Reader Sean Mullen says I Owe Ricky Rahne A Public Apology. So I Wrote One. He’s Not Going To Like How It Ends.

Reader Sean Mullen sent me this message last week:

“Congratulations Mark on being completely wrong about Ricky Rahne at Old Dominion. Are you gonna do the right thing now and follow up and state publicly you were wrong?”

Fair enough.

In August, I predicted Rahne would be fired by November. Instead, ODU went 10-3, beat Virginia Tech on the road, won the Cure Bowl, and Rahne signed a 4-year extension.

I was wrong about 2025. Completely, unambiguously wrong.

But here’s the thing.

Sean’s victory lap proves exactly why some fans misunderstand how coaching evaluation works.


The Number Everyone Wants to Ignore

Ricky Rahne’s career record at Old Dominion: 30-33.

That’s a .476 winning percentage across five seasons on the field. Still below .500. Still losing more games than he wins over the full sample.

Before 2025, he was 20-30. He was 0-2 in bowl games. Three of his first four seasons were losing seasons.

One 10-win year doesn’t erase that. It changes the trajectory. It doesn’t rewrite history.

This is the part where someone says: “But Mark, he just won 10 games! The program is clearly headed in the right direction!”

Maybe. Probably, even.

But that’s not what Sean argued.


The Argument That Defeats Itself

Sean didn’t say “Rahne has turned a corner.”

He said I was wrong to ever question Rahne in the first place. That I “slung stupid crap without doing any research.

The research was the problem.

Four years of data showed a coach who consistently lost close games, couldn’t win bowls, and failed to elevate ODU’s national profile. The 2025 prediction was based on roster losses, a brutal early schedule, and a pattern of fourth-quarter collapses.

The prediction was wrong. The pattern was real.

Virginia Tech and Indiana were supposed to expose ODU’s weaknesses. Instead, ODU beat Virginia Tech 45-26 and hung tough with the #1 team in America before losing. The roster losses that looked catastrophic on paper didn’t play out that way on the field.

That’s coaching. That’s development. That’s Rahne doing his job better than the data suggested he would.

Credit where it’s due.


But Here’s What Sean Missed

One year of evidence doesn’t invalidate four years of evidence.

It adds to it.

Rahne’s career now tells a more complete story: A coach who struggled to close games for four years, then figured something out in year five. A coach who went 0-2 in bowls, then won one. A coach who was below .500, and still is, but trending upward.

That’s a legitimate narrative. That’s a coach earning the benefit of the doubt.

What it’s not?

Proof that anyone who questioned him was “slinging stupid crap.”


The Real Problem With CFB Fandom in 2025

Here’s what drives me crazy about college football discourse:

The most recent season is the only season that matters.

Coach goes 10-3 after four losing seasons? He was always good, and anyone who questioned him was an idiot.

Coach goes 6-6 after three 10-win seasons? He’s washed, fire him immediately.

This is how you end up with coaching carousels that cost programs $50 million in buyouts. This is how you end up firing guys after one bad year and hiring guys after one good year.

One season is a data point. Five seasons is a sample.

Rahne now has a sample that says: below .500 overall, but improving. One bowl win after two bowl losses. A program trending up after years of stagnation.

That’s worth watching. That’s worth acknowledging.

It’s not worth rewriting history.


The Prediction I’ll Make Now

Ricky Rahne has earned his extension.

The 2025 season was legitimately impressive. Beating Virginia Tech. Beating a favored South Florida team in the bowl game. Winning 10 games with a backup quarterback in the biggest moments.

If he builds on this, the 20-30 start becomes a footnote in a successful tenure. He’ll have proven that the first four years were about building something that finally clicked.

But if ODU regresses in 2026? If they go 5-7 again?

The same people celebrating today will be calling for his head tomorrow.

Because that’s how this works now.

One year at a time. No memory. No sample size. Just whatever happened last Saturday.


The Bottom Line

I was wrong about Ricky Rahne in 2025.

The prediction said he’d be fired by November. Instead, he signed an extension and won a bowl game.

That’s the business. You make predictions based on available data. Sometimes the data misleads you. Sometimes coaches figure things out.

But Sean demanding I apologize for “slinging stupid crap”?

He’s doing the exact thing that makes coaching evaluation impossible: treating one season as the entire story.

