My point is what you said in your last statement, that if you have an opening find the best coach available and let him determine the offense, not let the offense dictate what coach you get; however, I disagree with you on your point that there is nobody that can consistently keep Tech recruiting in the Top 30s. Take Mississippi State for example: before Dan Mullen, Mississippi State consistently recruited around the number 45 spot. Since Mullen was hired, they've consistently recruited at around the number 25 spot. Before Jim Harbaugh, Stanford recruited around the high 50s, and since have dropped to consistently recruiting in the Top 20s. For many reasons, Mississippi State and Stanford are not good examples to compare to, but what they do indicate is that the right coach paired with institutional support CAN increase recruiting rankings, sometimes dramatically. I think with Stansbury we have that institutional support, and we will see if we have the right recruiting staff soon enough. However, that is all besides the point at hand, which you noted above in your last sentence, and I'm glad that we can agree on that
Absolutely, and I totally understand where you're coming from. That is certainly a valid reasoning for wanting an option coach. I just don't want Tech to be tied down to one particular scheme. Tech should do whatever it can to ensure it can be the best it can, and in my mind making the option Tech's identity will ensure that Tech can't do that, and that GT has to instead do the best that it can within those certain parameters (do the best it can through option coaches), similar to what we've experienced with recruiting (do the best we can with guys that can handle the Institute's coursework). The latter has prevented us from doing better in that area, so I don't want to fall into the trap of the former, that we have to go option and there is no other way, because I see that limiting us as well. Tech should not feel tied to one particular system, but should do the best it can with whatever system will help it to win. Perhaps in the future that will be the option, and if so we might have to go that route, but the biggest reason that I don't want another option coach after Johnson is simply because I'm already starting to see people get so tied to that particular system that they refuse to look at other options, and that will hurt us in the future. I don't think it's that way with you, and I totally understand your reasoning, but my biggest fear is that Tech will limit itself even more, and we can't afford that. Just my personal opinion on another option coach after CPJ
I refuse to believe that there is absolutely nothing that GT can do to obtain greater talent. Even with all of its institutional limitations, Tech should be able to recruit in the Top 30s with the right coach running the program at its maximum efficiency. By saying that the coach HAS to run the triple option, you aren't limiting yourself to lesser coaches, but you are limiting yourself from all of the other possibilities, some of which may be better than another option coach. I think that the fear that the coach will move on from Tech is a reason a lot of people don't want to hire an up-and-coming coach, or why they want someone who might stay for a long time, or might want another option coach, but consider 2 things: the coach may end up not leaving Tech if he does very well, or even if he does, his extended run of good results will have upgraded the program in a way that we can make a similarly good hire and retain that hire (similar to what Houston is going through). It's not all bad if a coach leaves; it is kind of a blow, but if that coach did well (George O'Leary) they leave Tech in a good position. So maybe the next Spurrier wouldn't stay long enough to produce as well as CPJ has (maybe he might stay longer and produce better; who knows), but he will have at the very worst left the program in a very good position. But again, this isn't an argument about Coach Johnson; I like him and want him to stay as long as he wants. What I don't want is for Tech to feel obligated to hire a coach who runs the same offense and thus limit itself of its options. I don't want an offense to be the identity of the program. I don't want to be tied down and impose another restriction on a program that already has so many. That's what I fear might happen if we hire another option coach, and considering the amount of people who argue that the option is the only way for Tech to win (which is untrue), my fears aren't completely unfounded
Michigan State absolutely does better than Tech does, and the only reason they get notoriety is because Mark Dantonio elevated the program to that level. Before Mark Dantonio, dating back to George Perles in 1983, Michigan State averaged 5.9 wins a season. Under Dantonio, they averaged 9.8 wins a year before this season. Dantonio has posted five (5!) 11+ win seasons in only one more year than CPJ (10 seasons, so half of his seasons have had 11 or more wins, and CPJ has never gotten more than 11 wins at Tech, something Dantonio has done twice), a #3 national ranking, an undefeated 14-0 season, wins in 2 major NY6/BCS bowls (wins in the Rose Bowl and Cotton Bowl), made the college football playoffs, and has only had one losing season (a familiar 3-9 season) in his 10 years as head coach. Everyone likes to note that CPJ has 4 9-win seasons at Tech, something that had only been done 17 times before him, but in that same regard Mark Dantonio has 6 9-win seasons, something that had only been done at Michigan State 9 times before him. Even the great Nick Saban (who left Michigan State after three 6-win seasons, one 7-win season, and a final 9-win season without ever winning a bowl game) couldn't do what Dantonio has done, and left complaining that MSU was second to everyone in the region and they'd never be great when they had Michigan, Ohio State, and Penn State around them recruiting the same guys and getting the better talent (sound familiar?). To me, Michigan State (a state school with a bigger and more prominent in-state rival) is the epitome of what I want Tech to become
I too think that the 2014 GT team would have beaten them (we were almost unstoppable and it took FSU's best game that season to just barely beat us), but to say that Michigan State would do just as well with any coach or that they don't do better than Tech is just wrong. But again, all of that is besides the point, the point being that we don't have to be tied down to one single offense and that Tech should pursue the best coach regardless of offense, but that I personally hope that Tech gets a coach that doesn't run the option because I don't want the option to become Tech's identity. Again, this is all just my own personal opinion