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Good article on Rocco in Richmond Times Dispatch

Posted: December 14th, 2006, 1:20 pm
by jcmanson
Ex-aides make grade
Coaches Prince, Golden, Rocco apply lessons learned under Groh

BY JEFF WHITE
TIMES-DISPATCH STAFF WRITER Dec 13, 2006


Twelve months have passed since they left Al Groh's staff at the University of Virginia, each to pursue a dream of running a football program. Offensive coordinator Ron Prince headed to Kansas State, defensive coordinator Al Golden to Temple, associate head coach Danny Rocco to Liberty.

"I couldn't be happier," Rocco said, and his former colleagues Prince and Golden say they have no regrets either.
Each of the three has his program in better shape than when he inherited it.

Liberty, which was 1-10 in 2005, went 6-5 this season, and Rocco was named Big South Conference coach of the year.

"I think we have a chance to have a lot of success here," he said.

Kansas State, which won four games in 2004 and five in '05, is 7-5 and bound for a Dec. 28 date with Rutgers (10-2) at the Texas Bowl. The Wildcats won three of their final four regular-season games, including their Nov. 11 matchup with defending national champion Texas.

"There's quite a bit of excitement," Prince said of the mood in Manhattan.

For Golden, who took over perhaps the worst program in Division I-A, the on-field progress wasn't as tangible. After finishing 0-11 in 2005, the Owls went 1-11 this season. But the new coaching staff, which includes another former U.Va. assistant, Mark D'Onofrio, stabilized a program whose foundation was crumbling in the spots where it hadn't collapsed.

"There were so many elements in the program we had to change," Golden said, "and I think we accomplished a lot of those things, just to give ourselves a chance to move forward."

It didn't help Golden that Temple had to play a brutal nonconference schedule, which included games with Louisville, Clemson, Penn State and Navy. Or that, because of academic problems that occurred during the tenure of Golden's predecessor, the NCAA last spring stripped Temple of nine scholarships.

The Owls played 21 true freshmen and were outscored 496-131 this season. The good news for Golden: His players improved dramatically in the classroom and never quit battling on the field. The breakthrough came Oct. 28, when Temple snapped a 20-game losing streak with a 28-14 win over Bowling Green.

"Look, I'm not happy with our results," Golden said, "but now we don't have this albatross [the losing streak] hanging over our heads the entire offseason."

Golden and Prince, at 37, are among the youngest head coaches in Division I-A. Rocco, 46, spent two decades as an assistant, at schools ranging from Wake Forest to Colorado to Boston College to U.Va., before landing the job at Division I-AA Liberty.

Like Golden and Prince, Rocco was part of Groh's first staff at U.Va. and spent five seasons as an assistant there. In addition to coaching the outside linebackers, Rocco interacted with the team's academic-support staff, worked with the university's admissions department and, at various times, also served as recruiting coordinator and summer-camp director.

"Al Groh allowed me to do a number of things at Virginia that really prepared me for this position," Rocco said.

Since returning to his alma mater after the 2000 season, Groh has lost numerous assistants, some to the NFL and some to higher-profile positions elsewhere. He says he can live with that.

"If you want to make sure that there's no movement on your staff," Groh said, "then hire unambitious guys who don't have enough talent to attract people's eyes."

Of the 2005 exodus, Golden said, "I think it was just a situation where there were three guys who learned a lot at the University of Virginia and who worked well together but really wanted an opportunity to have their own programs. I'm proud to have worked with [Prince and Rocco] and excited about the things they're doing at their programs."

Prince grew up in Kansas, and his parents live about 20 miles from the Kansas State campus. He replaced a legend at K-State, Bill Snyder, but has handled the transition to a high-visibility head job with aplomb.

"I feel I was well-prepared for it, with all the things I learned from [Groh]," Prince said.

Kansas State loses about 20 seniors from this year's team. In 2007, Prince said, he'll "be looking at a less-experienced team, but I think we'll be a little more talented."

