UgaBlows
Helluva Engineer
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Agreed, he's never leaving Navy if he didn't bolt for BYU as a mormon, that's why I said Monken
BYU was not going to let him run the spread-option, thats a BIG reason not to leave.
Agreed, he's never leaving Navy if he didn't bolt for BYU as a mormon, that's why I said Monken
I'd love to see Coach Bohannon wind up at GT even though he did go to UGAG
It's not the only offense that will allow Georgia Tech to win, so I'm saying don't limit yourself to just that offense and just hire the best coach available, one that might end up being a coach on the defensive side of the ball
BYU could use the spread option they're 1-7 after getting curb stomped 33-17 by a winless East Carolina team.BYU was not going to let him run the spread-option, thats a BIG reason not to leave.
This is exactly what I'm sayingI've been saying this for a LONG time. CPJ's offense gives us an advantage...no doubt about that. But there are other other coaches who can make a LOT out of little just like CPJ does. Willie Fritz (who was GA Southern's coach when GSU almost gave us a heart attack, and also beat Jeff Monken's Army team earlier this year) also runs an option based offense. He's just a darn good coach. Bob Stitt at Montana who use to coach non-scholarship Colorado School of Mines, is widely considered one of the best offensive minds. He's now at Montana and led them to an upset of powerhouse North Dakota State his first game. Another coach that intrigues me is Penn State's offensive coordinator, Joe Moorhead, who had a great HC career at Fordham. Turned them around from a 1-10 team to a perrenial playoff team. His offensive schemes are being widely copied right now as each play is an RPO within an RPO. He's been doing it before Penn State, and his offense made UConn a conference champion. He'll be snapped up by a good program way before CPJ retires though. His offense is recruit friendly in term so offensive players will line up to play in that system.
Point is, let's enjoy CPJ's time here for as long as he wants to stay. But let's not box ourselves into thinking we need to stay within CPJ's tree. If that's what happens I'll be fine with it, but in no way should GT eliminate a LOT of other options out there just because they don't run CPJ's offense.
EDIT: Here's more on Moorhead
https://www.si.com/college-football/2017/09/20/joe-moorhead-penn-state-offense-fordham
Scott Satterfield of Appalachian State or Brian Bohannon of Kennesaw State would be two good future head coaches for GT when CPJ retiresCough** George Godsey** cough
Trouble is, he seems to be pursuing an NFL career, and that is a different sport than college football. My concern about Godsey is inadequate P5 coaching experience--just like our last 2 coaching hires. He's a smart guy though.
If we are going with coaching trees, I hope we get back to the Ross coaching tree. However, Techster's point is correct.
Recruiting comes first, which is why Dabo was such a good hire for Clemson. He was a real estate salesman 15 years ago, and a position coach when Clemson hired him. Hire a recruiter and administrator as HC. Spend the money and hire coordinators to coach. This program would be in better shape with Gailey as head coach and Paul Johnson as OC--and the AD tells Gailey not to touch the offense. Not realistic, of course, just throwing out an example.
Being able to move is waaaaay more important than being big in our O. Of course, both is best!GT tends with it's high academic standards not to be able to get as large offensive and defensive linemen as other schools. The triple option is a great offense for schools that tend to have smaller linemen.
I wonder whether Mama wants her son to play for a foul mouthed, mean coach.
Rumor is that Nick Saban wants the job when Johnson retires.
They're all foul mouthed and mean. You think Saban is a basket of puppies? Maybe they are all not writing love letters, like Kiffin has.Since recruiting is so important in college football, how do you guys rate Johnson as a recruiter?
I wonder whether Mama wants her son to play for a foul mouthed, mean coach. Mom and Pop see Johnson on the sidelines grabbing kids by the face mask and cussing them out.
I compare this to the movie "The Blind Side" where all the coaches are schmoozing the recruit. Where someone like Saben comes in all polished and smooth. Or Richt. Charming the mothers and fathers.
I have no idea how CPJ is in the family room or around the kitchen table with recruits. Does he do well with Mom and Pop?
Did @flea77 tell you that?
Cough** George Godsey** cough
Trouble is, he seems to be pursuing an NFL career, and that is a different sport than college football. My concern about Godsey is inadequate P5 coaching experience--just like our last 2 coaching hires. He's a smart guy though.
If we are going with coaching trees, I hope we get back to the Ross coaching tree. However, Techster's point is correct.
Recruiting comes first, which is why Dabo was such a good hire for Clemson. He was a real estate salesman 15 years ago, and a position coach when Clemson hired him. Hire a recruiter and administrator as HC. Spend the money and hire coordinators to coach. This program would be in better shape with Gailey as head coach and Paul Johnson as OC--and the AD tells Gailey not to touch the offense. Not realistic, of course, just throwing out an example.
You hush, you. Stitt is coming to UVa when bronco gets canned. I believe.I've been saying this for a LONG time. CPJ's offense gives us an advantage...no doubt about that. But there are other other coaches who can make a LOT out of little just like CPJ does. Willie Fritz (who was GA Southern's coach when GSU almost gave us a heart attack, and also beat Jeff Monken's Army team earlier this year) also runs an option based offense. He's just a darn good coach. Bob Stitt at Montana who use to coach non-scholarship Colorado School of Mines, is widely considered one of the best offensive minds. He's now at Montana and led them to an upset of powerhouse North Dakota State his first game. Another coach that intrigues me is Penn State's offensive coordinator, Joe Moorhead, who had a great HC career at Fordham. Turned them around from a 1-10 team to a perrenial playoff team. His offensive schemes are being widely copied right now as each play is an RPO within an RPO. He's been doing it before Penn State, and his offense made UConn a conference champion. He'll be snapped up by a good program way before CPJ retires though. His offense is recruit friendly in term so offensive players will line up to play in that system.
Point is, let's enjoy CPJ's time here for as long as he wants to stay. But let's not box ourselves into thinking we need to stay within CPJ's tree. If that's what happens I'll be fine with it, but in no way should GT eliminate a LOT of other options out there just because they don't run CPJ's offense.
EDIT: Here's more on Moorhead
https://www.si.com/college-football/2017/09/20/joe-moorhead-penn-state-offense-fordham
Very funny, using "genius" and "coaches" in the same sentence.Phil Steele calls it "flight delay" when a heavily run-oriented team like 1990's Nebraska switches to a pass-heavy offensive scheme. He always strongly implied that it's harder to switch from running to passing than it is to switch from passing to running. He doesn't talk about it nearly as much as he used to, because nowadays there are so few classic option/power running teams so there also are very few schools switching up schemes in that drastic a fashion.
A genius coach could probably win regardless of scheme, but there aren't that many genius coaches. I think we'd be at a high risk of being a dumpster fire in the first year especially. Leave off QB for a second, and we're missing some other personnel -- no tight ends, no classic pass-blocking offensive tackles, and maybe not enough true WR's (though we'd be heavily overloaded at slot receiver). Also, we've gotten basically no practice at these kinds of schemes -- no zone blocking or zone reads, no shotgun snaps, no two-point OL stances set up to pass block. It takes practice to do those things well as a team, but we don't practice them. And learning to play well in pro style or spread passing schemes particularly takes practice for a QB -- if it didn't, there would be a lot more good true freshman QB's, instead of the phrase "true freshman QB" generally giving people hives (especially FSU fans this season).
Personally I love our offense for a number of reasons. Contrarian competitive advantage, giving us a unique identity nationally, and I just think it's fun to watch us elegantly brutalize opposing defenses.