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No question the most fun would be Les Miles.
Chip Kelly would have been great.
Malzahn for homer reasons.
Kiff Kingsbury would be a blast.
I don't see Saban being a fun afternoon but Spurrier might be.
I think it would be interesting what the most successful coach over the past few seasons, Saban, talks about, looks at, explains, etc. It would be interesting to know what he sees.
Also, historically, I would probably go with Hayden Fry while at Iowa and Jimmy Johnson while at Miami
I would have Nick Saban and Art Briles. Very different styles of play but a lot on the ground. It would be so interesting what they agree/disagree with.
From a learning standpoint, I'd probably go with Mark Dantonio and Bill Snyder.
They rarely get out-schemed and put a very knowledgeable product on the field each and every week.
When they get beat, they typically get beat by better athletes. They can also win games against better athletes which would be my trump card in selecting the 2. They can, and have showed how to beat bigger, better, and more athletic teams.
I wouldn't turn down that opportunity, but they are the same style. It's basically Hayden Fry based. Bill Snyder was Hayden Fry's go-to guy for a little over a decade and Dantonio is not shy about modeling MSU football after Kirk Ferentz who was a Hayden Fry guy and basically runs the program the same way. I am not trying to homer this. I would much rather watch game film with Dantonio than Ferentz and Snyder before both of them, but I wouldn't want 2 coaches that were the same.
I would choose 1 "all-timer" and 1 more current coach.
So for me, John McKay or Bear Bryant and Chip Kelly when he was at Oregon. I'd especially love to hear what McKay and Bear thought of Kelly's offense.
Pelini and Harbaugh. A steel cage may or may not be involved.
-I would have Nick Saban and Art Briles. Very different styles of play but a lot on the ground. It would be so interesting what they agree/disagree with.