Forty names, games, teams and minutiae making news in college football (valium sold separately in Knoxville to overwrought Tennessee fans):

More Dash: 10 paths to playoff | Conference title game picks | Dashie awards

TENNESSEE IS AN ABJECT TIRE FIRE

Forget the actual football. Forget the 4-8 fiasco, the school’s first winless conference record since 1924, firing the coach with two weeks left in the season. Tennessee (1) quite likely just concluded the worst season in its history Saturday.

All that was bad. And then came Sunday, when it somehow got worse.

As Yahoo Sports reported, the school was poised to hire Ohio State defensive coordinator Greg Schiano (2) — the guy who achieved the impossible by making Rutgers (3) respectable earlier this century. And then came the lynch mob to destroy the deal.

You people are ridiculous. Not all of you, but the delusional loudmouths who somehow think a program with a 62-63 record over the last decade is too good for Schiano. The internet vigilantes who want to bully their way into running the school’s coaching search. The piling-on politicians. The protestors. The rock painters. The rubes who still are waiting for Jon Gruden to slide down the chimney.

But the worst among the Tennessee lunatic fringe are the disingenuous liars who say this Schiano backlash is about Mike McQueary’s testimony regarding Jerry Sandusky and things that happened at Penn State, when in reality it’s because they don’t think Schiano is going to win a Southeastern Conference title. Don’t go getting righteously indignant when this has nothing to do with being righteous and everything to do with trying to beat Georgia.

Tennessee’s talks with Greg Schiano broke down on Sunday evening following fan and social media backlash. (AP) More

Carnival barker Clay Travis, who spent Sunday fomenting this revolt, makes it clear in this column what he thinks is the primary problem with Schiano: “In what universe does it make sense to hire Greg [expletive] Schiano right now? We’re talking about a guy with a losing record in college football at Rutgers who got fired by the Tampa Bay Buccaneers and just vanished from coaching until Urban Meyer decided to hire him as defensive coordinator.” In the next paragraph, he gets to the Penn State business. But first? First and foremost? It’s the mortal sin of a losing record at Rutgers.

If you are a Tennessee fan who has sincere ethical qualms about what Schiano may have known at Penn State many years ago, fine. The attorney general who prosecuted the Sandusky case doesn’t, but OK. Ohio State apparently is satisfied with Schiano’s reputation, since it has employed him the last two years.

But if you used this as a Trojan horse to blockade a coaching hire you don’t like because you think Tennessee football deserves better, shame on you. And now that the Schiano hire has been blown up because of this, good luck landing the next guy. Who would want to deal with this fan base right now?

WINNERS AND LOSERS IN THE HIRING/FIRING MARKET

It’s been a frantic few days on the coaching carousel, with jobs opening and closing rapidly. In all honesty, it will take a couple of years to begin to sort out the home runs from the strikeouts, the great moves from the boneheaded ones — but who has time for that? Thus The Dash applies some instant reaction to what has happened — and what appears likely to happen next:

Biggest winner: UCLA (4). The Bruins won the Chip Kelly sweepstakes, beating out Florida to land the best coach available. There’s no good reason why UCLA has accomplished so much less historically than Los Angeles rival USC — and with the arrival of Kelly and upgrades in facilities, that might now change. The Pac-12 South is no murderer’s row, having produced zero playoff teams and zero league champions since 2008. It’s there for the taking for Kelly.

Other winners: Nebraska (5). Another school that appears to have outmaneuvered Florida for the coach it wanted. When the Gators couldn’t land Central Florida’s Scott Frost, it spiked the speculation that Frost would come home to his alma mater and try to resurrect the Cornhuskers. If athletic director Bill Moos can close the deal — likely not until after undefeated UCF plays in the American Athletic Conference championship game — it will be an adrenaline boost the program hasn’t enjoyed since the 1990s.

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