LongforDodd
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OK, Carry onThis has been disproved over and over again. But the players being recruited believed it because the other teams sold it so hard
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OK, Carry onThis has been disproved over and over again. But the players being recruited believed it because the other teams sold it so hard
Tenuta had some of the best defenses ever here.Can we please stop talking about Tenuta and Roof? Let’s gets a new name that can bring a spark to this defense.
Unfortunately, I don’t think Tech can recruit the size needed to be a top d. We need scheme and high-level coaching here. If we can pull big bodies for up front? Great. But we need speed and coverage in the secondary first.
Tenuta was at NCSU for a while while his son was on their baseball team. That was some time ago. I suspect he is totally out of coaching now but just an assumption since his name is not being mentioned these days. Reset. Just looked him up. He is coaching with some team in New Orleans. Not NFL.Tenuta had some of the best defenses ever here.
here is a crazy tidbit, Tenuta replaced Bill Lewis as AHC coach at notre dameTenuta was at NCSU for a while while his son was on their baseball team. That was some time ago. I suspect he is totally out of coaching now but just an assumption since his name is not being mentioned these days. Reset. Just looked him up. He is coaching with some team in New Orleans. Not NFL.
Different game then. Although I noticed that our previous DC was also fond of the fire zone, his scheme does not translate well to spread offenses. In a pro style, it works well to confuse the blocking and QB, but a spread offense will drop it off to a receiver who just has to beat the dropping DE…Tenuta had some of the best defenses ever here.
Wow. That's a stout DL. 3 NFL players and Roman Reigns.Different game then. Although I noticed that our previous DC was also fond of the fire zone, his scheme does not translate well to spread offenses. In a pro style, it works well to confuse the blocking and QB, but a spread offense will drop it off to a receiver who just has to beat the dropping DE…
Give me Michael Johnson, Daryl Richard, Joe Annoai, and Darrell Robertson and you can run whatever scheme you like.
Should be a bunch of them.Get a guy that can recruit big bodies and develop them. That’s what we desperately need.
I agree to an extent. Venables himself has said having War Daddies up front makes all the difference.Plyers, players, players, NIL, NIL, NIL . Basic issue. Great players make great coaches, PERIOD !! This thread is useless.
Some coaches can see everything and some can't see crap.I agree to an extent. Venables himself has said having War Daddies up front makes all the difference.
That said, Elko goes to Duke and has immediate success withe the players who are already there. If you read about the Duke turnaround Elko says the biggest thing when he arrived was that the players failed the eyeball test. He put as much into S&C as he possibly could. Obviously paid dividends for them.
As an ex-college LB who had an amazing DC and amazing talent on the defensive side that produced a nationally ranked defense, coaching matters. Dude tweaked the D each week for each opponent. Lots of subtlety with shading DL this way or that, or assignment changes that had huge impacts. Sometimes assignment changes in response to different plays or formations.
For example for one opponent DC decided offside ILB rushes the QB automatically on sprint-out away. I came into a game as freshman in the second half and had 3 sacks in five minutes. Totally unblocked, no skill required...just run over there and tackle somebody, like taking candy from a baby.
At the same time we had an all-american DT AND an all-conference DT one year, and an all American speed rusher for a couple years after. Had an LB-sized free safety who hit like a load of bricks. Dudes made plays.
Our DC was the S&C coach (this was D-III) and knew what he was doing. Guys got huge and strong. So really it all fits together. Amazing to see how guys transform physically.
Any way you slice it having DL that win one on one's and eat people is huge. They require a lot of attention and are just disruptive as hell. Makes it really fun.
Good post. thanks for the players view point.I agree to an extent. Venables himself has said having War Daddies up front makes all the difference.
That said, Elko goes to Duke and has immediate success withe the players who are already there. If you read about the Duke turnaround Elko says the biggest thing when he arrived was that the players failed the eyeball test. He put as much into S&C as he possibly could. Obviously paid dividends for them.
As an ex-college LB who had an amazing DC and amazing talent on the defensive side that produced a nationally ranked defense, coaching matters. Dude tweaked the D each week for each opponent. Lots of subtlety with shading DL this way or that, or assignment changes that had huge impacts. Sometimes assignment changes in response to different plays or formations.
For example for one opponent DC decided offside ILB rushes the QB automatically on sprint-out away. I came into a game as freshman in the second half and had 3 sacks in five minutes. Totally unblocked, no skill required...just run over there and tackle somebody, like taking candy from a baby.
At the same time we had an all-american DT AND an all-conference DT one year, and an all American speed rusher for a couple years after. Had an LB-sized free safety who hit like a load of bricks. Dudes made plays.
Our DC was the S&C coach (this was D-III) and knew what he was doing. Guys got huge and strong. So really it all fits together. Amazing to see how guys transform physically.
Any way you slice it having DL that win one on one's and eat people is huge. They require a lot of attention and are just disruptive as hell. Makes it really fun.
I wasn't suggesting coaching doesn't matter. It's just that at GT we have a difficult time recruiting DL. And should make NIL available for those positions a priority. A great coach can only do so much schemeing to cover weak spots. It's hard for me to judge the D coaching given such a handicap.I agree to an extent. Venables himself has said having War Daddies up front makes all the difference.
That said, Elko goes to Duke and has immediate success withe the players who are already there. If you read about the Duke turnaround Elko says the biggest thing when he arrived was that the players failed the eyeball test. He put as much into S&C as he possibly could. Obviously paid dividends for them.
As an ex-college LB who had an amazing DC and amazing talent on the defensive side that produced a nationally ranked defense, coaching matters. Dude tweaked the D each week for each opponent. Lots of subtlety with shading DL this way or that, or assignment changes that had huge impacts. Sometimes assignment changes in response to different plays or formations.
For example for one opponent DC decided offside ILB rushes the QB automatically on sprint-out away. I came into a game as freshman in the second half and had 3 sacks in five minutes. Totally unblocked, no skill required...just run over there and tackle somebody, like taking candy from a baby.
At the same time we had an all-american DT AND an all-conference DT one year, and an all American speed rusher for a couple years after. Had an LB-sized free safety who hit like a load of bricks. Dudes made plays.
Our DC was the S&C coach (this was D-III) and knew what he was doing. Guys got huge and strong. So really it all fits together. Amazing to see how guys transform physically.
Any way you slice it having DL that win one on one's and eat people is huge. They require a lot of attention and are just disruptive as hell. Makes it really fun.
I'm happy with Marco for now. With his recruiting ability and a decent NIL, I think our DL will come along fine with his coaching ability.I wasn't suggesting coaching doesn't matter. It's just that at GT we have a difficult time recruiting DL. And should make NIL available for those positions a priority. A great coach can only do so much schemeing to cover weak spots. It's hard for me to judge the D coaching given such a handicap.