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Dickert may be gone

Jake Dickert, Wake Forest and flight tracking: Coincidence or is WSU going to need a new coach?​

Intrigue swells around Cougar coach and possible move to the Demon Deacons​

COUGFANcom
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WSU coach Jake Dickert (Photo: Cougfan.com/Whittney Thornton)

THE LAST TIME AN aircraft in Pullman garnered this much attention from Cougar sports fans, Mike Price took off for Tuscaloosa on Paul Bryant Jr.'s private plane. Late Tuesday, some enterprising WSU fans spotted an unusual pairing on the worldwide aircraft tracking system FlightAware: a twin-jet Cessna Citation Sovereign set to depart Pullman for Winston-Salem, N.C., at 10:48 this morning and arrive at 5:38 p.m. Eastern time.

Sure, there could be some connection to Schweitzer Engineering or the region's esteemed soft white wheat and lentil production. But the timing is mighty curious given that Wake Forest University -- located in Winston-Salem -- is looking for a new football coach and WSU head man Jake Dickert is reported by a variety of media outlets to be one of the Demon Deacons' prime targets.

Whether all the pieces connect remains to be seen, but speculation exploded on social media and in the Cougfan.com VIP Suites forum.

We should know quickly this morning if Dickert is on board the twin-jet at 10:48 because he's scheduled to talk with reporters, at around 11:15 a.m., following the Cougars' closed-door practice.

Cougfan.com made several calls late Tuesday to people well-connected in the WSU sports world and, to a person, the notion of Dickert to Wake Forest was met with surprise.

Wake Forest went 4-8 in each of the last two seasons, prompting coach Dave Clawson to resign this week after 11 seasons and a 67-69 record. He led Wake Forest to the school's second-ever ACC title in 2006. The Demon Deacons' football history is something of a roller-coaster, as they've concluded only five seasons over the last eight decades ranked nationally. (For the record, WSU in that span has been nationally ranked at the conclusion of 12 seasons.)

Dickert, 41, is 23-20 at WSU since taking over for Nick Rolovich midway through the 2021 season. The Cougars are preparing for their third bowl under Dickert, who arrived on the Palouse in 2020 as Rolovich's defensive coordinator. He signed a contract extension in January 2023 that runs though the 2027 season.

Why would Dickert want to make a move to Wake Forest?

  • The Deacons are in the ACC, a power conference. While the future of that conference looks precarious, its team aren't going through the deep budget-cutting tumult that WSU athletics is in the midst of following the implosion of the original Pac-12.
  • Clawson's salary was nearly $4.8 million this season. Dickert's is $2.7 million -- and way out of sync, on the high side, to the market rate of the teams coming into the Pac-12. He took a 10 percent pay cut in the current fiscal year and is likely headed for another cut in the upcoming year.
  • The school has invested heavily in football facilities in recent years, opening the McCreary Football Complex in 2023, the Sutton Performance Center in 2019 and an indoor practice facility in 2016
  • The transfer portal is crushing the Cougars right now, with 11 starters or part-time starters, entering since it opened last week.
Wake Forest is private school with an undergraduate enrollment of less than 6,000 students. The population of Winston-Salem is about 250,000, and the average attendance at home football games is just more than 30,000.

NOTABLE:
  • 247sports' DemonDeaconsDigest.com reported Tuesday that "James Madison head coach Bob Chesney, former West Virginia head coach Neal Brown and Washington State head coach Jake Dickert" are the names they're hearing most. Sources tell them the aim is to conclude the search by Thursday or Friday.
  • Wake Forest's athletic director is John Currie, the same John Currie who was fired at Tennessee in 2017 one day after offering the Vols' head coaching job to then-Cougar coach Mike Leach. Prior to that, Currie was the AD at Kansas State for the entirely of Kirk Schulz's presidency there.
  • If Dickert does indeed become the coach at Wake Forest, one might presume WSU would take a long look at pulling out of the Holiday Bowl on Dec. 27. The staff is ready down four positions and it stands to reason Dickert would take much of the rest with him.
  • At the time this story went to press we were unable to determine how much Dickert would owe WSU as part of the buyout clause in his contract. Offensive coordinator Ben Arbuckle, who just left Washington State for Oklahoma, owes WSU a $450,000 buyout.
 
