggressive attacking style of defense with the talent we always have.  I wanna see teams fear LSU defense again.  

So yep, great get imo

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On 2/3/2020 at 1:01 PM, Just Me said:

i have seen people happy about this, i have seen people not thrilled. some think he is too much a hothead. i know he has been, but i honestly don't know if that has been tempered and replaced with channeling it into coaching. i haven't had time to read through this thread,so if that has been discussed, well... that is my nickle's worth.

he was just as much of a hot head as DC here ‘05-‘07.  He didn’t get to Lincoln and suddenly lose his sh¡t. 
it’s just kept under wraps as DC, because you’re not giving interviews and doing press conferences, so nobody see it other than noticing you’re a fiery guy.

Muschamp is same way.   Fiery driven guy as a DC. A deranged wing nut as a HC. 
I’m willing to bet he’s the same exact guy in both spots.  But the lights shine a lot brighter on a HC, so you see every blemish  

Saban too except he has a pile of rings to flash at people so they look past it. 

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On 2/5/2020 at 6:30 PM, Nutriaitch said:

 

 

BOOM!

Ed Orgeron explains how LSU's defense will be different under Bo Pelini

SDS Staff | 2 hours ago
 

LSU hired one of the country’s best defensive minds in Bo Pelini following the loss of another great defensive mind in Dave Aranda. Aranda is now Baylor’s head coach, and Pelini is now back in Baton Rouge, as he was the Tigers defensive coordinator 2005-07.

During Ed Orgeron’s post-Signing Day press conference, he opened up about bringing Pelini back to LSU.

“Bo left here with a great mark,” Orgeron said about his new defensive coordinator. “The players loved him. Obviously, two of the top defenses he had in the SEC, two out of the top three years. He’s a 4-3 guy. That’s my background. I thought it was time for us to maybe shift a little bit to the 4-3, move to an attack style defense.

“He’s already made an impact. His first meeting yesterday with the players were phenomenal. He brought a lot of energy. He set the tempo. He does a great job taking control of the defensive meetings. He has an open mind on the personnel. He’s going to listen, ‘Hey, what can this guy do, what can that guy do.’ I think he’s going to put in the best position to attack. I can expect us to get more sacks, more tackles for loss because of his defense.”

Pelini will run a 4-3 scheme, which differs from Aranda’s 3-4.

“Now, Dave (Aranda) also ran some 4-3, some nickel packages with 11 personnel, but we felt last year we were more suited to stop the run in the 3-4 so that was kind of a staff decision. Now, we have the personnel to go 4-3 and I think it’s time for the shift with all the spread offenses we’re going to see and I think it’s going to be good.”

Orgeron then admitted that Pelini’s defense is more of an attacking style when compared to Aranda’s.

“I think it’s more get up the field, attack style, let the defensive line make plays in the backfield, expecting them to make plays in the backfield, blitzes and stuff like that.”

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On 2/5/2020 at 3:35 PM, Hatchertiger said:

Looks like the 4-3 it is!!!

 

Aranda ran a hybrid at times, 3-4, 4-3.  Many DC will tell you, it’s easier to run a 4-3.  Now, what most 4-3’s have  2DT and 2DE. But you can run a 4-3 with a NT, DT and 2DE. The Steelers started this years ago, they used Mean Joe Greene. The Tilted Nose Tackle started with the Steelers, but Tony Dungy brought it to Tampa Bay. 
 

What will Bo do? We may see a little in the Spring. 
 

With the numbers of DL, not as much at LB, we’ll see what Bo sets up this upcoming season. 
 

LSU has two from the 2020 class already in school, ready to get the Spring started. BJ Ojulari ( More of the LB size) and Ali Gaye, Gaye is a JC transfer, both will enter the mix. 

The 4 biggest returning DL from last season has to be, Shelvin, Logan, Apu and Neil Farrell. Like I to think these 4 will play a major part, but we have a number of back-ups, plus, true freshmen coming in.

