Found this on chicagotribune.com. This is why we keep talking about Ty, b/c the media still keeps kissing his

2 months later....
Fred Mitchell
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AROUND TOWN
Willingham enjoying the view at new job
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February 10, 2005
The view from Tyrone Willingham's new football office at the University of Washington is breathtaking.
"I'm looking out at Lake Washington right now, and most days I can see the mountains," Willingham said by phone. "It's unbelievable."
Willingham's view of his former employer, the University of Notre Dame, is not so picturesque. Asked to deliver a message to the administration that unceremoniously fired him after three years of a five-year contract, Willingham measured his words, then responded: "I wouldn't have one for them. I will let them grapple with those things."
If you have had an opportunity to get to know the understated Willingham as I did when I wrote a book ("The Meaning of Victory") about him two years ago, those succinct comments are practically tantamount to ripping Notre Dame for its unprecedented act of terminating a head football coach before his contract had expired.
Willingham added he was "not bitter" about his time at Notre Dame, where he had a 23-15 record. "Those are the things that happen," he said, offering his first extensive comments since his dismissal.
Willingham received several death threats during his brief stint in South Bend. The move to Seattle could work out well for his entire family—wife Kim, daughters Cassidy and Kelsey and son Nathaniel.
"I'm doing well, and my family is doing well," he said. "A change of location is not easy."
Willingham's Huskies happen to play host to Notre Dame this fall at Husky Stadium. An opportunity for vindication?
"I have been told that game is Sept. 24," Willingham said in a coach's typical play-one-game-at-a-time vernacular. "The most important game is Air Force (the season opener). If you're thinking [beyond that], you haven't been coaching long. That [Notre Dame] week will take care of itself."
Willingham said he has met his successor, Charlie Weis, who was offensive coordinator of the Super Bowl champion New England Patriots.
"Congratulations to him and the other New England coaches because they won the Super Bowl three out of the last four years," he said. "He's a graduate of the University of Notre Dame, and he has an understanding of the program."