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"Certainly I'm going to recognize the fact that this program made historic strides in the last three years, and we're a better football program because we crossed paths with Brian Kelly and his staff," Cincinnati athletic director Mike Thomas said.
Cincinnati (12-0) is getting ready to play Florida in its first Sugar Bowl. Thomas decided that Kelly won't coach the bowl. Instead, offensive coordinator Jeff Quinn -- Kelly's assistant for the last 22 years -- will run the team on an interim basis.
The parting was painful.
The team held its annual football banquet at a downtown hotel on Thursday night. As players arrived for what was supposed to be a night of celebration, they were greeted by camera crews and reporters asking about Kelly's decision to leave Cincinnati for Notre Dame.
Three hours later, after the various awards had been handed out, players were told to gather in a meeting room so Kelly could share the news most already knew.
One minute into the meeting, the door opened and senior receiver Mardy Gilyard walked out alone, save his team MVP trophy.
"He went for the money," Gilyard said. "I'm fairly disgusted with the situation, that they let it last this long."
His teammates soon followed, some with teary eyes. Gilyard said the younger players in particular -- those who would play for a new coach next season -- were angry and disillusioned.
"Just blindsided by the fact that it's a business," Gilyard said. "People lose sight of that. At the end of the day, NCAA football is a business. People have got to make business decisions."
Now, Cincinnati wonders whether it will keep its spot in the national spotlight under a new coach. At the men's basketball victory over Miami of Ohio on Thursday night, there were boos when Kelly's photo was shown on the videoboard. One fan held up a sign that played on Kelly's "next-man-in" philosophy.
"BKSELLOUT," the sign said. "NEXT COACH IN."
[Associated Press;
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