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So you have put together a reasoned argument, but let me propose some alternate hypotheses and counter arguments:
1. Had we remained with the spread option (which I agree T Stansbury was getting too much political pressure against to keep) :
Ken N will never leave Navy -- not a viable candidate
Jeff Monken -- Even the Army boosters expected him to take the GT job once is came open.. I think you dismissed this choice too quickly.
Army boosters expect any successful coach to leave. It's what successful Army coaches usually do.
Brian Bohannon - Not including this season, he has 5 years as a head coach and 20 years as an assistant coach. I'm not convinced that you can dismiss him as too raw when our current head coach only has 2 years as a head coach and also has 20 years as an assistant coach.
5 years of a fledgling KSU program.
2. Had we gone with a shotgun based option offense: (this would have been my choice)
Willie Fritz - you also consider him too raw, but he has 23 years as a head coach and has already presided over a transition away from a spread option offense.
If instead you want to go young, go look at someone who runs Urban Meyer's offense - which is a spread option offense out of the shogun.
Willie Fritz has been a FBS HC since 2014. Had a couple of good years at GaSo but hasn't moved the needle at Tulane.
3. Standard NCAA offense -- No matter who you chose, you are looking at multi-year roster re-build.
At this point you have concluded "That leaves transforming the offense as the only real option".
Here I disagree in scope. Had we gone with a shotgun based option offense as opposed to our current strategy, which as best as I can tell is "blow it all up and start over", we would have had some drop off (which is natural in any coaching transition) but would have also been competitive while the roster was transitioned to a more traditional profile. Even if that coach did not work out, we would have had 3-4 competitive years (which, given the choices that have been made, we are already conceding we are not going have ), and could have then transitioned to a traditional NCAA offense without the pain of a lost 1/3 to 1/2 decade.
I answered some specifics in bold above, but wanted to come back to "shotgun based option offense" as I am not sure that's not what we are moving towards. You point out Urban Meyer, but he uses different player types in his option than what CPJ used in his. His OL tends to pull from the same pools as we are now looking in. He doesn't recruit multiple ABs and fullbacks aren't the primary RBs. Most of your shotgun spread offenses are option based these days. Even Gus at Auburn uses the same players the rest of the factories are recruiting, which is where the 3O was so different. CPJ used smaller more athletic OL for his scheme. He relied on ABs for perimeter blocking and as APB/WR hybrids. His QBs were rarely ever recruited by other P5 schools as QBs. Every single offense you refer to uses a different style of QB than what we have typically recruited to GT under CPJ.
For shotgun spreads to work, you have to have a QB capable of not only running, but making good reads prior to the snap and also being able to stand in the pocket and make his progressions in passing situations. You need an OL with the ability to give him time to make those progressions. It is generally known that it takes 2-3 years for most OL recruits to become good enough to start at a P5 school. Outside of the elite few, most QBs take a year or two to develop. Our roster had none of these players on it, so expecting a shotgun spread ala Meyer to succeed right away would be wishful thinking as well.
Now, that's just my opinion, but I say that as someone who would have been thrilled to see the flexbone remain at GT and who would have been fine with Monken, Fritz or Coach N. In the end, while I would have probably preferred to stay with a more CPJ oriented offense, I can completely understand why we moved away from it and increasingly believe it's necessity is a reality we need to come to grips with.