The following are some of the articles that have been written this season with regards to Jim Tressel possibly becoming the Browns head coach in 2007. I am posting this now because the line of thinking here is that he would step down after the BCS title game, so it would happen soon if it does. In posting this, I am not saying I believe it will occur. But it is a big subplot to the NCAA division I title matchup.
http://sports.yahoo.com/ncaaf/news?slug=in...n&type=lgns
http://sports.yahoo.com/ncaaf/news?slug=in...n&type=lgns
http://www.cleveland.com/browns/plaindeale....xml&coll=2Look for the Cleveland Browns to come after Ohio State coach Jim Tressel if the Buckeyes win the national title. A clause in Tressel's seven-year, $17.1 million contract signed last May voids the package if he wins a national title. The Browns likely would double Tressel's average annual salary of $2.45 million and give one of football's best coaches another challenge after two national titles in his past five seasons in Columbus. Tressel, a Berea, Ohio, native who grew up a Browns fan, also has a $1 million buyout in his current contract. Tressel says he's happy in the college game, but one thing is certain: If OSU wins the national title, Tressel soon will be the highest-paid coach in college football ($3 million-plus per year) or one of the highest-paid in the NFL. . . .
http://www.cleveland.com/sports/plaindeale....xml&coll=2Iowa's Ferentz is Big Ten's hot name, but Browns job might interest OSU coach
Sunday, October 22, 2006
Tony Grossi
Plain Dealer Reporter
It's no secret that Browns General Manager Phil Savage is good friends with Iowa coach Kirk Ferentz. So is Baltimore General Manager Ozzie Newsome, as well as other team executives in the NFL.
It has been speculated in NFL circles that whichever GM goes looking for a head coach next, Ferentz would be the first choice of each.
Now it appears that Savage and Newsome both could be in the market for head coaches after this season.
If the Browns' season continues to flow down the sewer and owner Randy Lerner allows Savage one more coaching change, Savage could face a dilemma. How could he pick Ferentz, a good coach, over Ohio State's Jim Tressel, a better one?
Most assume Tressel aspires to no other job than the one he has. According to a source close to the OSU situation, however, the Browns might be the only NFL job that would interest Tressel.
Remember that Tressel, born in Mentor, spent most of his childhood in Berea learning the coaching trade from his father, Lee, a legend at Baldwin-Wallace College.
If the Crennel Era indeed crashes and burns, Lerner will need to pull out something magical to stem a mass exodus of his stadium suite-holders. The place already has far too many vacancies for a football-mad market like Cleveland.
http://www.buckeyextra.com/?story=dispatch...1025-C3-00.htmlTressel's pro appeal not worth gamble
Friday, November 03, 2006
Bill Livingston
Plain Dealer Columnist
Don't rashly dismiss the idea of Jim Tressel coach ing the Browns as just another bad marriage.
Some of us (blush) thought promoting a I-AA coach from Youngstown State to the Ohio State pressure cooker was as doomed as the Reese Witherspoon/Ryan Phillippe union. Too bad we didn't sign a pre-nup to limit our stupidity liability.
When speculation arose about Tressel coaching his boyhood team, the Browns, he said he loved the college game and felt comfortable at OSU. He did not say he would be there until he died or was fired, as Charlie Weis said about Notre Dame.
With the Browns, Tressel could double his $2.5 million salary at Ohio State. A possible second national championship this year would enhance his appeal even more.
The interesting thing is he never came flat out and said he would not consider coaching the Browns. he dodged the questioning.Tressel not interested in coaching Browns
Wednesday, October 25, 2006
Tim May
THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH
Jim Tressel put down speculation that he might be interested in the Cleveland Browns’ coaching job if Romeo Crennel were fired at season’s end.
Asked for a reaction to the report in a Cleveland newspaper, the Ohio State coach said, "I’ve not spent one day playing in the NFL or coaching in the NFL, and I’ve got my hands full doing what I’m doing. So that’s my reaction."
The Cleveland Plain Dealer story indicated that a substantial financial offer and long-term deal might attract Tressel.
"I’ve got money and I’ve got a contract, so … " said Tressel, who signed a seven-year deal this year that will increase his compensation from $2.3 million for this year to $2.6 million in 2012.
Asked what it would take to lure him from Ohio State, he said, "Don’t know; can’t think of a thing."
Tressel, in his sixth year with the Buckeyes, was asked whether he would be satisfied finishing his career at OSU.
"Absolutely," he said.