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Les Miles pursues acting career

If Miles ever forgets his lines, he can just make some up. And they might be better. He tended to make it up as he went along as LSU's coach from 2005-16. And more often than not, it worked better than many other coaches who sleep in their office...
Credit: Jonathan Bachman
BATON ROUGE, LA - SEPTEMBER 17: Head coach Les Miles of the LSU Tigers takes the field before a game against the Mississippi State Bulldogs at Tiger Stadium on September 17, 2016 in Baton Rouge, Louisiana. (Photo by Jonathan Bachman/Getty Images)

BATON ROUGE — He can be poignantly dramatic.

Just check out the "Damn Strong Football Team — Have a Great Day," speech from Dec. 1, 2007, for a refresher.

When former LSU coach Les Miles said, "Have a great day" to end his soliloquy after a Kirk Herbstreit report on ESPN that he was Michigan-bound, he says it out of the corner of his mouth. It was classic John Wayne as he exited stage left.

Then he went out into the street — in this case the Georgia Dome — and won the gunfight by beating Tennessee, 21-14, to set up a classic Hollywood ending. LSU won the national championship several weeks later in Tiger Stadium East in the Superdome in New Orleans, 38-24, over Ohio State, which happens to be the flagship institution for Miles' home state and the blood rival of Miles' Michigan alma mater.

He can be hilariously funny when he is trying to be and when he is not trying to be, which few can pull off.

"When I wake up in the morning, and I turn that film on, it's like reading a book. It's exciting," he once said about viewing game film.

"I don't read books," Miles added. "But if I read books, it would be like reading a book."

He didn't mean to be funny at the end of the Ole Miss game in 2009 that he lost 25-23 when he managed the clock like Flavor Flav. But it sure was, and Flavor Flav, aka William Jonathan Drayton Jr., used to have his own shows like "Flavor of Love" and "The Surreal Life."

Miles can ad lib with the best of them. If you remember, that fake field goal at Florida in 2010 was just that — a last second ad lib. The only people who knew about it were Miles and — a few seconds later not long before the snap — holder Derek Helton and kicker Josh Jasper, who scampered three yards with Helton's over-the-shoulder flip on fourth-and-three for the first down with 35 seconds to play and the Tigers down 29-26. It set up the winning touchdown pass from Jarrett Lee to Terrance Toliver with six seconds to go for a 33-29 win.

Hell, the "Have a Great Day" speech was an ad lib.

And if Miles ever forgets his lines, he can just make some up. And they might be better. He tended to make it up as he went along as LSU's coach from 2005-16. And more often than not, it worked better than many other coaches who sleep in their office, don't have a spontaneous play in their playbook or life, and do not have nearly as much fun as Miles had when he was coaching.

Yes, Les Miles — national champion coach, national champion runner-up coach and two time SEC champion — is trying to become a real actor and is actually reading now. Apparently, not a whole book yet, but scripts, according to a story by the Baton Rouge Advocate. And he may just have more success at finding work than he did at getting the type of head coaching job he wanted after LSU let him go early in the 2016 season. He still wants to coach, but they didn't quite want him at the type job he wanted.

Miles is a handsome guy and apparently has not had any work done yet. He has a square jaw line. He looks younger than his age, which is 64, and he could pass for a younger Kurt Russell, who is 67. He clearly has stage presence. He can light up a room whether he wants to or not.

Miles knows all about make believe. He did that at just about every press conference. He said with a straight face for years that Jordan Jefferson was a good quarterback. He said with a poker face in 2007 that No. 3 quarterback Andrew Hatch may get snaps in a game, even though Matt Flynn and Ryan Perrilloux were each healthy, far more talented and ahead of him on the depth chart. Life imitated art a year later when Hatch had to get snaps because Flynn graduated, and Miles kicked Perrilloux off the team for continually not showing up on the set on time and generally acting like Sean Penn.

To Miles, any question about an injury meant "Action," in his mind, because he would go into full scale thespian. He once came up with three injuries in three consecutive days for former offensive lineman Will Arnold, and amazingly all three were wrong.

He is creative. He skillfully used HIPAA (Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act) as if it was the Screen Actors' Guild and never cracked a smile. Never mind that HIPAA was not invented for coaches to hide football injuries.

That's it. Miles could play a riverboat gambler.

Miles has already played himself in the 2014 film, "When the Game Stands Tall," which had some good actors, but the movie fell quite a bit short. He portrayed himself as Oklahoma State's coach, which was his real-life gig before LSU. He no longer wants to just play himself.

He played a cop in a 2017 independent movie aptly titled, "Camera Obscura." Miles knew cops, because they knew quite a few of his players. Miles' one line was, "Sir, I'm going to need you to step back." And he was a natural at that one, mainly because that's exactly what he kept telling Jarrett Lee when Lee kept trying to sneak in for Jefferson in the 21-0 loss to Bama in the national championship game on Jan. 9, 2012.

Miles has actually landed a real role as a NASA official in the upcoming movie, "Angry Men," which is about the 1986 Challenger disaster.

He is starting late in life, but it's not like he has not been in the spotlight — both warm and loving and angry hot.

He could play a great, classic father like Phil Dunphy, and that would not be a stretch because that's exactly what he is to four great kids. Could there be a remake of "Yours, Mine and Ours?"

Miles does not need it, but he has always liked the limelight. As a kid, he dreamed of being on "The Tonight Show," the real one with the late Johnny Carson.

He has already been compared to Jimmy Stewart, but he has range. Miles, to tell you the truth, is not always the happy-go-lucky, nice guy. He'll get you.

He went from dark Clint Eastwood to cartoon John Wayne in about 15 seconds back in that impromptu press conference before the SEC Championship Game in 2007. That's his screen test. And it remains a classic.

"There was misinformation on ESPN, and I think it imperative that I straighten it out," he began that December afternoon, and no one wrote this. He winged everything.

"I'm the head coach at LSU. I will be the head coach at LSU. I have no interest in talking to anybody else," he said, and that was good acting there. Because just the day before at a press conference, he spoke about wanting to go up to Michigan to talk.

"I've got a championship game to play," he went on. "And I'm excited about the opportunity of my damn strong football team to play in it. And it's really all I'd like to say. It was unfortunate that I had to address my team with this information this morning. But that being done, I think we'll be ready to play."

With voice rising and edgy, he said, "There'll be no questions for me. I represent me in this issue. Please, ask me after. I'm busy. Thank you, very much ... Have a great day!"

You're hired, Les.

Now, can we get Saban to play a down-and-out coach, and Miles fires him?

Only in the movies.

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