Thankfully, Gators hire Dan Mullen instead of Chip Kelly

On this Thanksgiving weekend, the Florida Gators should feel blessed they got 
spurned by Chip Kelly and ended up with Mississippi State’s Dan Mullen as their 
new head coach.

Often times — as UF athletics director Scott Stricklin will find out in the 
years to come — the best hires are the ones you don’t make. Or, as that noted 
college football analyst Garth Brooks once observed, “Some of God's greatest 
gifts are unanswered prayers.”

The national perception may be that Stricklin struck out with Kelly, but I 
believe a more accurate depiction is that he hit a grand slam with Mullen.

The only question is, why did UF go after Kelly in the first place? Why wasn’t 
Mullen their first choice? Why wouldn’t they initially go after a coach who has 
SEC roots, Florida bloodlines and was an instrumental cog in arguably the most 
successful era in Gator history?

Although Stricklin and the Gators obviously wanted to make a splashy hire with 
Kelly, thankfully they ended up making the right hire with Mullen.

In Mullen, Stricklin has hired a coach who actually wants the UF job and knows 
the UF job instead of a coach [Kelly] who obviously was stringing along the 
Gators until something better became available.

“I have such great memories of the championships we won during our time here 
and have a love for Florida,” Mullen said upon his hiring. “ … We will give 
relentless effort in everything that we do on and off the field. Our commitment 
will match the passion that the Gator Nation has for this program.”

As I’ve been saying and writing all along, Kelly was never a good fit at UF and 
— in the end — even he realized it. Why do you think he accepted a job at UCLA 
— a place where there’s little pressure; where football is an afterthought; 
where he can win eight or nine games a year and everybody’s happy? If Kelly 
wasn’t completely sold on being the next coach of the Gators then he why would 
you want him in the first place?

If the Gators couldn’t lure Scott Frost away from UCF, which apparently they 
couldn’t, then Mullen was my second choice — ahead of USF’s Charlie Strong, 
Oregon’s Willie Taggart; Memphis’ Mike Norvell and Virginia Tech’s Justin Fuente

And, without question, ahead of Kelly.

Mullen, who once worked for Stricklin at Mississippi State, is an infinitely 
better fit at UF and checks so many more boxes than Kelly ever could have.

Why is Mullen a better hire than Kelly?

Well, let me count the ways:

1. Unlike Kelly, Mullen is somebody who truly covets and treasures the UF job. 
Kelly obviously didn’t want to be under the UF microscope or else why would he 
choose a lesser job in a weaker conference?

2. Unlike Kelly, Mullen knows the demands at UF and understands what it takes 
to win in the ultra-competitive SEC. He was, after all, at Florida for five 
years as offensive coordinator and is one of the main reasons Urban Meyer won 
two national titles in Gainesville.

3. Unlike Kelly, Mullen — if he wins at an acceptable rate — will be in 
Gainesville for a long, long time. Here’s all you need to know about Mullen’s 
loyalty quotient: Even though he had numerous opportunities to take other jobs, 
he spent nine years living in the appropriately named Starkville and coaching 
at Mississippi State. Give that man a medal for dedication and devotion.

4. Unlike Kelly, Mullen helped turn Tim Tebow into a Heisman Trophy winner and 
a cultural icon. Need we say more?

5. Unlike Kelly, Mullen has not been fired from his last two jobs. Do you 
really want to roll the dice on a coach who may have lost his mojo?

6. Unlike Kelly, Mullen is charismatic and outgoing and has the people skills 
to schmooze the boosters who stroke the $10 million checks to pay for the 
facilities UF so desperately needs to upgrade. In contrast, Kelly has the 
personality of a tilapia filet in the Publix seafood case.

7. Unlike Kelly, Mullen has never been nailed by the NCAA for a $25,000 payment 
made to a Houston-area football scouting service whose operator funneled 
players to Oregon (when Kelly coached the Ducks).

8. Unlike Kelly, Mullen seems to actually enjoy the recruiting process and 
hasn’t let it be known that he prefers the NFL, where he can concentrate on 
watching tape and game preparation. Mullen is well aware that in the State of 
Florida and in the SEC, you better embrace the recruiting process or you will 
get devoured by recruiting dynamos such as Nick Saban, Kirby Smart, Jimbo 
Fisher (if he stays at FSU), Mark Richt, Scott Frost and Charlie Strong.

Full disclosure, I thought Will Muschamp and Jim McElwain would succeed at UF, 
too, but how did that work out?

That said, the two greatest coaches in Florida history — Steve Spurrier (Duke) 
and Meyer (Utah) — proved themselves at non-traditional programs before taking 
the Florida job.

So, too, has UF’s new coach.

If Dan Mullen can put lowly Mississippi State on the map then he ought to be 
able to put the Florida Gators back on top of the college football world.



Oliver Barry CRS, GRI
Real Estate Broker
PARKS Real Estate Services
305 B Indian Lake Blvd
Suite 220
Hendersonville TN 37075
Office: 615-826-4040
Mobile: 615-972-4239
bar...@realtracs.com

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GATORS: ONE VOICE ON SATURDAY - NO VOICE ON SUNDAY!
1996 National Football Champions   |  2006 National Basketball Champions 2006 
National Football Champions   |   2007 National Basketball Champions 2008 
National Football Champions   |   Three Heisman Trophy winners: Steve Spurrier 
(1966), Danny Wuerffel (1996), Tim Tebow (2007)
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