 

With the hit taken in the LB position, the line must be a strong point.

 

Defensive Backs also took a hit. The return of Sting and Vincent will help. The trio of Ward, Flott and Ray Jones, all getting playing time helps. Bringing in Ricks, another 5* guy, will ease some of the pain. He looks to be on paper and film, another Sting. If he is anywhere close, this will be fun to watch. I often tell folks, only one returning guy in the SEC, can hang with Chase and Marshall, and he’s on the Tigers roster, Sting.  Ricks is in school, along with another DB Toles. Both will get early looks in the Spring. 

Even with so much lost to the draft, we still return so much. Having guy sit out for certain games, allowed some of the younger guys to get real game experience. 
 

Looking at early numbers, as for now, we have around 20 Sr’s. in this years roster. As always, after Spring, you might see some enter the Transfer Portal. We already lost D. Campbell early. 

Edited by LSUDad
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A few 4-3’s use a NT, not just 2 DT’s. Former LSU Tiger Kyle Williams spend time with the Bills, they went back and forth with a 4-3 and 3-4. Kyle played the DT and NT positions over the years. 
Going to be fun to see who Bo and O starts in the Spring on the line. 
The return of Shelvin and Logan helps with this transition. 
Without a doubt, O and Bo will be putting together a game plan. We have a number of really good true freshmen coming in, how they enter into the mix, will be one to watch. Might see a few in the first game get playing time. Playing in 4 games, still getting a Red-Shirt. 
 

We have a number of really good LB’s coming in, this talent will also get into the mix. 
 

DB’s have guys coming in, Flott, Raydar and Ward all need to gain weight and get stronger. Having Vincent return also helps with the nickel position. Stevens is another plus. Bo is going to love moving Stevens around, putting him into position to make plays. 

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LSU Football: Bo Pelini is going to take the Tigers’ defense to the next level

 
 

LSU football will have a familiar face on the sideline in 2020 with Bo Pelini leading the Tigers’ defense.

Dave Aranda did a terrific job leading LSU football’s defense over the last several years.

But losing Aranda to Baylor (where he’ll serve as the Bears’ head coach) wasn’t exactly a major loss for the Tigers.

That because Ed Orgeron brought Bo Pelini back to Baton Rouge to lead LSU’s defense.

Pelini, who will move the Tigers from a 3-4 defense to a base 4-3 defense, is exactly what the Tigers need after their championship run in 2019.

Aranda was a quiet coach who brought a mostly cerebral approach to the game. He never let his emotions get too high. Pelini, however, is the opposite — at least in the emotional aspect.

Pelini is fierce. He yells. He gets angry. He throws his hands up in the air in disgust.

But most of all, he brings energy. And the Tigers will need that energy in 2020 after losing numerous key defensive players to the NFL draft.Buy Now!

Pelini, in fact, is making a big impact in the energy department after just one spring practice.

Geaux247 reported on Saturday that Pelini was “very vocal with the linebackers and they seemed to feed off the enthusiasm he brings to the field”. They also noted that Pelini’s coaching style was “night and day compared to Dave Aranda’s coaching style”.

I love the emotional aspect of sports. I think that’s what makes sports, in general, so great. Elite talent has to be present to win. But I think the right emotional approach, which is something that can’t be measured by stats, also has to be present.

Pelini’s fiery demeanor could be a huge X factor for the Tigers in 2020.

Perhaps it’ll be LSU’s defense that carries the team to a College Football Playoff appearance this season.

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That was great!  I never heard Bo talk when he was here last time, only thing I heard at Nebraska was ugly comments about the fans that got him canned.  He may not be a good head coach, yes from the X's and O's, but he's too hot headed.  This talk is the first time I feel like I got to know him.  Maybe he's like O, maybe he has learned a thing or two about controlling himself, although this was not a stressful situation.  He seems like a good communicator.  I have a more favorable opinion of Bo now.

