All That and a Bag of Mail: Ole Miss Tattoo Edition

Greetings from Mexico, where I'm on a family vacation over Thanksgiving weekend and into next week.

But have no fear, I'll continue to update the site throughout the vacation -- with the able assistance of Bullpen editor Lori -- such that I don't think it will make much of a difference to you guys.

Our beaver pelt trader of the week this week goes to the Tennessee administration, Dave Hart in particular. Finally, the Vols are deploying the Clay Travis dump truck theory. I've been highly critical of UT over the past four or five years because I think they got behind the curve in terms of the importance of spending for top coaches. But give the Vols credit, they're doing just about everything they can to get Jon Gruden. That doesn't mean Gruden is coming, but it does mean that it won't be for lack of Vol effort.

With that in mind let's dive into All That and a Bag of Mail:

Hundreds of you on Twitter this week:

"Clay, give us odds on Gruden to UT."

Okay, here's the deal, the ball is in Gruden's court. He's got to decide. Remember when I first started writing about Gruden to UT and everyone said it was a joke? Now those same people have realized that this is a legit pursuit, that the Vols have got Gruden, who likes the idea on some level, thinking hard about it, and that they've made a serious offer to him.

So in terms of assessing probability we know UT is making a big offer to Gruden so to me that means he has to be the odds-on favorite. Why? Because we're not absolutely certain of the UT coaching flow-chart. and we have no idea if anyone else ever gets an offer. If Gruden accepts, the search ends there.  

Put simply, you can't accept the job until it's offered to you.

So if I was setting percentage odds on UT's next coach, it would look something like this:

Jon Gruden: 30%

Jimbo Fisher: 15%

Charlie Strong: 13%

Gary Patterson: 12%

Al Golden: 10%

Dan Mullen: 10%

David Cutcliffe: 5%

Phil Fulmer: 5%

This would roughly correspond to what I think Dave Hart's flow chart would resemble. (Also, let me be clear, this is my guess at Dave Hart's list. Number two on my list would be Bobby Petrino. And I'd have James Franklin at number three. But all I care about is winning, nothing else.)

If some of you think Gruden at 30% is low, I would just say that every potential new coach begins with low odds. There are lots of things that can go wrong and Gruden may have a lot of NFL options. I'm always nervous in coaching searches that coaches want the offer so they can use it to negotiate for the next offer.

Diving back into my list, if Gruden says no I think Jimbo Fisher is next up on the offer list. Which is why Fisher would be the next most likely to be coach. (There are rumors out there of Bob Stoops to the Vols, but I don't buy those as evidenced by my flow chart.) If Fisher says no, it's Charlie Strong.

On down the list.

I've got Phil Fulmer as the floor now, as I think if he could bring John Chavis back to Knoxville, there would be a case to be made that he makes more sense than taking a flier on a relatively unproven coach not on this list of names. In fact, if you asked me straight up would I rather have Al Golden or Phil Fulmer back at UT with John Chavis, I'd take Fulmer.

After hiring two coaches with losing records and waiting on them to pan out, I'd be ready to go back to the guy who was 152-52 at UT. Fulmer won the east in five of his final 11 years of coaching the Vols. How many years from now do you think it will take the Vols to win the east five times? Plus, and this is really key, since Fulmer's firing John Chavis has demonstrated that he's the best defensive coordinator in the SEC. If Chavis was back at UT you could be very confident in that side of the ball. If Fulmer kept Jay Graham, grabbed Tee Martin and a few other dynamite younger recruiters, you could argue that the Vol program was a family, something unique in the SEC. 

I'm not saying it should happen, just that I think the potential there is less risky than some of these other options. 

Ask Bill Snyder.  

Justin W. writes:

"If Dave Hart called you and said he had just hired Jon Gruden and wanted you to be the one to break the news, how would you do it? There is no time limit and he will deny all claims until you have broken the story."

First of all, I'd enter into extreme silent pantomime celebration while on the phone with Hart. Probably sixty or seventy fist pumps Tiger Woods made putt fist pumps all while running in place and exulting. All while trying to stay completely calm on the phone and not making a sound.

I'd have to ask whether I can quote him directly. (99% of the time I tell you guys something the person who told me it won't let his or her name be used. That's how this works.)

If I can quote him directly then I'm coming straight to OKTC and writing the article. Then this would just be massive.

I'd do it immediately.

But if I can't quote Dave Hart directly, then I'd get nervous that I was being set up for some reason.

Ask anyone who has ever broken any story how terrifying it is to break a story when no one else has it and you'll see that most who do it don't go into it lightly.

Especially in a coaching search like this. Because you can be 100% correct at the time you break the story and then a coach can change his mind and make you 100% wrong. Malzahn accepted the Vandy job and then rescinded his acceptance. Vandy ended up much better off -- no way Malzahn has come in and had the impact James Franklin has -- but it's an example of how messy the process can be. Ask any athletic director involved in the process and they can tell you countless stories about near misses. Times when they believed they had their guy and then he switched at the last possible moment.

Recent case in point for OKTC, Peyton Manning to the Titans. If I told you the guys who I'd been talking with throughout that process -- and from how many different angles they were coming from -- you guys would be like, "Holy s---!" But I can't. And so when Peyton makes his mind up and it surprises everyone around him, you can be wrong despite having been right up to that point. And you're just left out there hanging in the breeze.   

I'd still write that Gruden was the next coach of the Vols, because you have to trust the athletic director, but if I turned out to be wrong then I'd get killed for being wrong and I'd just have to take it. 

