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Rick Neuheisel Fired From UCLA

GREG BEACHAM   11/28/11 07:42 PM ET   AP

LOS ANGELES — Rick Neuheisel returned to UCLA determined to do everything correctly after a coaching career filled with big successes and equally big trouble.

Even athletic director Dan Guerrero, who fired Neuheisel on Monday after four disappointing seasons, agreed the formerly scandal-plagued coach did most everything the right way at his alma mater.

All except the winning part.

UCLA is 21-28 under Neuheisel, who will be allowed to coach in Friday's Pac-12 title game at Oregon. Offensive coordinator Mike Johnson will be the interim coach if the Bruins (6-6, 5-4 Pac-12) receive a bowl berth.

"Rick was a great representative for our school, and I'll always be grateful for that," Guerrero said. "I believe the sign of a good program is consistency. We just weren't there. We certainly had some losses that were of epic proportions ... in the second half of the season, and that simply wasn't good enough."

Neuheisel never built the momentum necessary to challenge mighty Southern California for city supremacy, and Guerrero fired Neuheisel two days after UCLA's 50-0 loss to No. 9 USC, the Bruins' largest loss since 1930 in their crosstown rivalry game. UCLA also lost 48-12 to lowly Arizona after a bye week, along with a 26-point loss at Stanford, a 29-point home blowout by Texas and a 25-point loss at Utah two weeks ago.

"I thanked Dan for the opportunity," Neuheisel said on the Pac-12's promotional teleconference for the title game, less than an hour after his firing was announced. "I don't need reasons and all that kind of stuff. Certainly when you're the UCLA coach, you'd like to play better against USC. I know that. We had our chances, but when you lose in the fashion we did, that's a difficult pill to swallow."

The Bruins will represent the Pac-12 South in the inaugural league title game on Friday despite finishing two games behind postseason-banned USC in the division standings. UCLA is a 30-point underdog against the Ducks with a Rose Bowl berth on the line for the winner.

Neuheisel said he didn't consider stepping down before the title game. He planned to run the Bruins' practice at Spaulding Field late Monday night.

"I hope I'm not a distraction," Neuheisel said. "I hope I'm some sort of help, in respect to the planning and how we go about it. We've been knocked down before this year, and somehow, some way, we've always responded. I hope we'll respond the same way."

If UCLA loses to Oregon, the Pac-12 would have to petition the NCAA for bowl eligibility for a 6-7 team. Guerrero said the Bruins already have filed for a waiver, and they will accept a bowl invitation if they're eligible.

UCLA made it to just one bowl game in Neuheisel's first three seasons, winning the EagleBank Bowl in Washington, D.C., in 2009.

Guerrero said he fired Neuheisel immediately after reaching his decision, not wanting to be disingenuous about the coach's future. Yet the decision allows UCLA to begin courting candidates, and Guerrero said he has "more financial ammunition" to hire an elite coach with the Pac-12's new television contracts and an influx of cash commitments from alumni and donors who want a big name in Westwood.

Guerrero also said he would prefer a coach with prior head coaching experience, even somebody "sitting in that chair" right now in charge of a successful program. Boise State's Chris Petersen is widely rumored to be atop UCLA's wish list, as he is at most West Coast schools with vacancies.

Neuheisel's firing before the title game is an ugly end to the 50-year-old coach's self-described dream job. He was a quarterback at UCLA, leading the Bruins to an unlikely victory in the Rose Bowl on Jan. 2, 1984.

"I'm just thankful for the opportunity," Neuheisel said. "This has always been a place that I wanted to have the chance to help bring it to a place that everybody would be proud. Obviously we've fallen short of that."

Neuheisel had more success during his first two head coaching stops at Colorado and Washington, leading the Buffaloes to 33 wins and three bowl victories over four seasons before taking the Huskies to four straight winning seasons and a Rose Bowl victory after the 2000 campaign.

Neuheisel eventually was dismissed by Washington after a series of problems in Seattle ranging from player discipline to a rift with school leadership to his infamous involvement in an NCAA basketball tournament pool. After two years out of coaching and a stint on the Baltimore Ravens' staff, Neuheisel took over at UCLA.

But the Bruins went 4-8 in his first and third seasons, with a 7-6 finish in 2009. He had high expectations for his current team, but the Bruins have won consecutive games just once all season.

When Neuheisel returned to UCLA, he appeared in newspaper ads created by the school's marketing department and highlighted by a quote: "The football monopoly in Los Angeles is officially over." Although Neuheisel didn't order the ads, the words hung over him with each loss by his Bruins.

Neuheisel ended up with much less success than former teammate Karl Dorrell, who was fired in 2007 after going 35-27 in five seasons that included four bowl berths, a 10-2 campaign in 2005 and a Sun Bowl victory.

Johnson joined Neuheisel's staff this season, replacing Norm Chow after Neuheisel's messy public breakup with the longtime offensive mastermind. Johnson, a Los Angeles native and veteran NFL assistant, was the San Francisco 49ers' offensive coordinator for most of last season, and he has helped Neuheisel to lead a resurgence of UCLA's offense this year.

Neuheisel said he hadn't thought about his future.

"This has kind of hit me between the eyes here a little bit," Neuheisel said. "I've been on one track, which is just to do the best I can with this particular team. That will be the case at least through Friday, and then we'll make any decisions on which course I take."