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2 hours ago, houtiger said:

That was great!  I never heard Bo talk when he was here last time, only thing I heard at Nebraska was ugly comments about the fans that got him canned.  He may not be a good head coach, yes from the X's and O's, but he's too hot headed.  This talk is the first time I feel like I got to know him.  Maybe he's like O, maybe he has learned a thing or two about controlling himself, although this was not a stressful situation.  He seems like a good communicator.  I have a more favorable opinion of Bo now.

I travel a little, so every time I see a Nebraska fan, I ask about Bo. I’ve never heard a fan say anything bad about him. They all seem to like the 9-10 wins every year. The higher ups were the problem there. 

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Bo Pelini opens up on his return to LSU: 'It's an honor to be back here'

SDS Staff | 40 minutes ago
 
 

LSU hired Youngstown State head coach Bo Pelini earlier this year to replace defensive coordinator Dave Aranda, who left for the head coaching job at Baylor. Pelini received a 3-year, $2.3 million deal.

He previously served the same position at LSU from 2005-07 under Les Miles, including helping the Tigers win the BCS National Championship during the 2007 season.

 

 
 
 
 
 
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Now, he’s back, and he recently opened up on returning at LSU’s Annual Coaches Clinic, which was cut short due to the outbreak of coronavirus.

 

“It’s an honor to be back here,” Pelini said. “When I left, my time at Nebraska and when I went back to Youngstown, it was for a reason. It was family oriented. It was all about where I wanted my kids to graduate high school. I ended up staying and during that time I had a number of different opportunities. To be honest with you, I didn’t even take them to my wife. I didn’t even bring them up.

“But when this came up and Coach O called, it was about 30 seconds before I went to my wife and I was nervous. I went up to her and said, LSU wants to talk here tomorrow about me going back there. I thought she was going to lay into me saying are you crazy? She looked at me and said, ‘you’re going to talk right?’”

Pelini then said the magic word — culture.

“This place is special to me and I feel like it’s my second home. To me it’s about the culture. Obviously, Coach O’s culture and the culture here at LSU with the things he represents and the things this program represents, with the winning and all that. But the culture of the state, the people, the work ethic, I just always felt at home here.

“I’ve talked to a lot of people and they say, ‘what’s the most special place you’ve worked?’ And I say LSU. And the reason why was because the kids from Louisiana, they set the culture in the program with the way they work and they were brought up the right way in the sport and at home and they set the culture. It doesn’t matter how many kids you bring in from out-of-state, they all basically fall in or the Louisiana kids are going to show you the door.

“It’s an honor for me to be back here.”

Pelini compiled a 66-27 record as Nebraska’s head coach in 7 seasons. During the last 5 years, he recorded a 33-28 overall record at Youngstown State.

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More Bo:

 

Back on the Bayou, an Unfiltered Bo Pelini Is Ready for His Second Act

Returning to college football’s big stage, Pelini speaks candidly on a perception he says is unfair and a future he believes is bright.
BY ROSS DELLENGER , MAY 21, 2020
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BATON ROUGE, La. — Bo Pelini is the last member of the LSU football team left in the school’s operations building. Across the street at Tiger Stadium, everyone else is feasting at the program’s annual pre-spring crawfish boil. That might appeal to some, but not Pelini, an Italian Midwesterner who much prefers red sauce over mud bugs. The crustaceans are too much work for too little payoff, he says.

Anyhow, he’s stuck in that office of his because an interview is running long, and he seems fine with it (whether that’s to avoid crawfish or not, who can say). The interview, in fact, is running so long that dusk approaches through the window over Pelini’s right shoulder, signaling the end of the final day before the reigning national champions begin spring practice. In an emblematic moment, the sun quite literally sets on the history-making 2019 Tigers, and it will rise hours later on a vastly different group (as it turns out, the coronavirus would shut down everything a week later). Three-fourths of LSU’s 2019 starters are gone, including 14 NFL draft picks; a handful of high-profile analysts left for full-time gigs; and two coordinators, Dave Aranda and Joe Brady, departed for big paydays. 

