Rutgers fires head coach Flood, AD Hermann

PISCATAWAY, N.J. -- Rutgers fired football coach Kyle Flood and athletic director Julie Hermann on Sunday, stripping the athletic department of its most prominent employees after a season that was a failure on and off the field.

University President Robert Barchi announced that Patrick Hobbs, Dean Emeritus of the Seton Hall University School of Law, will take over for Hermann.

Barchi decided last week to make a change in leadership, he said in a statement, and told the football team of the change at about 2 p.m. Sunday.

"This is a particular point in time and one makes the decisions on a multiplicity of factors and this happens to be a confluence of one of those directional lines if you will," Barchi said later Sunday during a teleconference with reporters.

As players left the team meeting room about 45 minutes later, everyone declined to comment except senior Quentin Gause, who was team captain.

"Just business decisions," Gause said was the message from Barchi. "Everyone cares for Flood, but decisions have to be made."

The reaction in the room was silence, Gause said, and Barchi provided no other details about the Flood decision or what would happen to the assistant coaches. Assistant head coach Norries Wilson will be interim coach.

The Scarlet Knights finished 4-8 after blowing a big lead to Maryland on Saturday, a game that was not even close to being the worst of the team's embarrassments this season.

Flood was suspended for three games for making inappropriate contact with a professor regarding a player's academics. Also, seven players were arrested since August, though charges were dropped against star receiver Leontee Carroo.

"(The) football program that has not been moving in the direction I'd like to see it. Some off-the-field issues that have caused us some issues and overall issues in the athletic department that have had some questions raised and all brought together because a football coach and replacing a football coach poses special challenges," Barchi said. "So I thought that made it appropriate for us to start fresh, wipe the slate clean, take this opportunity to move Rutgers forward and take it to where we know where it can go."

Flood was 27-24 in four seasons at Rutgers, including bowl appearances in his first three. He was given a two-year contract extension at the beginning of the 2014 season that runs through the 2018 season and made $1.26 million this year, according to USA Today's coaches' salary database. Among Big Ten coaches, only Illinois' Bill Cubit, who was interim coach until getting a two-year deal on Saturday, made less.

The next AD, Hobbs, did a stint as Seton Hall's AD and was initially targeted to be an interim replacement for Hermann, but Barchi said Rutgers decided to offer him the job permanently Friday. Barchi said Hobbs signed a five-year contract worth $560,000 annually.

Hobbs is now tasked with finding Rutgers' next head coach, a search that has already begun. He said he knows what he's looking for.

"A great leader for our football team, somebody who can build enthusiasm across constituencies," Hobbs said during the teleconference. "Obviously in the end, wins and losses are really important. How you get there is very important. Somebody with integrity, somebody how inspires these athletes, someone who understands the institution of Rutgers as a world-class institution."

Hermann took over in 2013 and came from Louisville, where she was an associate AD. She walked into a reeling athletic department, which saw Mike Rice get fired for physically and verbally abusing his players. And Tim Pernetti, the AD who helped land Rutgers a spot in the Big Ten, had been let go for only suspending Rice when a video of Rice's actions were first brought to him.

But Hermann brought her own baggage. She had been accused of verbally abusing players when she was volleyball coach at Tennessee and was named in a discrimination lawsuit there.

Her first few months at Rutgers were tumultuous and she never seemed to gain the full trust of the administration. When Flood was under investigation for breaking rules regarding contact between coaches and professors in August and ultimately suspended, Hermann made no public comments beyond prepared statements.

Hermann met with Barchi at his home Sunday morning, a meeting that lasted 11 minutes. Hermann's contract was to run through the 2017-18 school year.

Flood was hired in a rush after former Rutgers coach Greg Schiano left to become coach of the Tampa Bay Buccaneers in January 2012. Flood, a former assistant under Schiano, came up a victory short of taking Rutgers to its first Big East Conference title in 2012 and finished 9-4.

The Scarlet Knights slipped to 6-7 the next season, but went a surprising 8-4 last year in their first season in the Big Ten.

This season, however, has been a wreck.

Flood was suspended Sept. 16 and fined $50,000 after the university's investigation determined he knowingly broke rules when he asked to meet with a professor for a player who was unable to become academically eligible in summer school.

Flood missed games against Penn State, Kansas and Michigan State; Wilson was acting coach.

When Flood returned, the team was 2-3 and then beat Indiana 55-52. But they only won one more game the rest of the way, against Army. The season ended Saturday with a brutal 46-41 loss to Maryland, blowing a 31-13 halftime lead at home to finish 1-7 in the Big Ten and last in the East Division.

"There's a lot of pressure in this league," Barchi said. "And we have to be able to success and move the program forward."