Posted by alblack56 on 6/8/2013 5:42:00 AM (view original):
In RL, there were 5 BCS coaches fired this season....Minnesota, Northwestern, Texas Tech, UCLA and USC.
In 2012, there were 4 firings...Illinois, Mississippi St., Nebraska and South Carolina.
By whatever critieria, there should be a minimum # of openings each season. The 3 schools with the lowest standing fire their coach. If the BCS already has 3 or more SIM teams, noone gets fired that year.
A firing quota is an interesting idea. It would certainly make firings more realistic, but I think that although we need to increase firings, this is one of those things (like EE's, injuries, dilemmas, etc.), where we're not seeking to correspond exactly with real life. I don't want to get to a point where we have Ben Howland-like firings, no matter how realistic that may be.
My two initial concerns with what you've proposed are the following:
1. If there are 3 or more Sims among the BCS schools (not that uncommon), which would prevent any humans from being fired, you could actually be protecting some truly bad human coaches who deserve to be fired.
2. There are 72 BCS jobs. At any given time, roughly 20 of those are held by coaches too early in their tenure to be considered for firing. That means our firing quota is potentially hitting coaches #48-52 out of 72. Once you've initiated this system for a few seasons and have weeded out the truly bad coaches who've been hanging around for too long, firing coaches #48-52 could mean giving the axe to some guys who aren't great coaches, but who aren't terrible coaches, either. Depending what criteria you're using, this could impact someone who simply had a couple down seasons, etc, or who really haven't done anything to necessarily deserve being fired other than satisfying the quota.
6/8/2013 7:15 AM (edited)