There is a new but familiar face in these Cajun lands, and he’s sitting right here with a member of the media, a group that over the years, he feels, hasn’t treated him as kindly as he’d like—partially his own doing of course. From expletive-filled rants to explosive sideline exchanges, Pelini’s name for the vast majority of the college football public elicits an image of a snarling, red-faced man whose vocabulary is dependent on four-letter words. But there is no screaming during this interview. There is no yelling. There is no cussing. There is only Bo Pelini—misunderstood and mislabeled, he says—setting the record straight on the world’s perception of him and answering a couple of pointed questions: Why hasn’t a man with one of the best résumés of any fired college head coach gotten another big-time shot? And is he capable of doing it one day?

“I don’t think there’s any question I can,” Pelini says. “Everybody talks about wanting to win, but let’s face it, there are other things involved when these hires are made. I mean, there are always other agendas. I think sometimes people in college football are so concerned about the opening press conference that they forget: You better win football games.

“All the way back to when I was the defensive coordinator at Nebraska (in 2003), there was always an adjective in front of my name,” he continues. “The fiery Bo Pelini... the this Bo Pelini and that Bo Pelini. It got blown out of proportion. It was like every picture taken of me was me yelling at a ref. Most people never got to know what I stand for and who I really was.

“If somebody wants to win,” Pelini concludes, “they should call me.”

***

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USA TODAY Sports

Back during Pelini’s first stint as LSU’s defensive coordinator, from 2005 through ’07, Gino Marino would encourage the coach to try something different when he ventured into Gino’s, a 54-year-old Italian restaurant in Baton Rouge. How about the veal parmigiana? What about the seafood cannelloni? But no, Pelini always said, he wanted his regular: Italian salad, spaghetti and meatballs with linked sausage and laurence bread. 

Pelini dined at Gino’s a couple times a week back then. So naturally that’s where he ended up on his first night back in town this January. “He’s like a damn rock star now,” says Marino. “He comes in to eat and everybody comes and thanks him for coming back.”

Indeed, Bo is back on the bayou. As college football goes, Pelini has emerged from the shadows, stepping out of the FCS level and back onto one of football’s brightest stages—a place that originally launched his head coaching career 13 years ago, when his national championship-winning defense catapulted him to the gig at Nebraska.

This place, though, never really left him. He refers to Baton Rouge as his “second home,” likening its people to those in his native Ohio—blue-collar Catholics with a passion for football. He spent the last five years in Ohio as head coach at Youngstown State, a mission primarily to raise his children in his own hometown. His youngest daughter has just one more year of high school there, his son is in college at Notre Dame and his oldest daughter studies acting in Manhattan. He’s virtually an empty nester with his high school sweetheart, wife Mary Pat.

If Pelini’s coaching career were a game, this was the 52-year old’s halftime. Now, here’s the second act. The expectations are sky-high. “The LSU roster seems even better than the one he won the national championship with (in 2007),” says Joe Ganz, a longtime Pelini assistant who played for the coach and worked with him at Nebraska and Youngstown State. “Hopefully LSU continues to be as good as they’ve been, and he can get another crack at being a Power 5 head coach.”

The last time he sat in such a chair, Pelini coached Nebraska from 2008–2014, leading the program through an arduous transition from the Big 12 to the Big Ten while winning nine games a year. In those seven seasons, the Cornhuskers were 66–27, had zero losing seasons and never finished worse than third in their division. In five seasons since Pelini’s firing, the Cornhuskers are 28–34, have had four losing seasons and never have finished better than third in their division. He never lost more than four games, never won less than nine and his winning percentage (70.9%) is one of the best in FBS history among fired head coaches. “Hopefully now people have some sense of appreciation for what we did there,” Pelini says, “because it’s not easy.” 