If all parties were smart the interview would have taken place already somewhere else. On a recruiting trip, maybe in Vegas… somewhere to avoid this attention. If he is flying to campus now it is to meet whoever is gonna put a final stamp of approval on his hiring. Just my free 3 cents. Guess we will find out soon enough. Prob has some questions to answer from players at practice…
 
Dickert has to plan for his future as well, players are doing it, other coaches are doing it. A vast majority of coaches are getting raises, at WSU, per rumors, coaches are being asked to take a pay cut. The WSU admin said they could continue to compete at a power 5 level, actions seem to suggest other wise. Wake Forest might actually have a worse overall record than WSU, but they do have more money committed to their program. The lack of commitment to the football program from WSU will negatively impact the university not only on the football field, but in all areas of the university.
 
10 starters gone, DC and OC are gone, QB coach is gone, now the head coach is gone, and you have a bowl game in 9 days. This could be considered the worst few weeks in Cougar football of all time. However, it seems like we have become numb to the news, since we have been kicked in the face by college football so many times in the past 18 months, and they keep piling on. The lack of leadership from the university from the Regents to the President to the AD has been disappointing to say the least.
 
10 starters gone, DC and OC are gone, QB coach is gone, now the head coach is gone, and you have a bowl game in 9 days. This could be considered the worst few weeks in Cougar football of all time. However, it seems like we have become numb to the news, since we have been kicked in the face by college football so many times in the past 18 months, and they keep piling on. The lack of leadership from the university from the Regents to the President to the AD has been disappointing to say the least.

They should be fired too. Clean house top to bottom. A Meion Sanders team meeting is long last due for the WSU administration.
 
Schultz should be fired today. The F’n incompetence of that guy is incomprehensible. Biggest villain in WSU history and there’s not really a close 2nd.
 
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If all parties were smart the interview would have taken place already somewhere else. On a recruiting trip, maybe in Vegas… somewhere to avoid this attention. If he is flying to campus now it is to meet whoever is gonna put a final stamp of approval on his hiring. Just my free 3 cents. Guess we will find out soon enough. Prob has some questions to answer from players at practice…
If he’s on a plane to NC, it stands to reason he won’t be at practice. If he’s not at practice with the staff down 4 coaches, the team down 11 starters, and the threat of a Holiday Bowl pullout looming, why as a player, would you even bother to practice?
 
Schultz should be fired today. The F’n incompetence of that guy is incomprehensible. Biggest villain in WSU history and there’s not really a close 2nd.
He's (officially) done at the end of the academic year. Making him actually work would be the punishment to you to administer.
 
I know assistants were going to be offered cuts. Dickert could reasonably expect the same. On top of that, there’s really no reason to believe that improvements in anything - facilities, funding, support, etc. - are on the horizon. As it stands, WSU is a no-win situation. A dream season will be 9 wins and a middling bowl, followed by a gutting of the roster. Every year, our best players will be taken. Coaches will use us as nothing but a stepping stone, none will sign if there’s a significant buyout, because there are plenty of stepping stones out there.

If there’s not a significant revamp of the system, to include the possibility of a separate athletic organization outside of the NCAA, with multi-year contracts and some reasonable controls on NIL, then WSU and a lot of other schools may as well give up football. It’ll be a massive money drain with little return or promise.
 
I know assistants were going to be offered cuts. Dickert could reasonably expect the same. On top of that, there’s really no reason to believe that improvements in anything - facilities, funding, support, etc. - are on the horizon. As it stands, WSU is a no-win situation. A dream season will be 9 wins and a middling bowl, followed by a gutting of the roster. Every year, our best players will be taken. Coaches will use us as nothing but a stepping stone, none will sign if there’s a significant buyout, because there are plenty of stepping stones out there.

If there’s not a significant revamp of the system, to include the possibility of a separate athletic organization outside of the NCAA, with multi-year contracts and some reasonable controls on NIL, then WSU and a lot of other schools may as well give up football. It’ll be a massive money drain with little return or promise.
I still think we can build a program for that model. Changes at the top will not necessarily be a hindrance to hiring capable assistants. I don't see selling the possibility of a being a head coach without leaving town during a 6-8 year stint (some as a coordinator, some as a HC) at WSU as a bad thing. Oregon did it for awhile with Brooks, Bellotti, Kelly and Helfrich. Boise State has more or less done the same since Dirk Koetter.
 
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It is my understanding that Wake's HC stepped down "unexpectedly" a couple of days ago. Hence no advance interviews, and the sudden process.
 
It is my understanding that Wake's HC stepped down "unexpectedly" a couple of days ago. Hence no advance interviews, and the sudden PUBLIC process.
I can’t believe clandestine negotiations haven’t been taking place between Dickerts agent and an intermediary of the school for some time.
 
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