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It hasn’t gotten better in Willingham’s eyes

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Thought: Notre Dame should keep Charlie Weis. And barring a monumentally terrible season next fall or some ugly off-field issue, he should remain exactly where he is for a good while more. So three cheers for Mr. Weis.

Caveat: The Fighting Irish football coach just got a vote of confidence and is now slated to lead his anemic Notre Dame team for a fifth year -- and this burns me up.

It’s because of Tyrone Willingham, the stern-faced, African American coach who, despite his recent dismissal at Washington, is still known as much for the controversial firing he endured at Notre Dame in 2004.

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Normally tight-lipped when talking Notre Dame, Willingham recently offered his thoughts to Fred Mitchell, a Chicago Tribune columnist. Willingham used the moment to discuss an issue that should cause our universities the utmost in shame: the vexing lack of non-white coaches in college football.

“What we have to do is look not just at my issue; it’s a college football issue,” Willingham said. “We’ve got to give coaches a chance to do their job. Because now we have got coaches -- especially when you look at some of the minority coaches -- who are losing their jobs after 2 1/2 years. That’s not right!”

Let’s be real, Willingham’s Huskies have been atrocious in this, his fourth season there -- with one game left, they’re winless -- so this time there was good cause for him to lose his job.

But recall that before arriving in Seattle, Willingham coached Stanford to a Rose Bowl. And that he left a decent legacy in three seasons at Notre Dame: a 21-15 record, a Gator Bowl trip, a team of true student-athletes.

Recall, too, the angst over his firing; how the first black football coach in school history became the first Fighting Irish football coach canned before his contract was up.

His replacement was hailed as a magician. So far, no magic. Weis, who got a 10-year extension his first season, is 6-6 this year after his team was crushed last week by USC and now sports a record of 28-21 overall. Despite a winning percentage lower than Willingham’s (.571 to .583), he now has a vote of confidence.

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Willingham indicated he doesn’t necessarily begrudge Notre Dame for standing behind its man. He called his Notre Dame experience “a steppingstone as far as African Americans. Hopefully, it was a step . . . in moving us forward.”

There’s little forward motion when it comes to minority coaches. There are now only three black head coaches in major college football -- out of 119 schools. Disgusting.

Will things ever change?

Consider DeWayne Walker, the tough-minded, African American defensive coordinator largely responsible for almost every notable Bruins win in recent memory -- upsetting USC two years back, Oregon last year, or even Tennessee and Stanford this woeful season.

Walker has watched patiently as he’s been passed over for the brass ring -- Washington will offer the job to USC offensive coordinator Steve Sarkisian.

If I’m a college president, I’m giving Walker a real chance. And if I hire him, he’s getting what all college coaches should get: an eight-year deal.

Change? Why must we worry whether DeWayne Walker will get a legit shot?

“Obviously,” Willingham told Mitchell, things haven’t “gotten any better.”

Change? It came to the White House. But in the world of college football, it’s far off.

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kurt.streeter@latimes.com

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