Think he understands what’s going on, he been around football for a long time and understands it will take time.Does Key move on after looking toward the horizon a little more when the season is over?
Does Key move on after looking toward the horizon a little more when the season is over?
Does Key move on after looking toward the horizon a little more when the season is over?
I know they'd cost way too much but I'd love to see Taggart or Morris come on as OC
Here’s my follow-up question: would future job opportunities judge them for their turnaround with our offense? If that’s weighted heavily for future jobs, GT OC is actually a fairly attractive job. Ur starting point is bottom 10-20 in most offensive statistical categories.Both of them would have their salaries paid for by the former school so we should be able to afford them.
I really think he came here to be a head coach but I hope he stays a long timeKey could be an OLine coach almost anywhere, but came home for the long haul. He knew what he was doing and he embraced the challenge.
My thoughts exactly......Coach P would be the only one I can see , but then again two things
1) Year one with an under developed o line , coach talked a while back about how as the offense develops the more plays they can introduce , especially the qb position
2 ) Collins and P'nut have a long history similar to one of cpjs early d coordinators . Will Collins be able to cut ties due to long history will.be interesting to see
Sent from my Pixel 3 using Tapatalk
Great post ! I am thinking the same.I wrote this up for the thread on firing Dave Pataneude yesterday before it was deleted, but it still applies to this thread. You can't fairly judge any coach on this staff this year provided the injuries and large amount of inexperience in their schemes. Remember how those elements affected 2015? CPJ was a proven amazing OC and playcaller, but that offense was ranked 87th in offensive efficiency by FEI. It has yet to take into account the VT game and will definitely drop, but FEI also ranks GT's offensive efficiency this year at 87th. Firing anyone at this point would do a lot more damage to the program long-term in regards to player development, severed recruiting relationships, and finances than by just letting them work at least through the end of next season.
Think about this practically. Let's say we fire Dave Pataneude and put up the job application for OC. CDP gets paid a pretty measly $400k (by coordinator standards) and we're not likely to raise that salary a cent after we tack on CDP's buyout money to our existing debt. We also have an offensive roster made up of players recruited to a specific offensive system that have proven to struggle mightily at executing something non-flexbone. Here's the question: what OC is better than CDP that will want to inherit these players, get paid peanuts compared to his peers, and know that he has practically no job security when the last guy got fired after one season? There is nobody crazy enough to take that job. The only logical ending in this scenario I can see would be promoting Brent Key to OC, and we know how that worked out last time.
There's also no guarantee that who you get next will be even marginally better either and there's the risk they could be worse. Take a look at Les Miles firing his OC mid-season and how they've put up 2 of their worst offensive performances the last two weeks. Let things play out. Have some patience. We're not a school with the capital that can play the quick turnover game.
It was posed as a question, to get everyone's thoughts. What is " silly " about that ?? Glad you shared your 2 cents.This question is silly, if a coordinator was fired at this point you might as well fire Collins and TS too because that would mean a fundamental error has been made. Everyone needs to chill with the apocalypse talk
Just a question ......don't read too much into it. I personally think Pnut will need all 4 & 5 stars on O to move the needle. High schools are showing better play calling on offense than we have seen so far. Talent is one thing, assessing and using what you do have is another.The fact that this thread even exists is mind boggling. To give ANYONE less than 3 years in a new environment is asinine regardless of the outcome. In our case four years is likely the minimum before significant results are produced given the offense we are coming from.
So I know you said not to read too much into this ;Just a question ......don't read too much into it. I personally think Pnut will need all 4 & 5 stars on O to move the needle. High schools are showing better play calling on offense than we have seen so far. Talent is one thing, assessing and using what you do have is another.
This hits the nail on the head.Too early. And even if it wasn’t too early, I doubt we see any big changes. If he does, it will be an indictment on him. We have been hearing since he started that this was the most massive transformation in history. If he goes and makes a coaching change seems to suggest there were other issues.
Does Key move on after looking toward the horizon a little more when the season is over?
I wrote this up for the thread on firing Dave Pataneude yesterday before it was deleted, but it still applies to this thread. You can't fairly judge any coach on this staff this year provided the injuries and large amount of inexperience in their schemes. Remember how those elements affected 2015? CPJ was a proven amazing OC and playcaller, but that offense was ranked 87th in offensive efficiency by FEI. It has yet to take into account the VT game and will definitely drop, but FEI also ranks GT's offensive efficiency this year at 87th. Firing anyone at this point would do a lot more damage to the program long-term in regards to player development, severed recruiting relationships, and finances than by just letting them work at least through the end of next season.
Think about this practically. Let's say we fire Dave Pataneude and put up the job application for OC. CDP gets paid a pretty measly $400k (by coordinator standards) and we're not likely to raise that salary a cent after we tack on CDP's buyout money to our existing debt. We also have an offensive roster made up of players recruited to a specific offensive system that have proven to struggle mightily at executing something non-flexbone. Here's the question: what OC is better than CDP that will want to inherit these players, get paid peanuts compared to his peers, and know that he has practically no job security when the last guy got fired after one season? There is nobody crazy enough to take that job. The only logical ending in this scenario I can see would be promoting Brent Key to OC, and we know how that worked out last time.
There's also no guarantee that who you get next will be even marginally better either and there's the risk they could be worse. Take a look at Les Miles firing his OC mid-season and how they've put up 2 of their worst offensive performances the last two weeks. Let things play out. Have some patience. We're not a school with the capital that can play the quick turnover game.