I always get a chuckle from the interwebs geniuses who are absolutely, 100% convinced that if the head coach would simply take their advice, everything would be wonderful. Reminds me a bit of the old military quote that has been attributed to different sources: "amateurs discuss tactics; professionals discuss logistics."
I doubt there is a single veteran on here from the world of professionals when it comes to college football coaching. Perhaps I'm wrong and someone will tell us where he coached for 20 years. Huff makes perfect sense when he talks about trying to get a person for whatever job we have open and noting there are numerous considerations those folks are going to think about such as money, location (it will come as a shock to many to learn that a hell of a lot of people have no desire to ever set foot in West Virginia even if that lack of desire is based on misinformation), family situation (maybe you don't want to change areas until your kids are out of kindergarten), whether you think your coaching philosophy and the philosophy of the head coach will be compatible, whether you perceive this as a move that will enable you to take the next step in your career, etc. Beyond that, you may think the head coach will be on the hot seat next year and you don't want to move into that type of situation. In other words, lots of things for anyone to think about before even applying.
Having said all that, I'm willing to give the guy a chance. Our offense the last couple of years has not been good and we need to be doing something different. I have no idea what that something is but let's see if this guy can figure it out.