One week had passed since a Chick Fil-A Peach Bowl win served as Houstons biggest bowl celebration in 35 years and doubled as the Cougars declaration as a future playoff revolutionary.Tom Herman, who days earlier stood overwhelmed atop a Georgia Dome stage, was clearing space. Not for two sterling trophies but for his family. The first-time head coach who went 13-1 in his inaugural season was cleaning his garage.The luster of a conference championship and New Years Six trophy for Houston didnt wear off after a week. It was wiped clean. It was time for Hermans 2016 to to-do list, which constituted a Saturday of housework.Winning the Peach Bowl does not help you at all with what youre trying to accomplish in 2016, Herman said. Youve probably heard we dont wear any Peach Bowl gear during team activities, we dont say the words.Its a formula adopted from Urban Meyer. If Meyers ketchup, Herman is catsup. The recipe is the same, just a repackaged style. With a clean garage, next on Hermans to-do list was to touch base with Meyer.Want to win a national championship in Year 2? Meyer has the blueprint, and it was Meyer who helped launch Hermans nascent coaching career with a three-year apprenticeship at Ohio State.At two of Meyers past three stops, Year 2 consisted of an undefeated regular season. The other was a national championship year. There have been three BCS bowls, and while Boise State and TCU are memorialized as the BCS busters, first there was Meyers 2004 Utah team.Now, Herman is hoping to similarly chart a landscape undefined for the Group of 5. In his second season at Houston, Herman has positioned the Cougars as a viable preseason playoff contender. In the first two years of the playoff, only one Group of 5 team has been ranked preseason: No. 23 Boise State in 2015.[Meyers] Year 2s are phenomenal, Herman said.Herman hopes to duplicate it, and there are striking similarities between how Meyer started his programs with what Herman is doing at Houston.1. Break entitlementMeyer blueprint:Wide receiver Dallas Baker enrolled at Florida in 2003 under Ron Zook but lived off past Florida glory. A nose-diving program still held itself in the same esteem as the SEC powerhouse of the 1990s.We were losing but still living the life. We were living off stuff that Steve Spurrier did, Baker said. That first [Meyer] year, 2005, was about breaking entitlement. Coach Meyer said the school owes you nothing.So Meyers first offseason consisted of midnight and weekend workouts to assess the players dedication to the program and one another. Stripped of their gear and given tattered workout clothes, players were shipped to nearby Lake Alice to carry weighted milk jugs the length of the field. Lifting logs, army crawls and sledgehammer slams followed as the rest of campus enjoyed the temperate winter weather.It taught us not to give up, no matter how hard, Baker said. It was about dedicating our time to one another.Herman model:Herman stripped Houston of any sense of comfort in his first offseason. Players had to earn the right to display the Houston insignia. The locker room was chained shut, and what followed were a series of consecutive pre-dawn workouts.Earn a place on the team, Herman demanded, and build equity with the staff.He told us that first-meeting things will be a meritocracy, senior defensive end Cameron Malveaux said. You get what you earn, all the way to the workout gear.... That first offseason, he was trying to make us realize he was the real deal. We did a lot of things to break you physically and mentally. Of course we had a couple teammates back out, weeded out.2. Change practice habitsMeyer blueprint:In the moments leading up to the 2006 national championship game, Meyer and Baker argued over the intricacies of a route. Early in the first quarter, a pass to Baker went for a touchdown rather than a costly red zone interception.There is no detail overlooked during practices with Meyer. No skills are taken for granted. Basics are perfected.Not taking anything away from Coach Zook because he coached at Florida in the early 90s and knows Florida football, but he wasnt about hitting on fundamentals. We didnt hit on them. It was supposed to be expected, Baker said. It was about bringing the juice like Florida had with Coach Spurrier. When Coach Meyer came, it was about competing, learning how to run, basically taking a robot apart and putting it back together.Once Meyer built them back up, he put his players through the most physically taxing practices. He would set up the offense against the defense first-and-goal from the 1-yard line, and the loser had to run sprints. It fostered such a competitive environment that fights would sometimes break out, creating an edge which former players said the coach liked.My second year in the NFL, I went back to Florida and how intense it was, in the NFL you didnt practice nearly as hard or strenuous, 2006 linebacker Brandon Siler said. It comes from the tempo and amount of stress he puts on competition.Herman method:At Houston, dont dare walk onto the practice field with even a slight deviance from the equipment that players were asked to wear. Dont finish a route even a half-inch past its intended point.That tremendous attention to detail came from Urban, said Houston co-defensive coordinator Craig Naivar.After beating Vanderbilt last season, Herman offered a break from those heavily scrutinized practices. He asked his players whether they wanted a light day early next week. Theyd watch film instead of slopping in the downpour outside.They declined.And this spring, Houston suffered through more live hitting in practice than ever before. Malveaux estimates there were far more than 1,000 live repetitions, exceeding any previous spring.It was a feel for hard-nosed football, he said. The main thing is we have to impose our will on teams.3. Proper alignmentMeyer blueprint:Alignment is a word rooted in Meyers programs, and it doesnt always take hold in the first year. Not much changes in Year 2 to spark a championship run, but after a full year, theres an alignment within the program. Its an all-encompassing term stretching to every corner of the program.In Year 1, I dont care where you go. Youre trying as best you can to get as much buy-in, but theres never 100 percent. There cant be. Guys have been involved in another program, said Steve Addazio, who is the coach for Boston College and former Meyer assistant. In Year 2, everyone knows the offseason program, understands accountability, bought into the principles, the way we practice, run Fridays, train. Everyone is in alignment.Thats really what it is. I know it intimately. Theres nothing else thats dif