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Six seasons enough as SMU parts with coach Bennett - NCAA Football Sports News
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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Location: Dallas, Tex. | Founded: 1911 | Enrollment: 11,152 | Colors: Red and Blue | Stadium: Gerald J. Ford
Capacity: 32,000 | Coach: June Jones

Record: (5-4, 4-1 Conference USA)
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Six seasons enough as SMU parts with coach Bennett

DALLAS -- SMU coach Phil Bennett was fired Sunday, a day after the Mustangs lost 29-23 at Tulsa and were eliminated from bowl contention.

 

Bennett, who is 18-48 in six seasons, will finish out the season, athletic director Steve Orsini said.

"I appreciate Phil's efforts here at SMU, but I felt it was time for a change," Orsini said in a statement.

The Mustangs are 1-7 with four games remaining. They play at Houston on Sunday.

Bennett is expected to address the media Tuesday. He did not immediately return a phone message from the Associated Press on Sunday.

Bennett was reportedly close to losing his job after the 2005 season, but won the last three to finish 5-6. He signed an extension in January 2006 that put him under contract through the 2009 season.

But that was before Orsini came aboard as athletic director and began to put his mark on the program. His first big move was to hire former North Carolina basketball coach Matt Doherty.

Bennett, under Orsini's close watch in 2006, led the Mustangs to a 6-6 record. It was the team's second non-losing season since the NCAA shut down the program in 1987 for numerous violations, including paying players.

In an interview with the AP last year, Bennett acknowledged that his job was in jeopardy.

"You know and I know if you don't perform, it doesn't matter," Bennett said. "Steve has a vision for this place, and I know he wants to win. That's my job."

Expectations were high entering this season, with Bennett predicting the program's first bowl appearance since the NCAA-mandated death penalty. But the team opened with a 49-9 loss at home against Texas Tech. After beating North Texas the next week, SMU lost six straight. Two of the losses were in overtime.

Orsini said Bennett worked hard but ultimately didn't win enough games.

"But as I said on the day I was hired at SMU, we can be successful on a national level," Orsini said. "With the support of this tremendous university and our great facilities and location in the heart of Dallas, there is no reason we cannot become a top 25 football program."

Bennett took over at SMU in 2002 after three seasons as defensive coordinator at Kansas State. He led the Mustangs to a 3-9 season that year, but went 0-12 in 2003.

Since then, SMU made modest strides, going 3-8 in 2004, 5-6 in 2005 and 6-6 in 2006.

Bennett's six seasons ties the longest tenure for an SMU coach since the program shut down for two seasons in 1987 and 1988.

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