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In the last decade, plenty of head coaches have been fired with career records north of .500. Some are still searching for another FBS head gig. Among those, Bo Pelini’s winning percentage stands as the best. 

However, with Pelini, there is more to consider. He remains a polarizing figure at Nebraska. Few ride the fence. You like Bo or you don’t like Bo. The fan base is split on Pelini’s attitude—passionate vs. angry—and on his success—seven bowls vs. zero conference titles. In 2013, a rift began between the coach and fans when Deadspin published leaked audio—two years after it was recorded without the coach’s knowledge—that captured Pelini disparaging Cornhuskers fans for leaving a game early. One particular line stands out now given Nebraska’s position post-Pelini: “We’ll see what they can do when I’m f------ gone.”

Soon, a fissure developed too between Pelini and the Nebraska administration, led by new athletic director Shawn Eichorst. During a news conference in 2013, Pelini didn’t help matters when he challenged his own bosses to fire him. And then a year later, they did. After his firing, a second audio recording emerged, this one from Pelini’s private meeting with Nebraska players, where he was obscenely colorful in attacking Eichorst, who’d blocked him from saying farewell to his players on campus. 

A column in the Lincoln Journal Star this spring suggested that Pelini was surreptitiously recorded behind closed doors by a rat, a plot at first to turn fans against him and then to smear him during his exit. “I’m not trying to go out of the way to defend him,” says Tom Osborne, the legendary Nebraska coach and athletic director who hired Pelini in 2007, “but those were two things where he didn’t openly come out in public and say things unseemly. Some people felt that they tried to make sure those (recordings) did not go unnoticed. For some people, it would have never gotten public.”

The leaked recordings, the sideline demeanor, the brash press conferences—they all helped to build an image of Pelini that Bleacher Report described thusly in a 2015 story: “He is a true rant specialist and one of the most bitter coaches around.” While Pelini is partially to blame for his own label, he contends that it is unfair. He vehemently defends his style, attributing it to a game-day passion that extends three decades back to his days as a free safety at Ohio State. He’s not the apologetic or regretful type. He stands firm on his approach, instead pointing the finger at a label based on a few sideline outbursts and a rocky final 18-month marriage with Nebraska. In short, “he’s not going to change,” says Ganz.

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Greg Nelson/Sports Illustrated

And maybe he doesn’t need to. Pelini has his own suggestion on his image: Get to know his players and you get to know the real Bo Pelini—the motivational coach and teacher, not the screaming, fire-spitting sideline stalker. A half-dozen of his players rave about him—his passion, his intensity, his drive. One of those includes Taylor Martinez, the former Nebraska quarterback who Pelini famously blistered in a finger-pointing sideline episode caught on ESPN cameras during a 2010 game at Texas A&M. Reached earlier this month, Martinez says he’s long past the incident and calls the coach a “fatherly figure.”

Osborne says Pelini’s episode with Martinez—rampant then on television and in newspapers—painted a bullseye on the coach. He became the target, always the focus of television cameras. His outbursts, reactions and rants stole headlines. “Perception can become reality,” Pelini says. “I always say that people… you’ve got to get to know them. I think you can say that in so many areas of life. Sometimes I think people write things, say things and do things and they don’t really think of the ramifications of it. In this world, if something is written or said, it creates this persona that doesn’t go away. It’s something that’s always out there.”

Greg Shelley sees this in coaches across the country—their intense passion materializing into an unfavorable label. Shelley, a sports psychology professor at Ithaca College in New York and a graduate of Nebraska, has worked with dozens of FBS athletic programs in a consulting role. “With that passion and drive and fiery attitude, there’s a line, and when you cross it, all the sudden it’s a negative,” Shelley says. “For a lot of coaches, that’s a hard line to walk. It’s a hard line for all of us to walk.”

