That's a common fallacy, though. Just because you go to a standard offense doesn't mean you need to hire a mediocre coach like Gailey. Even besides that obvious fallacy, did that system ever break a Top-3 in the country bowl streak, have the worst season since Bill Lewis, or even have a single losing season?
Now, I'm not advocating for Chan Gailey; I think he was mediocre at best, and don't get me wrong, I love CPJ. I love the triple option. I think that our highs have been better than our lows. But the argument isn't about whether I like the triple option over other systems or whether I like Coach Johnson or not: it's about whether we should move on from that scheme after he Johnson leaves. I think that if Georgia Tech allows it to become its identity, then we'll be forever known as that school and everything will revolve around that offense. That's just putting one more restriction on a school that already has a lot of inherent limitations. I personally want a different style so that GT fans don't fall into that exact same mentality that you're displaying above: triple option or bust. You can win with different offenses. In fact, 120 teams in the country win with a different offense. 25 of them were even better than Tech, according to the AP Poll that came out. It's not like the only way Tech can win is with the triple option, and I am afraid that another option coach hire will forever stigmatize GT as the same sort of school as Navy and Army. I don't want Tech to be a Navy or Army that overachieves with lesser talent. I want Tech to be a Michigan State. I want Tech to be a Clemson. I want Tech to bring in the best and win with the best. You saw what happened when you gave Ralph Friedgen great talent with Joe Hamilton. We don't have to be unique; we just have to win
And about being different, even Ralph Friedgen who you mentioned ran a pro-style system at Maryland and later Rutgers (I can't find any info about his style at Tech, but I would imagine it's the same), and
his whole philosophy was balance: not run-heavy or pass-heavy (although it got increasingly more pass-heavy in his later years at Maryland, probably because defenses were catching up and the spread scheme was gaining more prevalence). The last time an option coach won the national championship was Tom Osborne in 1997. It's been 20 years, and it's not likely to change. I want Tech to win a National Championship. If we can do it with CPJ, great. If not, then there is not going to be any option coach out there that will guide us to that promised land. CPJ is the best out there, and anybody else is a step down. Why limit yourself to lesser coaches after CPJ leaves? You're purposely putting yourself a step behind the competition. If a great coach is available but he runs a different offense, I don't care about it. I just want the best coach. If it happens to be an option coach, that's fine. More likely than not, the best coach available will not be one. I'm just afraid that the same line of thinking you displayed above will be every GT fan's mentality if we hire another option coach. Instead of focusing on the offense, we should focus on the coach itself. CPJ has been great, but more likely than not a better coach than Candeto or whoever will be available, and he will likely run a different offense than CPJ, and as long as he wins that's OK. I'm just saying that it doesn't HAVE to be an option coach, and only looking at other option coaches means you're not looking at the hundreds of other options available, and as great as he's been for us I'd rather get the next Spurrier than the next Johnson