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As college football evolves, so does relationship between players and CEO-like coaches

Oregon running backs football coach Ra'Shaad Samples works with the team during the Ducks' fall camp Aug. 6 at the Hatfield-Dowlin Complex in Eugene, Ore. Associated Press

Ra'Shaad Samples was a reticent and newly appointed student-assistant, shagging balls at practice with a group of wide receivers who were recently his teammates, when he received one of his first important lessons about coaching.

“Ra'Shaad, you have to talk to coach," Samples recalls then-Houston coach Tom Herman yelling at him from across a practice field.

The 29-year-old Samples has come a long way since. Now heading into his first season as running backs coach at No. 3 Oregon, he has made stops at Texas, SMU, TCU, the Los Angeles Rams — where he was the youngest position coach in the NFL — and Arizona State.

This tumultuous and uncertain period of college football, with rules about player compensation and transfers seemingly changing every six months, has made more than a few coaches — including Nick Saban, who retired after last season — question whether the job is really for them anymore.

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