
The time of year when college football fans are hankering for college football but have little recruiting or transfer-portal news to keep up with always produces some engaging offseason content. Way off-season.
Over at ESPN, college football analyst Adam Rittenberg put together a tier list of every FBS coach ranked by how good that coach was in college. More specifically, he put coaches into tiers that appear largely unranked, then capped the list with a top 30.
So, where does Oklahoma’s Brent Venables fit in? Not as high as Tennessee’s Josh Heupel, but not in a bad landing spot. The Sooners coach slotted into the “Pre-portal transfers” tier. That tier ranks sixth of eight, though, again, differentiating between the middle tiers is a matter of perspective.
Venables fit there because he began his career at Garden City Community College, becoming a JUCO All-American in 1990. From there, he transferred in-state to play for his mentor, Bill Snyder, at Kansas State. In Manhattan, Venables earned All-Big Eight honorable mention status his senior year after logging 114 tackles.
No other SEC coach was among the nine remaining in that tier. The top-30 rankings yielded five Southeastern Conference head coaches. At the top, of course, former Sooners Heisman Trophy winner Josh Heupel.
He immediately made his presence known in 1999 with 3,850 passing yards and 33 touchdowns. Heupel then led the Sooners to a national title in 2000, recording 3,606 passing yards and 20 touchdowns. He was named AP Player of the Year, won the Walter Camp Award and consensus All-America honors, and was runner-up for the Heisman Trophy. – Rittenberg, ESPN
Oklahoma and Tennessee meet on the field with Heupel and Venables roaming the sidelines in Knoxville on November 1 this fall. Last year, Heupel’s Volunteers won the matchup in Norman, 25-15.
For those with a curious bit of state pride, four coaches with ties to the Sooner State ranked in the top 30. Purdue’s Barry Odom (Ada) ranked 24th, Arkansas’ Sam Pittman (Grove) ranked 21st, and Oklahoma State’s Mike Gundy (Midwest City) ranked fifth.
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