Blog Article
Is Jim Mora an Upgrade Over Jay Norvell at Colorado State?
Colorado State just made a bet.
Not a small bet. Not a ‘let’s see what happens’ bet. A real bet – the kind where you fire a coach coming off an 8-5 season because you believe something better exists. The kind where you write a check to a 64-year-old with 100+ career wins and say, ‘Finish what the last guy couldn’t.’ The kind that looks brilliant or foolish in three years, with very little in between.
Here’s what the numbers say.
The Tale of the Tape
Most fans will argue about ‘culture’ and ‘fit.’
That’s fine. But before we get into narratives, let’s look at what actually happened. Career numbers. Home and away splits. Performance against ranked teams. Late-season execution. Bowl results. The stuff that doesn’t care about press conferences.
Here’s the side-by-side:

Look at the ‘vs. Ranked’ row.
Mora is 14-18. Not dominant—but competitive. He’s been in those games. He’s won some of them. Norvell is 1-6. One win in seven tries against ranked opponents. That’s not bad luck. That’s a pattern. And patterns tell you what happens when the pressure goes up.
The late-season splits tell the same story.
What Norvell Built
Let’s be fair to the guy who just got fired.
Norvell inherited the Steve Addazio disaster. He brought energy. He brought recruits. He brought an 8-5 season that made CSU fans remember what winning felt like. That’s not nothing. But here’s the problem: one season doesn’t erase four years of data. And four years of data paint a different picture.
The numbers at CSU specifically:

18-31 overall.
Zero wins against ranked teams. Zero bowl wins. A .357 late-season record—meaning when November hit, the Rams folded. And here’s the detail that doesn’t show up in win-loss columns: across Norvell’s 18 victories, only two came against opponents who finished with winning records. The wins looked good on paper. They didn’t mean much in context.
Then came 2025: 2-9.
The UConn Proof of Concept
Here’s why CSU wrote the check.
Before Mora arrived, UConn was 9-50 over five seasons. Read that again. Nine wins in five years. An FBS program with no conference, no TV money, no hope. The kind of job you take to prove a point – or to disappear. Mora didn’t disappear.
In four years:

Look at that late-season number: .692.
When the games mattered, UConn won. Back-to-back nine-win seasons. Bowl eligibility in three of four years. A ranked upset. All at a program that had been left for dead. This isn’t theory. This is proof. Mora knows how to turn a broken program into a competitive one.
The question is whether he can do it one more time.
The UCLA Question
You can’t write about Mora without addressing how UCLA ended.
He started 29-11. Two 10-win seasons. A Pac-12 South title. Then: 17-19 over his final three years. Three straight losses to USC. Declining attendance. A $12 million buyout. The program had stagnated, and UCLA wanted a reset. That’s the honest version. But here’s what matters for CSU: the reasons Mora struggled at UCLA don’t necessarily apply to Fort Collins.
Different expectations. Different resources. Different definition of success.
Why This Fit Makes Sense
Three things line up here.
First: CSU is joining the rebuilt Pac-12. That means real TV money, a conference identity, and a path to the CFP. Mora has Pac-12 experience. He has West Coast recruiting ties. He knows what it takes to compete in that ecosystem. Second: CSU’s AD has promised actual investment: NIL, facilities, and staff. Mora never had those resources at UConn. If CSU delivers, his ceiling goes up significantly. Third: credibility. Norvell was a promising G5 profile. Mora is a known commodity with an NFL pedigree and 100+ wins.
CSU isn’t asking Mora to win a national title. They’re asking him to make the Rams relevant.
Where It Could Go Wrong
This isn’t a guarantee.
Mora is 64. His offensive philosophy skews conservative: ground-and-pound, control the clock. That’s not the explosive style dominating modern college football. If CSU under-invests, or if Mora whiffs on portal and staff hires, this becomes a ‘veteran stabilizer’ move instead of a transformational one. And remember: Norvell did go 8-5 with a 6-1 league record. Mora has to at least match that while navigating a tougher schedule and a transition year.
The bar isn’t zero. But the ceiling is higher.
The Bottom Line
On paper, this is a clear upgrade.
Career win rate: .578 vs .468. Bowl record: 12-9 vs 3-4. A proven rebuild at UConn. A Pac-12 South title at UCLA. Norvell raised the floor from the Addazio disaster, but he never proved he could sustain contention. He never beat a ranked team at CSU. He never won a bowl game. Mora has done all of those things—multiple times, at multiple programs.
CSU traded a promising profile for a proven builder.
The numbers say that’s the right call.