I listened to some of yesterday's Iowa-Purdue football game on the car radio and watched some of it on TV in Medina, MN.
The Boilermakers got clobbered, 49-35, and didn't look any better on TV at Lance's home in Medina than they sounded on the radio in Mark's Honda.
Indeed, I made the comment to someone that I couldn't imagine a more poorly-coached team than Purdue.
Evidently, Darrell Hazell's bosses agreed with me.
They fired Hazell today.
Obviously, athletic director Mike Bobinski had seen enough after Purdue's clobbering by Iowa.
Had Bobinski not canned Hazell, the powers-that-be at Purdue might have fired Bobinski.
Hazell's records were 9-33 overall and 3-24 in the Big Ten in less than four seasons.
I'm not big on firing collegiate coaches at mid-season.
After all, I covered Iowa in its 0-11 season in 1973 [the worst record in school history] and coach Frank Lauterbur survived until the bitter end.
But these are different times.
There's pressure all over collegiate football, just like in professional football.
Coaches are being paid millions of dollars to succeed.
When they don't, they're gone.