Blake25p
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Honest question, does Gus actually let his staff, you know, coach or is he like Pruitt in the sense that he tries to do everything?
Merle HaagardI feel like that there is a joke going straight over my head, LOL. I don't think she's an Okie, but I guess she could be.
As you keep saying and you are 100% correct about, the NFL is a level playing field. Tremendous parity, and it's constructed so that every team goes 8-8 every year. For purposes of discussing the Tennessee job, 9-7 at the Buffalo Bills one year isn't more impressive than Mullen's 7, 8, and occasionally 9 or 10 win seasons at Miss St over a 9-year period. College football is not level playing field, and isn't designed to be. You have to grade coaches that coach at smaller programs on a curve in college. The NFL is much more of a "you are what your record says you are" league than college football.
There are a few really good hires that we could actually make but we will end up with someone like gus or marrone. Tennessee just sucks like that. Chadwell, napier, freeze, Campbell and ficklle out there but tennessee gonna tennessee.Honestly I just did this this morning because I was bored. I do think theres about a 30% of a new coach next year but only because of a combination of 1) me wanting one and 2) that attorney they got is known as the coach contract killer so who knows! But if it does happen and we select Douglas Marrone thats the end of Tennessee football.
Gus always got his hands on the offense.
Malzahn's genius ran out and his book on offense never came with a second volume. He struggled weighing his roots as a playcaller with the need to oversee an entire program. And as he flip-flopped his position calling plays, opposing coaches studied what he did and evolved, while Malzahn stubbornly remained the same.
Also this is my problem with Gus:
There were a number of reasons Gus Malzahn was fired by Auburn on Sunday after eight up-and-down seasons, but none was as ironic or as frustrating as the regression of the offense. The struggle there represented the crumbling of the foundation of the program and the core of Malzahn as a coach.
Why did Auburn pay Gus Malzahn $21.7 million to walk away? Offensive woes top list
Exactly. If everyone is so enamored by Auburn's ability to win 8 games, just hire the reason they were able to win 8 games, not the reason they couldn't win more.Yea, didn't think about that, if true. Well, if Fulmer likes Steele so much, then why would he hire Gus?
He’s capable of winning 9-10 games a year and the SEC East. I’ll take it.