New Morehouse College head football coach Brad Sherrod made clear he is not interested in a slow build or moral victories as he begins his tenure leading the Maroon Tigers.
At his introductory press conference on Monday, Sherrod emphasized that changing the culture — from the locker room to the alumni base — will be central to any turnaround.
Sherrod, who engineered back-to-back playoff runs at NAIA Texas Wesleyan University before being hired by Morehouse earlier this month, said the challenge at Morehouse will not be quick or easy, even as some might hope the path back to sustained success could be accelerated.
“It’s going to be a hard process,” he said, noting that he views reshaping the program’s mindset as just as important as any schematic or personnel decisions.
At the core of that shift, Sherrod said, is aligning expectations across every layer of the program.
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“You have to change mindsets and what the expectations are,” he explained, pointing to players, alumni and administrators as all having a stake in the standard he intends to set.
Morehouse is coming off a 4-7 season under former coach and ex-NFL player Terance Mathis, and hasn’t experienced a winning season since 2018.
“I have an expectation. Their expectations need to match my expectations. I expect to win. I didn’t come here to lose.”
Sherrod acknowledged that resources are part of the equation, but he made it clear that money alone will not solve Morehouse’s football problems.
“They’re spending a lot of money in some areas, they’re spending some money in some areas,” he said, before quickly pivoting back to the daily demands he believes will define his program.
For Sherrod, the foundation will be “a lot of hard work and being focused on that,” a theme he returned to as he laid out his vision.
The new head coach’s blunt tone signals a no-nonsense approach as Morehouse looks to climb in the SIAC standings and re-establish itself as a consistent winner.
By insisting that everyone attached to the program share his belief in doing things “the right ways,” Sherrod is staking his early tenure on accountability and shared purpose more than promises of a quick fix.