At Liberty, Rocco will have back 10 players who made first- or second-team all-Big South this season. Newcomers will include 6-6, 280-pound linebacker Vince Redd, a transfer from U.Va. who wasn't eligible this season. "I can't wait to start spring ball," Rocco said. "We will literally be so much farther ahead than we were last year because of the foundation we laid."

The same is true at Temple, said Golden, who believes the worst is behind him. It better be, he added with a laugh.

The Owls lose only five starters from this year, and it's realistic to think they could win several games next season, when they'll finally be full members of the Mid-American Conference. Temple should be better still in 2008, when virtually all of its 2007 team will be eligible to return.

Posted: December 14th, 2006, 1:25 pm
by PAmedic
Golden and Prince, at 37, are among the youngest head coaches in Division I-A. Rocco, 46, spent two decades as an assistant, at schools ranging from Wake Forest to Colorado to Boston College to U.Va., before landing the job at Division I-AA Liberty.
Football Bowl Subdivision

Football Championship Subdivision

sorry. just keeping to my promise that I will repeat that mantra everytime I see the old moniker(s) in print. :P

Posted: December 14th, 2006, 1:25 pm
by bigsmooth
im glad to see some groh disciples doing well. i still question the golden move, but rocco and prince will continue to do very well.

Posted: December 14th, 2006, 1:26 pm
by PAmedic
you oughta be up here watching that carnage on the news each weekend :?

(IF Temple gets ANY mention, at all. Actually, after JoePa and PSU: Lehigh, Penn, 'Nova and Delaware get more press- and for good reason)

Posted: December 14th, 2006, 1:28 pm
by bigsmooth
they should really be a I-AA program..that is the only way i can see them having any success.

Posted: December 14th, 2006, 4:03 pm
by Chris Lang
PAmedic wrote:
Golden and Prince, at 37, are among the youngest head coaches in Division I-A. Rocco, 46, spent two decades as an assistant, at schools ranging from Wake Forest to Colorado to Boston College to U.Va., before landing the job at Division I-AA Liberty.
Football Bowl Subdivision

Football Championship Subdivision

sorry. just keeping to my promise that I will repeat that mantra everytime I see the old moniker(s) in print. :P
Don't hold your breath on everyone using this right now. The NCAA was dumb to institute it in midseason. If you use "football championship subdivision," you have to add a paragraph explaining what the heck the FCS is.

I-AA = people know what you're talking about. That's why it's still in wide use.

Posted: December 15th, 2006, 10:57 am
by PAmedic
I'm under NO illusion that it will become a wide-spread practice.

I AM aware, however- of just how annoying it is when I point the discrepency out EACH AND EVERY TIME I SEE IT.

therefore, I shall continue to do so.

8)

Posted: December 15th, 2006, 12:16 pm
by Hold My Own
How long til we can beat Appy State at their place?

Posted: December 15th, 2006, 12:17 pm
by PAmedic
whoo boy.

that would be quite a win.

I'd say at least 2 yrs. not to be pessamistic.

Posted: December 15th, 2006, 1:04 pm
by Chris Lang
Medic, sometime in spring football, I'm going to put a notebook item out there relaying the change and why we're going from using I-AA to FCS, and then we'll stick with it. Hopefully, that'll smooth the process. Just got to make sure our Tech and UVa guy use the notation, too.

Posted: December 15th, 2006, 1:10 pm
by A.G.
Is it not b/c many of the I-AA schools felt "D-I envy" b/c of the "AA" designation?? But they are D-I in all other sports??

Posted: December 15th, 2006, 3:18 pm
by SuperJon
Hold My Own wrote:How long til we can beat Appy State at their place?
We hafta worry about beating JMU at their place first.

Posted: December 15th, 2006, 4:19 pm
by thepostman
yeah...lets beat schools like JMU and even Towson at their places before we talk about ASU...

Posted: December 15th, 2006, 5:44 pm
by SuperJon
Speaking of App, I'm going to a viewing party for the championship game tonight. This could be fun...

Posted: December 15th, 2006, 6:07 pm
by A.G.
I sure hope those hillbillies slap those danged yankees all over the lot.