Petrino rebounds from outcast to top

Louisville head coach Bobby Petrino answers a question during a news conference for the Belk Bowl NCAA college football game in Charlotte, N.C., Monday, Dec. 29, 2014.
Louisville head coach Bobby Petrino answers a question during a news conference for the Belk Bowl NCAA college football game in Charlotte, N.C., Monday, Dec. 29, 2014.

LOUISVILLE, Ky. -- Bobby Petrino simply was too good at what he does best to remain a college football outcast for long.

Question his honesty. Question his integrity. Question his loyalty. Question whether he has changed his ways. The reality is only the people closest to Petrino are the ones who are truly owed an answer to the question of whether he is a better person now.

This is the reason he's gone so quickly from outcast to coach of the year candidate: "Bobby's always has been an outstanding football coach," Arkansas Athletic Director Jeff Long said. "I don't think there's ever been a question about his football coaching ability."

Four-and-a-half years after being fired by Long at Arkansas, Petrino is rising again. His Louisville team is No. 3 in the country heading into a showdown at No. 5 Clemson today, and his quarterback has gone from three-star prospect to Heisman Trophy front-runner in little more than one season of college football.

The infamous motorcycle accident and scandal that cost Petrino his job at Arkansas could end up being the backstory on the way to a national championship.

"I thought he could take it to another level," Louisville Athletic Director Tom Jurich said recently. "But he has rounded himself out as a fantastic human being this time around. It's just great to watch. You can see he's at peace."

Jurich was one of the people who needed convincing about Petrino the person. Jurich has hired Petrino twice, and both times he has guided Louisville to national prominence.

The relationship between Petrino and Jurich was far from perfect the first time around. Petrino's penchant for eyeing other jobs in a less-than-up-front way during his first stint coaching the Cardinals annoyed Jurich. Still, Petrino reached out to his former boss after being fired by Arkansas for lying to Long about the motorcycle accident that involved Petrino and his mistress, who also was an Arkansas football staff member.

Jurich suggested to Petrino that he own up to the embarrassing judgment lapse and show remorse if he hoped to coach again. Petrino was out of college football for one season, and he returned on a much smaller stage.

"I looked at it from the standpoint ... when will Western Kentucky ever have a chance to hire somebody in the prime of their career with the resume that he has?" WKU Athletic Director Todd Stewart said. "Somebody that's had top 10 team finishes. Been to the Orange Bowl. Been to the Sugar Bowl and the Cotton Bowl. I felt from a football standpoint, we'd never be able to hire somebody with a resume like that."

Petrino led the Hilltoppers to an 8-4 mark in 2013, but the prospect of Petrino returning to Louisville didn't enter Jurich's mind until Coach Charlie Strong (Batesville, Central Arkansas) left for Texas in January 2014. The surprising turn of events ended several days later with Petrino getting a second chance with the program he led to a 41-9 record from 2003-06.

Jurich knew what he was getting in a coach and was comfortable with the man.

"Did I expect to beat [then-No. 2] Florida State 63-20? No, I sure didn't," Jurich said. "But I expected us to be very competitive."

Louisville's statement victory Sept. 17 against the Seminoles has Petrino and the Cardinals (4-0, 2-0 Atlantic Coast Conference) poised to take another big leap tonight at Clemson (4-0, 1-0). A second top five victory in three weeks puts the Cardinals on track toward winning the Atlantic Division and firmly in the national title discussion.

This spring, Jurich gave Petrino a seven-year contract extension that pays a base annual salary of $3.875 million. The way this season is going, Petrino can expect another raise. And the speculation already has begun about whether that will be at Louisville or LSU.

Petrino pledged his allegiance to Louisville this week the way coaches do when asked about other jobs.

"I did believe our goal was to win a national championship. We've been saying that since we got here. It was that way when I was here before," Petrino said.

Some may never forgive Petrino for his indiscretions, no matter how many games he wins -- and not just how it ended at Arkansas. He ended up leaving Louisville for the NFL in 2007, but he quit during his first season with the Atlanta Falcons struggling at 3-10 to take the Razorbacks job.

"Everybody makes mistakes," said former Louisville offensive coordinator Garrick McGee, now at Illinois. "As long as they look them in the eye, accept responsibility and don't let them happen again, you are supposed to be forgiven. In team meetings, when he's talking about making mistakes and coming back from them, he can use himself as an example."

Sports on 10/01/2016

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