Rahne is 30-33. He was 20-30 before this year. The pressure was real. The questions were legitimate .

2025 was a great answer.

It wasn’t the only answer that mattered.

What the Original Prediction Got Right (and Wrong)

Go back and read the August piece. Here’s what I said would happen:

“Indiana and Virginia Tech expose the inexperienced skill players. The secondary gives up multiple explosive plays.”

Indiana won. They’re now in the College Football Playoff. That part tracked.

Virginia Tech? ODU won 45-26. Not even close. Complete miss.

“The roster talent is evaporating. They’re replacing 2,229 yards of offense with players who produced 292 yards.”

The numbers were accurate. The conclusion was wrong. Rahne developed the replacements better than anyone expected. Devin Roche went from 274 yards to a 100-yard bowl game. Quinn Henicle went from backup to Cure Bowl MVP.

That’s coaching. That’s the part I didn’t account for.

“By Halloween, Ricky Rahne will be at the top of every coaching hot seat ranking in America.”

By Halloween, ODU was 7-3 and rolling toward a bowl bid.

Swing and a miss.

Here’s what I’ll stand by: The questions were legitimate. A 20-30 coach with an 0-2 bowl record and a pattern of close losses deserved scrutiny. The pressure was real.

Rahne answered it. That’s the story.

The prediction was wrong. The process wasn’t.

No related posts found.

LOAD MORE BLOG ARTICLES

The Hottest Coaching Seat in College Football Is Hiding in Plain Sight

While everyone obsesses over Lincoln Riley and other big-name coaches, the most dangerous hot seat in America belongs to a guy most fans have never heard of.

His name is Ricky Rahne. He coaches at Old Dominion. And he’s about to become the first major firing of the 2025 season.

Here’s why nobody sees it coming.

The Trucking Company Problem That Started Everything

When people hear “Old Dominion,” they think of shipping trucks, not football helmets.

That’s not a joke—that’s the exact problem Rahne was hired to solve in 2020.

ODU’s mandate was crystal clear: Raise the profile of Old Dominion University so it’s better recognized than the freight company with the same name. Make people think “football program” before “logistics company.”

Four years later, Reddit threads still joke about thinking of trucking more than touchdowns when they hear “Old Dominion.”

Mission failed.

The Pattern That Reveals Everything

Here’s what makes Rahne’s situation so dangerous: He’s not obviously terrible.

His 2024 season looked respectable on paper:

  • 5-7 record
  • Led the nation in red zone offense (95%)
  • 14th nationally in rushing offense
  • Sophomore quarterback showing promise

But dig deeper into those losses:

  • Coastal Carolina: Lost 45-37
  • Marshall: Lost 42-35
  • James Madison: Lost 35-32

See the pattern? Rahne consistently puts his team in a position to win, then finds creative ways to lose.

That’s not bad luck. That’s a coaching problem.

The Close-Loss Curse That’s Worse Than Blowouts

You know what’s more damaging than getting blown out? Losing winnable games.

When you get destroyed 45-10, everyone understands you’re rebuilding. When you lose 35-32, it means you had the talent to win but couldn’t execute when it mattered.

Rahne’s entire tenure reads like a masterclass in snatching defeat from the jaws of victory:

2024 specifics that hurt:

  • Turnover margin: -3 (gave away 20, took 17)
  • Record in one-score games: Consistently poor
  • Fourth quarter collapses: Multiple instances

The quarterback numbers tell the story: Colton Joseph threw for 1,627 yards with 11 TDs and 647 rushing yards with 11 rushing TDs. Those are impressive numbers. But he completed just 59.9% of his passes with 5 interceptions.

Translation: Talented enough to make plays, not refined enough to avoid mistakes when pressure mounts.

The 2025 Schedule That Will Expose Everything

If you want to know why Rahne’s seat is about to catch fire, look at how 2025 starts:

September schedule:

  • @ Indiana (Big Ten)
  • vs N.C. Central
  • @ Virginia Tech (ACC)

Let me paint you a picture: You have an inexperienced receiving corps (losing 1,342 receiving yards from departures), an unproven secondary (three leading interceptors graduated), and a pattern of fourth-quarter mistakes.

Now you’re asking this team to open at Indiana and travel to Virginia Tech in the first three weeks.

