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Georgia Tech Athletics
Georgia Tech Football
Former GT assistant coaches Bill O’Brien and Doug Marrone
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<blockquote data-quote="GTRambler" data-source="post: 817152" data-attributes="member: 4009"><p>Good morning, guys! Well if I may, I’d like to opine:</p><p></p><p>I have noticed over the past number of years that Nick Saban seems to have always hired experienced football coaches with a wide range of previous coaching backgrounds as his top assistants. Almost without exception, these top assistants have important head-coaching jobs in their resumes.</p><p></p><p>Then Saban indoctrinates them in an intense crash course how he wants them to implement his system. It is intense, brutally intense!</p><p></p><p>And Saban is highly successful in getting it done, in his own way.</p><p></p><p>After a year or two or three years of this remarkable intensity, the top assistants then get tired of the pressure and start looking to get out toward “greener pastures.”</p><p></p><p>Once they leave, Saban starts his hiring process all over again.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="GTRambler, post: 817152, member: 4009"] Good morning, guys! Well if I may, I’d like to opine: I have noticed over the past number of years that Nick Saban seems to have always hired experienced football coaches with a wide range of previous coaching backgrounds as his top assistants. Almost without exception, these top assistants have important head-coaching jobs in their resumes. Then Saban indoctrinates them in an intense crash course how he wants them to implement his system. It is intense, brutally intense! And Saban is highly successful in getting it done, in his own way. After a year or two or three years of this remarkable intensity, the top assistants then get tired of the pressure and start looking to get out toward “greener pastures.” Once they leave, Saban starts his hiring process all over again. [/QUOTE]
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Former GT assistant coaches Bill O’Brien and Doug Marrone
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