There are plenty of examples of a coach’s game-day passion crossing the line. Think of Bob Knight’s infamous chair toss in 1985 or Notre Dame coach Brian Kelly grappling with his own assistant strength coach during a sideline episode in 2015. Even the great ones have these moments. Former Ohio State coach Woody Hayes once drop kicked a sideline chair. Nick Saban, for all of his championships, has compiled an even more lengthy list of expletive-filled sideline clips. In a somewhat fitting twist, Pelini is now working for a man who rebounded from his own firing and rebuilt a public perception not unlike Pelini’s own. 

Ed Orgeron is now a title-winning, baby-kissing genius who’s transformed into a public relations pleasure, a far cry from the failed Ole Piss coach who’d launch into Red Bull-fueled rages. Orgeron’s makeover began away from the field. As interim coach in 2016, he stopped driving his black Hummer, instead adopting a more sleek SUV. He began catering to media members and flourished on a number of public platforms, appearing in commercials with key political figures, retaining an active Twitter account and, through fiery locker room speeches, endearing himself to a fan base that at first resented his hire. 

The real makeover took place on the field: He won a national championship. And so poof went the memories and images of the crazed Ole Piss coach. 

Some inside the industry believe the Pelini-Orgeron marriage has the potential to be explosive—two hot-tempered, loud personalities both with expertise on defense. Carrie Cecil, one of the nation’s leading consultants for coaches on reputation and brand management, sees otherwise. She believes Pelini went to the right place to start his climb to another major head coaching gig. The LSU community, she says, will rally around a man with fiery passion and defensive prowess. “We all love a comeback story and great coaches are hard to come by,” Cecil says. “I’m excited to see how Coach Pelini starts to shift and shake off the negative stereotypes from the past, but he has to be an active participant in his own brand rescue to be a head coach again. And I think Coach Pelini will do that.”

Maybe that started back in his hometown. In five seasons at Youngstown State, no serious public incident arose off the field. On the field, the Penguins went 33–28 and advanced to the FCS championship game during Pelini’s second season. Ganz believes time at the lower level made Pelini a better coach—a humbling experience for sure. Accustomed to commodities of major college football, Pelini coached a team with 20 fewer scholarship players than he had at Nebraska, was forced to share a training room with other sports and had to maneuver around a budget a fraction of those at the FBS level. 

But for Pelini specifically, the path back to the top may involve scrubbing that perceived image of a scowling, fire-spitting man. In this internet-centric world, that’s not so easy. Google Bo Pelini and of the first two dozen generated photos, six of them show the coach berating an official. Two show him smiling. “Bo is intense. No question he was somewhat volatile at times,” Osborne says, “but there were people who saw a different side of him. He could be the nicest guy in the world. If he let people see that side, it would work out differently for him.”

There are other things to consider, too. Pelini’s mad-man image spawned a host of memes on social media, including a popular parody account. The @FauxPelini Twitter account, with its 664,000 followers, has become popular enough that The Athletic, a subscription-based digital sports platform, has started publishing written works from the account’s operator. During that interview in his office, Pelini airs his grievances about someone using his name to fill the college football masses with satirical humor. “I think it’s ridiculous. There’s an example of somebody who sits behind his computer every day. It just sticks in my craw,” Pelini says. “I don’t think the guy means it that way. It’s funny and some people find it to be funny and I thought it was funny for a while, but after a while, it’s like, you know, I don’t find it funny.”

Pelini isn’t necessarily searching for his next big gig. He’s quite happy being back in the SEC manning a defense loaded with five-stars. In fact, the coach says he turned down 11 job offers during his time at Youngstown, but most if not all of them were college assistant jobs and NFL staff positions. Meanwhile, more than 55 head coaching jobs at the Power 5 level came open during that stretch. Head coaching hires run in cycles, says Gene DeFilippo, a former college administrator and the executive director of Turnkey Sports and Entertainment, one of the most widely used coaching search firms. For the last several years, DeFilippo says, the popular hire in the industry has been the young, smart offensive guru, but he senses that changing.

