I love posts like this ... raise a topic, review the data, and debate the conclusions. I'm not sure the NFL has a lot in common with NCAA D-1 Hockey, but the goal in both places is to run a successful winning program. And if you don't win OR move towards winning quickly in the NFL, there is a lot of money and prestige on the line when you're challenging for a Super Bowl. The patience to allow a head coach more than five (5) seasons to get there is pretty rare.
The 14 year guy BTW is the Steelers' Bill Cowher, and like his predecessor and successor, he fielded winners consistently over the course of his career, and combined with the Rooney family's patience - three HC hires in the last 56 seasons speaks to patience and good judgment - that explains why he got as much slack as he did. I'm sure if you put Cowher on truth serum, he'd concede he was lucky to last so long without winning the big trophy. As a counterpoint, the Buffalo Bills gave Sean McDermott nine years, and even if his team was supremely unlucky this postseason (getting jobbed in Denver, which probably led to the Patriots advancing, where a loss to Buffalo this past weekend would have been probable), that still ended up costing him his job. It's a tough business.
Now ... we slide on over, and we consider Coach Souza, and what (if anything?) he has in common with either Cowher or McDermott?? Pretty much nothing, actually. Those two guys were consistent winners, even when they were coming up short a combined 22 times between them. Heck, UNH wrote the book on riding with a consistently winning coach who never quite got there (Umile) ... but while he was consistently winning, his successor has consistently been a loser.
The college setting is certainly a more forgiving scenario for underachieving coaches who ingratiate themselves with their schools for other qualities, but I'd love to see you do a deep dive on D-1 coaches who have managed to make it through an entire decade with just one (1) winning season. I'm going to be very surprised if, in addition to our very own man of the hour, there are more than 2-3 tops who survived that long on such a sparse CV.
And once again, it is none other than Scotty B. who ambles into town with his Merrimack Warriors to apply the kill shot to the kid who stole his job at UNH ...