Potential Head Coach Hires

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TheTaxJacket

Ramblin' Wreck
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I ain’t making sh— up you so called football experts on here need to get out and talk to high school players and then you might have a idea what they think and you might learn something about GT and how the football program is run because by what some of you post on here you don’t have a clue .I was told GT didn’t have a player that could play in the 2deep at ugag and some of you all act like some asst coach is gonna come in here and win bu— s—- . It’s gonna take someone with a lot of recruiting experience to fix this

Fixed that last sentence for you. Paul had 31 years of coaching experience but I think we all can agree he left little to be desired in the recruiting department. That was his ultimate downfall. That and his loyalty to less than stellar asst. coaches like Sewak and Lamar Owens.

If Eliot has experienced anything it’s Dabo’s ability to hire good coordinators and recruit well. Dabo was never even a coordinator but he has a ring. Again your argument that a lot of coaching experience is required doesn’t mean it’s a law or rule. Dabo has proven that wrong.
 

Boss Ross

Jolly Good Fellow
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Fixed that last sentence for you. Paul had 31 years of coaching experience but I think we all can agree he left little to be desired in the recruiting department. That was his ultimate downfall. That and his loyalty to less than stellar asst. coaches like Sewak and Lamar Owens.

If Eliot has experienced anything it’s Dabo’s ability to hire good coordinators and recruit well. Dabo was never even a coordinator but he has a ring. Again your argument that a lot of coaching experience is required doesn’t mean it’s a law or rule. Dabo has proven that wrong.
Clem’s cheat like hell thats why they win I don’t believe that GT will do this.
 

GTonTop88

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I’m on the Tony Elliot train from what little due diligence I have done so far. There may be some better coaches out there but from an immediate impact standpoint I think he is hard to beat.

I believe he could really put together some great recruiting classes over the next couple of years that we aren’t use to seeing and Clemson’s offense would translate pretty well here I think.
 

Bogey

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I'm hoping for Satterfield, Tony Elliot, or Mike Houston, with either Satterfield or Elliot being the best fit for us.

Sent from my ASUS_Z01RD using Tapatalk
 

Techster

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You're the one that needs to wake up. Look at his background, he's not a dumb jock and he can figure out how to get the kids that qualify interested in the ATL college football team. Even Paul said in his exit interview the challenges here recruiting are nothing that can't be overcome, and every school has challenges. We need STRONG recruiters and he's definitely that.

Wait, what?!

I swear every time I've said the exact same thing a group of posters takes their head out of the ground long enough to scream "GT is almost impossible to recruit to it's a wonder we have a football team at all!!!"

CPJ must not have any experience recruiting at GT if he says something like that...
 

dressedcheeseside

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Going outside the "GT bubble" and outside the local papers, SI chimes in about CPJ stepping down and GT's path forward:

https://www.si.com/college-football...ech-coaching-candidates-ken-whisenhunt-option

To me, this is the interesting part of the article:

There’s a much easier way, however—and it doesn’t have to be as simple as replacing Johnson with another coach from one of the academies or another program that runs an offense steeped in option principles. Instead, Georgia Tech can look at any number of offensive minds who run spread schemes that incorporate plenty of option elements, which has become the norm around the college game and has gradually infiltrated the NFL as well. No matter who they hire, it would be an adjustment for the Yellow Jackets to pass the ball more than 10 times a game, but with the right resourceful mind pulling the strings, any number of creative college coaches could oversee a transition not nearly as jarring as pivoting to a pro-style scheme.

A lot of us think what CPJ does is unique. In fact, it's only unique in the high percentage that we choose operate the option schemes. The option schemes themselves are pretty prevalent in college (and some NFL). Heck, UVA ran triple option plays against us this year, but no one is calling UVA a triple option team. Going back to SI's article about the CPJ's spread option ( https://www.si.com/college-football/2018/09/27/triple-option-offense-army-georgia-tech ), there's a reason why good coaches have gone to CPJ for guidance, BUT there's also a good reason why those same coaches don't operate those same schemes at the high percentage or market those schemes: the perception of them hurts (off the field) as much as it helps (on the field). CPJ's offense works. No one can doubt that. But in many ways, it's a zero sum proposition.

I've always contended that CPJ had the tools to "modernize" his offense already in hand: Emphasize the Run n Shoot aspects of his offense more, and complement them with his option schemes. One day, some enterprising coach will do just that. As devastating as CPJ's offense was rushing the ball, whoever "flips the script" will take the entire offense to another level. It will be beautiful to watch when it happens.
I think limited practice time combined with the rigorous academic workload other schools’ players don’t have to contend and with the complicated/time consuming nature of option football made it near impossible to fully implement the entire playbook. CPJ found out that if you try to do too much, you can’t master any of it and that this was especially true at GT due to the aforementioned aspects.
 

Animal02

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I think limited practice time combined with the rigorous academic workload other schools’ players don’t have to contend and with the complicated/time consuming nature of option football made it near impossible to fully implement the entire playbook. CPJ found out that if you try to do too much, you can’t master any of it and that this was especially true at GT due to the aforementioned aspects.
I don't think CPJ had any trouble passing more when we had the QBs and receivers to make it work. Just don't think he did the last couple of years. And since he didn't, did not spend the practice time on it, thus not much practice blocking, which leads to game time disaster.
 

Animal02

Banned
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You're the one that needs to wake up. Look at his background, he's not a dumb jock and he can figure out how to get the kids that qualify interested in the ATL college football team. Even Paul said in his exit interview the challenges here recruiting are nothing that can't be overcome, and every school has challenges. We need STRONG recruiters and he's definitely that.
Disagree completely...it is not a matter of strong recruiters.......it is the $$$$$ to provide sufficient staff and travel
 
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