If ODU starts 0-2 with blowout losses, Rahne goes from “under the radar” to “trending on Twitter” overnight.

The Roster Disaster Nobody’s Discussing

Want to know how bad ODU’s talent drain is?

Key departures after 2024:

  • Aaron Young: 887 rushing yards, 8 TDs
  • Isiah Paige: 819 receiving yards
  • Pat Conroy: 523 receiving yards, 5 TDs

Combined production lost: 2,229 yards and 16 touchdowns

Key returning players with significant experience:

  • Devin Roche: 43 carries, 274 yards
  • Na’eem Abdul-Rahim Gladding: 2 catches, 18 yards

Combined returning production: 292 yards

They’re replacing 2,229 yards of offense with players who produced 292 yards. That’s not roster turnover—that’s roster evaporation.

The Defensive Time Bomb Nobody Mentions

Everyone focuses on ODU’s offensive losses, but the defensive departures might be worse.

Gone: Jahron Manning, Angelo Rankin Jr., and Will Jones II—the three players who led the team with 3 interceptions each.

Remaining secondary experience: Largely unproven at FBS level.

2024 defensive numbers:

  • 410.4 yards allowed per game
  • 237.8 passing yards allowed per game
  • Already struggled against the pass with experienced players

Now they’re asking completely new faces to cover receivers in hostile environments at Indiana and Virginia Tech.

This is a recipe for explosive plays and blown coverages that will make highlight reels for all the wrong reasons.

The Sun Belt Reality That Changes Everything

Here’s why Rahne’s situation is more precarious than coaches in power conferences: There are no excuses in the Sun Belt.

You can’t blame recruiting disadvantages when you’re competing against similar programs. You can’t claim schedule strength when conference opponents have comparable resources.

2024 Sun Belt Conference record: 4-4
Bowl record under Rahne: 0-2

Translation: He can’t dominate his peer group, and he can’t win when it matters most.

In a weak conference, mediocrity stands out like a beacon. When James Madison and other Sun Belt programs are making noise nationally, ODU’s invisibility becomes more glaring.

The Prediction Nobody’s Making

Here’s what’s going to happen, and you can bookmark this:

Early season (0-3 or 1-2 start): Indiana and Virginia Tech expose the inexperienced skill players. The secondary gives up multiple explosive plays. Joseph forces throws, trying to keep pace.

Mid-season crisis: Local media starts asking questions about Rahne’s job security. National outlets pick up the story because it’s a straightforward narrative about a coach nobody was watching.

November reckoning: ODU administration realizes four years of “almost good enough” hasn’t moved the needle on national recognition. They pull the trigger to salvage recruiting.

By Halloween, Ricky Rahne will be at the top of every coaching hot seat ranking in America.

The Hot Seat Rating That Tells the Real Story

My proprietary analysis gives Rahne a 1.000 hot seat rating against weak competition over four years.

Translation: He’s perfectly meeting lowered expectations.

But here’s the problem—meeting lowered expectations isn’t success when your original mandate was to raise the program’s profile nationally.

ODU didn’t hire Rahne to go 5-7 and lose close games. They hired him to put Old Dominion football on the map.

Four years later, people still think of freight trucks before football when they hear the name.

The Bottom Line

While everyone watches the obvious hot seats at major programs, the most dangerous coaching situation in college football is flying completely under the radar.

Ricky Rahne isn’t failing spectacularly enough to generate headlines. He’s failing quietly, consistently, and in ways that make victory feel perpetually just out of reach.

The trucking company is still more famous than the football team.

The close losses keep piling up.

The roster talent is evaporating.

The schedule is about to expose every weakness.

Mark this prediction: By November, “Ricky Rahne” will be trending for all the wrong reasons. The hottest seat nobody was watching will suddenly become the firing that everyone saw coming.

The only question is whether ODU’s administration will act fast enough to salvage the 2026 recruiting class, or if they’ll wait until the program’s shortcomings become apparent for all the wrong reasons.

Hot Seat Temperature: Volcanic and rising, but nobody’s watching the eruption build.

Want to know which other “under the radar” coaches are about to be on the hot seat?

I track the real hot seats (not just the obvious ones) every Friday in my free newsletter.

Join thousands of readers who get the stories before they become headlines: Coaches Hot Seat Insider.

No related posts found.

LOAD MORE BLOG ARTICLES