rexvol
The Minister of Defense
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UT, Fulmer again sit at a crossroad
Commentary by JOE BIDDLE
Staff Writer
Tennessee Coach Phillip Fulmer not only lost his best friend, but also the program's MVP when Duke hired David Cutcliffe as its head coach.
It sends Fulmer back to the 1998 national championship season, when Cutcliffe departed to take the Ole Miss job.
Fulmer had a choice. Promote from within or bring in someone with new ideas and offensive schemes.
It was all too predictable. Fulmer promoted quarterbacks coach Randy Sanders. It turned out to be a huge mistake. Sanders wasn't ready for the job. The program dropped to a point where, almost 10 years later, it has not won another SEC championship.
Oh, it still can give Vols fans eight or nine wins in a 12-game schedule. But UT is in danger of falling behind Florida, Georgia, LSU, Auburn and what will be a force to be reckoned with in Alabama.
Fulmer is faced with the same choice. Promote from within, or hire an innovative coordinator who understands today's offenses.
From 1993-98 under Cutcliffe, the Vols went 63-11. During Sanders' tenure, they went 61-26 in seven seasons.
In Cutcliffe's two seasons after replacing Sanders, the Vols have gone 18-8. He resurrected quarterback Erik Ainge's career. Even though Ainge had few weapons this season, Cutcliffe broke him down and built him back up.
Stay on staff?
Fulmer has promising quarterbacks in Jonathan Crompton and freshman B.J. Coleman. Who coaches them?
On staff, Fulmer has assistant head coach Trooper Taylor, who coaches wide receivers, and offensive line coach Greg Adkins. Taylor has been a college coach since 1992. Adkins broke into the business in 1991.
Taylor is intense, flamboyant, gets players excited. He often wears his hat backward, flies up and down the sideline and has created friction on a staff that is stoical and stale. Taylor is thought to be the best recruiter among assistants, and Fulmer can't afford to lose him.
Adkins did a sound job with the offensive line as Ainge's uniform stayed clean.
History would tell us Fulmer will not change his ways. He stubbornly will point to his record and say his system is proved over time.
Auburn's Tommy Tuberville hired Troy's offensive coordinator, Tony Franklin, who also coached under Hal Mumme at Kentucky. Franklin runs a no-huddle, spread offense. Tuberville had a coach who fit what he needed in the same state.
How far will Fulmer look?
This could be his last chance to make the right choice.
Commentary by JOE BIDDLE
Staff Writer
Tennessee Coach Phillip Fulmer not only lost his best friend, but also the program's MVP when Duke hired David Cutcliffe as its head coach.
It sends Fulmer back to the 1998 national championship season, when Cutcliffe departed to take the Ole Miss job.
Fulmer had a choice. Promote from within or bring in someone with new ideas and offensive schemes.
It was all too predictable. Fulmer promoted quarterbacks coach Randy Sanders. It turned out to be a huge mistake. Sanders wasn't ready for the job. The program dropped to a point where, almost 10 years later, it has not won another SEC championship.
Oh, it still can give Vols fans eight or nine wins in a 12-game schedule. But UT is in danger of falling behind Florida, Georgia, LSU, Auburn and what will be a force to be reckoned with in Alabama.
Fulmer is faced with the same choice. Promote from within, or hire an innovative coordinator who understands today's offenses.
From 1993-98 under Cutcliffe, the Vols went 63-11. During Sanders' tenure, they went 61-26 in seven seasons.
In Cutcliffe's two seasons after replacing Sanders, the Vols have gone 18-8. He resurrected quarterback Erik Ainge's career. Even though Ainge had few weapons this season, Cutcliffe broke him down and built him back up.
Stay on staff?
Fulmer has promising quarterbacks in Jonathan Crompton and freshman B.J. Coleman. Who coaches them?
On staff, Fulmer has assistant head coach Trooper Taylor, who coaches wide receivers, and offensive line coach Greg Adkins. Taylor has been a college coach since 1992. Adkins broke into the business in 1991.
Taylor is intense, flamboyant, gets players excited. He often wears his hat backward, flies up and down the sideline and has created friction on a staff that is stoical and stale. Taylor is thought to be the best recruiter among assistants, and Fulmer can't afford to lose him.
Adkins did a sound job with the offensive line as Ainge's uniform stayed clean.
History would tell us Fulmer will not change his ways. He stubbornly will point to his record and say his system is proved over time.
Auburn's Tommy Tuberville hired Troy's offensive coordinator, Tony Franklin, who also coached under Hal Mumme at Kentucky. Franklin runs a no-huddle, spread offense. Tuberville had a coach who fit what he needed in the same state.
How far will Fulmer look?
This could be his last chance to make the right choice.