To be fair, everyone thought we'd get some version of Lovie-ball and that his system could hold up to the spread and we'd have teams full of Peanuts and Urlacher-lites.
Kerby Joseph, Tony Adams, Sydney Brown, Devon Witherspoon, we did get some of those players thankfully.
He was mad the NFL got rid of him and that he'd be successful here and make his way back after 5 years.
We were so wrong, but he ultimately got what he wanted. To coach in the Pros closer to home. We got nothing out of our deal.
I do see the fire we wanted from Lovie in BB though. He wants the respect back on his name in college. Idk if this is his terminal stop but I have no doubt Illinois will be better when BB leaves than when Lovie left.
I think both Lovie and Whitman believed the NFL was an objectively higher and more sophisticated level of football, and therefore anywhere you applied NFL methods in tactics, coaching, or scouting you were gaining a step up on college football.
This concept was coming from two guys sitting in a suburban Tampa rumpus room who hadn't been working hands-on in major college football since 2000 and 1995 respectively. And they were just wrong about that NFL > College idea.
The NFL has mastered the best ways of winning in professional football with adult players and parity and salary caps and all of that. And college football has mastered its version of the game.
So instead of gaining a leg up everywhere we were doing things the "NFL way", we were in fact becoming deficient in those areas.
And then the oldest message board trope in the book is Idiot Old Coach did X and Y all wrong, and now Savior New Coach is doing those things the opposite, correct way.
Unfortunately for the trope I think Bielema would tell you he learned a lot of new things about football during his detour to the NFL and he's trying to implement some of those ideas back in college, where he obviously has a ton of natural background in the way things are done, as does his staff.
So I think in the end I'd say the same thing I do about similar Groce vs Underwood discourse: it's ultimately not about doing things different, it's about doing things better.
That's the same advice I'd give Nebraska.