Randy Carson
Helluva Engineer
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- 1,306
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- Apex, NC
Thanks for the memories, Coach.
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2015 was the worst injury riddled season since 1968 when we had to call the 7th string QB out of the stands at halftime of the Navy game, appropriately enough played in a driving rain storm, to finish the game. Our leading tackler, the late Eric Wilcox, played the second half of the season on one leg.... the other had a shredded knee. And so on......The only quibble I had was when talking about the 2015 season. No mention at all that like half the team died from injuries that year.
Or even mention Nesbit breaking his arm his last year.
If that was the game at Bobby Dodd, I was there. Navy returned a punt for a touchdown and did everything right. Our offense did the slip and slide the whole game. We scored two late fourth quarter touchdowns to make it respectable in what was otherwise a rout.2015 was the worst injury riddled season since 1968 when we had to call the 7th string QB out of the stands at halftime of the Navy game, appropriately enough played in a driving rain storm, to finish the game. Our leading tackler, the late Eric Wilcox, played the second half of the season on one leg.... the other had a shredded knee. And so on......
Yes, and it usually isn't mentioned that 2008, with a restricted roster, was also a very bad season for injuries. 11 players who started in the first game missed at least one game and both OTs went down to injury, including future long-time pro Andrew Garner. Despite this - or, perhaps, because of it - Tech vastly over-performed predictions.It's nice to hear someone knowledgeable put into perspective just how impactful the injuries were in 2015. The worst year for injuries in nearly half a century speaks volumes...
Was that the year Larry Good hobbled2015 was the worst injury riddled season since 1968 when we had to call the 7th string QB out of the stands at halftime of the Navy game, appropriately enough played in a driving rain storm, to finish the game. Our leading tackler, the late Eric Wilcox, played the second half of the season on one leg.... the other had a shredded knee. And so on......
I loved Larry Good! His running style - his teammates called it the "Camilla Shuffle" - was a lot of fun to watch. And talk about someone who would have made the spread option work! If we could have found another Larry Good things would have been as nice as they were with Thomas.Was that the year Larry Good hobbled
back out for the Uga game? In the yesr i remember he got hit in the knee by a dirty tacle
The whole 2014 back field except for Qb was skill play were gone. The young guys had plenty of talent but as soon as they got their timing down, bam injured.It's nice to hear someone knowledgeable put into perspective just how impactful the injuries were in 2015. The worst year for injuries in nearly half a century speaks volumes...
Yep... the Navy FB Dan Pike spent the afternoon running wild on GF.If that was the game at Bobby Dodd, I was there. Navy returned a punt for a touchdown and did everything right. Our offense did the slip and slide the whole game. We scored two late fourth quarter touchdowns to make it respectable in what was otherwise a rout.
Yes, Larry came back for the Ugag game in Athens against Bill Stanfill & Jack Scott & played on one leg. OC Bill Crutchfield designed the "Cherry Picker Formation" to spread everybody out & try to confuse the dwags. Gaggers - 47 Good's Guys - 8Was that the year Larry Good hobbled
back out for the Uga game? In the yesr i remember he got hit in the knee by a dirty tacle
Thanks.Yes, Larry came back for the Ugag game in Athens against Bill Stanfill & Jack Scott & played on one leg. OC Bill Crutchfield designed the "Cherry Picker Formation" to spread everybody out & try to confuse the dwags. Gaggers - 47 Good's Guys - 8
The "Cherry Picker Formation" was banned by the NCAA the next year & Crutchfield was gone, another UNC friend of Carson's with a much more advanced understanding of how to build an offense than Carson, so Budro let him go.
Not soon enough....... he lost the locker room during the practices during Finals Week before the 1970 Sun Bowl. 9PM - yes, 9PM - practices in full pads during Finals Week drove everyone off a cliff.Wonder if Carson was let go too soon.
I saw that Peach Bowl game against Ole Miss. From the stands it was clear Tech was throwing the game. First half they literally handed the ball to a Miss receiver for a touchdown. Second half Tech showed what they could do if they wanted. Most bizarre Tech game I’ve ever watched.Not soon enough....... he lost the locker room during the practices during Finals Week before the 1970 Sun Bowl. 9PM - yes, 9PM - practices in full pads during Finals Week drove everyone off a cliff.
The next year with his bunker approach was worse. After the team voted to NOT go play a very good Ole Miss team after our disappointing 1971 season, Carson's "We're gonna stay in this room & vote as many times as necessary to go to the Peach Bowl" was the last straw. He was begging us to save his job, not in so many words, and he got the performance he deserved in that bowl game. We got on with our lives.
Budro's pro coaching career mirrored his college one - great assistant with the Steelers, lousy HC with the Browns (old version) - to the surprise of no one who had played for him at NATS.
I remember that game well. Vince Dooley referred to it as a brilliantly conceived offense. It exposed a major loophole in the substitution rules though. Something similar happened after Tech ACC championship game with Clemson where a receiver lingered by the sideline on a 4th down punt after appearing to leave the game and caught a touchdown pass. NCAA got busy the next year on that one too “to clarify the rule.”Yes, Larry came back for the Ugag game in Athens against Bill Stanfill & Jack Scott & played on one leg. OC Bill Crutchfield designed the "Cherry Picker Formation" to spread everybody out & try to confuse the dwags. Gaggers - 47 Good's Guys - 8
The "Cherry Picker Formation" was banned by the NCAA the next year & Crutchfield was gone, another UNC friend of Carson's with a much more advanced understanding of how to build an offense than Carson, so Budro let him go.
What a different and eye opening perspective u bring.Not soon enough....... he lost the locker room during the practices during Finals Week before the 1970 Sun Bowl. 9PM - yes, 9PM - practices in full pads during Finals Week drove everyone off a cliff.
The next year with his bunker approach was worse. After the team voted to NOT go play a very good Ole Miss team after our disappointing 1971 season, Carson's "We're gonna stay in this room & vote as many times as necessary to go to the Peach Bowl" was the last straw. He was begging us to save his job, not in so many words, and he got the performance he deserved in that bowl game. We got on with our lives.
Budro's pro coaching career mirrored his college one - great assistant with the Steelers, lousy HC with the Browns (old version) - to the surprise of no one who had played for him at NATS.
The halftime blocking adjustment he made in’08 vs. uga was equally amazingYes, and it usually isn't mentioned that 2008, with a restricted roster, was also a very bad season for injuries. 11 players who started in the first game missed at least one game and both OTs went down to injury, including future long-time pro Andrew Garner. Despite this - or, perhaps, because of it - Tech vastly over-performed predictions.
As I've said here before, I'm an old OL. I spent most of Paul's 11 years watching the blocking schemes and tying to figure out what was happening, especially after the half. No coach I ever saw was better at halftime O adjustments then Paul and it almost always involved simple changes that took both me and the other side by surprise. My favorite = the sudden use of the belly dive in the 2014 Orange Bowl. They couldn't stop it, Tech kept running it, and it made their second half a living Hell. Heaven for Tech, of course.
I'll miss Paul and the spread option for, I'm sure, the rest of my life. I doubt that Tech will go with one of the coaches now running it even if the present experiment fails. And I continue to wonder what would have happened if Tech had offered the job to Monken. More success for sure; how much more is a question.
I hope Key succeeds, of course, and I support him fully. I think he's probably sure to get us to Gailey-level success. We'll just have to see about going higher.
Thanks for the memories, Coach.
IMHO,The halftime blocking adjustment he made in’08 vs. uga was equally amazing