Lately, more experienced, once-fired head coaches are landing Power 5 jobs. He cites hires this cycle of Karl Dorrell (Colorado) and Greg Schiano (Rutgers), along with a slew of similar men hired over the last two years: Les Miles (Kansas), Mike Locksley (Maryland), Mack Brown (North Carolina) and Herm Edwards (Arizona State). “Bo Pelini will get another chance,” DeFilippo says.

At LSU, Pelini is beginning the process of putting talented pieces in the right places. Ganz describes this as having 10 ferraris in your garage and “you don’t know which one to take out,” he laughs. Pelini, of course, has experience in choosing correctly. His three defenses at LSU never ranked worse than third in the country and led the SEC in two of those three seasons. He’s overhauling a unit this offseason from a 3–4 to a 4–3, a transition that Orgeron compares to the offensive transformation the Tigers experienced last offseason with quarterback Joe Burrow and Brady, the wunderkind guru who left LSU to take the offensive coordinator job with the Carolina Panthers.

This is a point of contention in Baton Rouge. Orgeron expected Brady to remain on staff. The 30-year-old had even signed a memorandum of agreement, a document binding him to a contract with the school. But it also included a clause allowing him to leave for a college head coaching job or the pro ranks. A day after the national championship win over Clemson, Orgeron learned of Brady’s departure while on the 90-minute bus ride from the championship site, New Orleans, to Baton Rouge. “I found out from somebody else that it was going on,” Orgeron says in an interview in his office in March. 

Aranda left days later to be the head coach at Baylor, for which Orgeron had in place a plan. In fact, Orgeron reached out to Pelini in December when Aranda was a top candidate for another head job, Utah State. A month later, Pelini’s phone buzzed with a second message from Orgeron, among others. “I didn’t even know (Aranda) was looking at the Baylor job and next thing I know, my phone is blowing up from people down here,” Pelini recalls. “Coach O texted about having a conversation. I mentioned it to my wife and she said, ‘You’re going to listen, aren’t you?’”

LSU athletic director Scott Woodward, a longtime acquaintance of Pelini, believes the Tigers' new defensive coordinator will take pressure and stress off of Orgeron. For one, Pelini is more of a disciplinarian than his predecessor. He also specializes in the defensive backfield and linebackers, leaving the defensive line for the expert himself, Orgeron. “The sky's the limit for Bo,” Woodward says of Pelini’s future, “but I think he’s content right now at being the head defensive coach in Baton Rouge. He has a great record and memories here.”

Indeed, this is a special place for the Pelinis. After all, to this day, the program continues a tradition Pelini started in 2005. Once a week during the football season, the coaching staff dines on Gino’s takeout. After Pelini left for Nebraska following the 2007 season, the ritual took a brief hiatus before then-coach Les Miles, superstitious as ever, phoned Gino himself to re-establish the tradition. The Tigers needed the red sauce. 

“We didn’t have the spaghetti last week!” Gino remembers Miles yelling over the phone. “We almost got our ass beat!”

***

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Pelini during his first stint with LSU in 2007.

Dale Zanine/USA TODAY Sports

The interview is winding down, finally. Pelini stares across his desk with that patented glare, the sun further dipping below his right shoulder and that crawfish boil across the street awaiting his entrance (they can wait). Talk of what he calls his unfair perception is over, replaced by a lighter topic: his basketball skills.

For years, Pelini led pickup games with staff members wherever he coached. These games got intense. That fiery Bo Pelini from the sideline appeared on the court. Those days are done. A back injury a few years ago sidelined him for good. He refuses to play, even though he acknowledges that he still could in a limited role. But that’s not Bo Pelini. He doesn’t present a limited version of himself—in coaching, in basketball and in life. Perception or not, you get the full Bo Pelini or you get nothing at all. “That,” Ganz says, “is just the way he’s wired.”

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