Even though it would have come from someone that every single one of you would have trusted as well. 

Anyway, that's the behind the scenes angle on stories like these.  

Jon S. writes:

"Imagine this, Mike Tirico is doing the wrap for the postgame on Monday Night Football and says "Jon, there are lots of rumors about where you are going to be next year, and I hear you have made a decision." The camera cuts to Gruden sitting at a table in the MNF booth with a UT hat, Philadelphia Eagles hat, Carolina Panthers hat, a Dallas Cowboys hat and an ESPN hat. Gruden says "I've done a lot of thinking and talking with my family and decided to coach the next 4-6 years at... (hand moves down, hovering over each hat)

How intense would that moment be?!

Would people not be glued to the TV?! I think the ratings in that moment would sky rocket.. Twitter would blow up!"

This would be outstanding.

And it would get massive ratings.

But ESPN won't let anyone even talk about the possibility that their employees might leave. Witness the PTI editing recently.

I mean, how did ESPN not break Urban Meyer to Ohio State.

Think about how crazy that is, they employ Urban Meyer and someone else broke it. All ESPN ever did was trot out Meyer to issue awkward denial after awkward denial.

Keep in mind that Gruden is coming to Nashville for the final Monday Night Football game of the year on December 17th. (There's also a Saturday game the next week.) Can you imagine what would happen if Gruden put on a coonskin cap in the broadcast booth in Nashville?

The state would come undone.

If he hung around and waved a UT flag out the booth window?

Hell, even if he just put a UT hat on and addressed the camera in the final segment of the show.

It would be the biggest sports moment in the state of Tennessee since the Titans trip to the Super Bowl.

No doubt.

Claire C. writes:

"Sentencing the teabagger to two years behind bars is ridiculous- Don't you think a better/more appropriate punishment would be to let the "teabagee" film the teabagger buttchugging? His choice of alcohol, of course. (My suggestion: mad dog 20/20)"

Yes!

Perfect.

By the way, ESPN the magazine interviewed me for thirty minutes for their 8k word teabagger expose and didn't use a single quote of mine. (OKTC was mentioned as the initial site to have the video up online).

I think my quotes weren't because most of my quotes dealt with how ridiculous it was for him to get prison time for the act.

It didn't square with the tone of the article.

Rachel writes:

"Hi Clay!

I have a law question for you: I am a UT alum/fan and my husband of nine years is a Mississippi State alum/ diehard fan. He mentioned to me the other day that if UT hires away Dan Mullen- it could be grounds for divorce. I think he's kidding.

Thoughts? Any legal precedent behind this?"



Do you live in Mississippi?

If so, he could still divorce you and take away your right to vote. 

Be careful.  

These are both really good, smart questions. I'm printing them both in full.

Boose C. writes:

So the Big Ten are rewarding poorly run, economic disasters presided over by incompetent people who never win anything in a town where the school barely registers (Rutgers, Maryland) and punishing those schools with solid success across the board and an athletic department on strong financial ground with a great fan base in a town that loves college sports (Louisville). This is the opposite of how it should play out. And it all happens because of a TV model that will not last more than five years. Ten years ago, no one had DVR. Do these presidents think the TV landscape will be the exact same in 2017 when these projections start to blow up in their faces?

Mike writes:

There's lots of talk about conference buyouts.

Do you know what the SEC's buyout is?

$0.

Nothing.

A team could leave at any moment without a cost.

The strongest bonds are those that aren't held in place by money.

First, the Big Ten would love to have Vandy and have inquired about the Commodore interest in the past. (That's why the ignorant SEC fan position of "Let's kick Vandy out!" is so stupid. The SEC needs Vandy's academics as much, or more, than Vandy needs the SEC). Second, Vandy would never go. Ever. The cultural tie to the South is too strong. Privately Vandy administrators have said as much to me.

Third, the Big Ten would never offer more than an equal share. 

And the SEC Network payout is going to dwarf the Big Ten Network's payout. 

...

Okay, I'm 32-16 on the season with the picks. 

Here are my final five picks of the regular season:

Vols -12.5 vs. Kentucky

Georgia -13 vs. Georgia Tech

Auburn +33.5 vs. Bama

LSU -12 vs. Arkansas

Mizzou +22.5 vs. Texas A&M  

Written by
Clay Travis is the founder of the fastest growing national multimedia platform, OutKick, that produces and distributes engaging content across sports and pop culture to millions of fans across the country. OutKick was created by Travis in 2011 and sold to the Fox Corporation in 2021. One of the most electrifying and outspoken personalities in the industry, Travis hosts OutKick The Show where he provides his unfiltered opinion on the most compelling headlines throughout sports, culture, and politics. He also makes regular appearances on FOX News Media as a contributor providing analysis on a variety of subjects ranging from sports news to the cultural landscape. Throughout the college football season, Travis is on Big Noon Kickoff for Fox Sports breaking down the game and the latest storylines. Additionally, Travis serves as a co-host of The Clay Travis and Buck Sexton Show, a three-hour conservative radio talk program syndicated across Premiere Networks radio stations nationwide. Previously, he launched OutKick The Coverage on Fox Sports Radio that included interviews and listener interactions and was on Fox Sports Bet for four years. Additionally, Travis started an iHeartRadio Original Podcast called Wins & Losses that featured in-depth conversations with the biggest names in sports. Travis is a graduate of George Washington University as well as Vanderbilt Law School. Based in Nashville, he is the author of Dixieland Delight, On Rocky Top, and Republicans Buy Sneakers Too.