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LOS ANGELES — Rick Neuheisel returned to UCLA determined to do everything correctly after a coaching career filled with big successes and equally big trouble. Even athletic director Dan Guerrer...
LOS ANGELES — Rick Neuheisel returned to UCLA determined to do everything correctly after a coaching career filled with big successes and equally big trouble. Even athletic director Dan Guerrer...
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This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
01:41 AM on 11/30/2011
This is a kind of sad story about the state of big time college athletics. Rich N. is a good person, who ran a clean program, who did the best he could. Unfortunately, in America, that is not good enough anymore. UCLA should fire their Athletic Director for his poor performance...I am no fan of UCLA or USC, and my interests are with the FCS playoffs, but I recognze a good person who is loyla to his alma mater and his program....I hope Rich N; finds a great position somewhere...
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bgofca
12:42 PM on 11/29/2011
go ducks! add to ucla's loosing score at autzen.
02:37 AM on 11/29/2011
Oh man...when the crowd at the USC UCLA game was shouting one more year... it was for both Barkley and Neuheisel
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Concerned Citizen in CA
3 things cannot be long hidden: sun, moon & truth
01:29 AM on 11/29/2011
Can UCLA really afford to fire Neuheisel and hire someone else? Aren't they in a huge money crunch right now? Aren't they trying to raise tuition on their students again by some 8%, on top of the increase from last year, and the year before. $250,000 plus the cost of a new coach is going to put a huge dent in the school's budget.
02:13 PM on 11/29/2011
The coach (usually one of the highest paid people on the campus) is not paid from the same budget. The aforementioned TV money and the ticket sales for the games etc etc. cover that and a lot of other stuff too.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
01:43 AM on 11/30/2011
That is the spin that keeps big time colleges going but it is a lie....or, at best, a stretching of the truth...the team represents the University and its students and alumni....and, as such, all expenses should be connected to the school...
12:50 AM on 11/29/2011
Rick who?
Why is this taking up space on my monitor?
Oh wait... it's not anymore. Bye
Sthernbull
I am one of the 53% that pays taxes.
12:32 AM on 11/29/2011
UCLA...UCLA....Who? Oh yes one of those JV squads out in the Pack 1.
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Edguy52
Resist and Exist: Obama 2012
11:25 PM on 11/28/2011
UCLA got moped on by USC... I guess its a good new beginning.
02:14 PM on 11/29/2011
Well things can only improve.
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DismayedRepub
300km/s Not just common sense, it’s the law
11:23 PM on 11/28/2011
So here we have a 5-4 team contenting for the PAC12 championship and should they happen to manage to beat the Ducks this Friday will they allow Neuheisel to coach the Rose Bowl game? Should the Bruins win will they have to get a waiver from the NCAA to play the Rose Bowl as they aren’t bowl eligible at 6-4?

If LSU and Oklahoma St. trip up this weekend we could see Stanford vault ahead into the BCS championship game and this team is locked out of their league (PAC12) championship. The PAC12 is a mess this year and it’s almost as bad as their referees. This could get pretty humorous.
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Concerned Citizen in CA
3 things cannot be long hidden: sun, moon & truth
01:37 AM on 11/29/2011
Actually, after the Oregon game, Slick Rick is done, whether they get into a bowl game or not. Offensive coordinator Mike Johnson will be interim head coach if they go to a bowl.
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bgofca
12:43 PM on 11/29/2011
oregon beat stanford
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DismayedRepub
300km/s Not just common sense, it’s the law
03:57 PM on 11/29/2011
I love the irony. It's a playoff system wanna be.
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DismayedRepub
300km/s Not just common sense, it’s the law
03:58 PM on 11/29/2011
And Stanford has a better overall record than the Ducks.
09:29 PM on 11/28/2011
Who's more devastated by this, the Neuheisel family.... or the Kiffen family? That was a guarantee win every year for Laney and the old man.
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LickMyDecalsOffBaby
SafeAsMilk
08:36 PM on 11/28/2011
Penn State has proven that winning is the only thing that matters in college sports.
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lovinlife2
Quite a journey we're on here
07:56 PM on 11/28/2011
It will be a long while before UCLA gets anywhere near competetive again.
02:29 PM on 11/29/2011
The thing that is really going to do in the AD is the basketball team sucks this year too. He's toast.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
06:19 PM on 11/28/2011
For a dozen years, this chump kept tripping uphill. Colorado, UW, the NFL and then UCLA. He was demonstrably unprepared--and just kept freeriding on his dubious charm.

Lane Kiffin, you are next.
12:48 AM on 11/29/2011
Neuheisel is proof that coaching can be a con game.
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06:05 PM on 11/28/2011
Best jobs in the world. Recruit thugs, have a couple of good seasons, get a couple of bowl wins, renegotiate salary and severance payout, get caught by NCAA, Get fired and receive big payout to leave. Perfect. Ask Pete Carroll as he bailedout from USC before the hammer came down. Ask people in Seattle who had to put up with the rapes and drug dealing by Rick's recruits. Houston Nutt in line for $4-6 million payout for failure to win an SEC conference game during his tenure. Really?
In the meantime, every one of these Universities has raised their tuition by 20-40% in the last two years. We need new priorities in this country.
02:16 PM on 11/29/2011
Where is Pete Carroll now, BTW? Is he still at whatever NFL team he went to, or is he available for the job in Westwood?
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jwod211
05:49 PM on 11/28/2011
As a UCLA alum, I'm appalled at the team's performance and that of the blowhards (Guerrero and Neuheisel). But so what? How much money was, ( will be), wasted in hiring, firing and paying off contracts? How much unnecessary noise emanated from athletic management? It was supposed to be about students playing a sport. But now it's about public relations, the performance of adults and satisfying the jaded sports press and alums. It's an endless cycle. With such unstable ground, is it at all likely that, after coaches (and ADs) have been regularly discarded like used toilet paper, that any better performing coach (or AD) will want the job.
05:13 PM on 11/28/2011
As a proud UCLA alumnus...... all I can say is: It's about d*mn time!