Peter Burns Speaking Truth

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VolnJC

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#1
Peter Burns‏
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@PeterBurnsESPN

Is this a rough patch for Tennessee? Yes.

But if you don’t think a program with this much support and passion, won’t once rise again, then you don’t know a damn thing about college football.
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#7
#7
Peter Burns‏
Verified account
@PeterBurnsESPN

Is this a rough patch for Tennessee? Yes.

But if you don’t think a program with this much support and passion, won’t once rise again, then you don’t know a damn thing about college football.
Twitter

Tennessee will never rise again with the HOH calling the shots!

Must rid ourselves of the HOH control! and then Currie and then Davenport.

Screw them all and burn it down!
 
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#8
#8
14-25ish I'm sure.

Every year at NC State they have finished higher than year before in ACC standings

Head coaching record[edit]
Year
Team
Overall
Conference
Standing
Bowl/playoffs
Coaches#
AP°
Northern Illinois Huskies (Mid-American Conference) (2011–2012)
2011
Northern Illinois
11–3
7–1
T–1st (West)
W GoDaddy.com


2012
Northern Illinois
12–2
8–0
1st (West)
Orange*†
24
22
Northern Illinois:
23–4
15–1
* Did not coach bowl game
NC State Wolfpack (Atlantic Coast Conference) (2013–present)
2013
NC State
3–9
0–8
7th (Atlantic)



2014
NC State
8–5
3–5
5th (Atlantic)
W St. Petersburg


2015
NC State
7–6
3–5
4th (Atlantic)
L Belk


2016
NC State
7–6
3–5
T–4th (Atlantic)
W Independence


2017
NC State
8–4
6–2
2nd (Atlantic)



NC State:
33–30
15–25

Total:
56–34
 
#11
#11
If we get a Dorean I hope it's driven by Marty McFly and takes us back to halftime of the 2001 SEC championship game. Good times.
 
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#15
#15
He should be about 85th on the list. I'd take Morris in a heartbeat over him. At least Morris was in a big time national program at Clemson and has did heavy recruiting in the Southeast and Texas. Not to mention he's the best offense coach by far we've looked at and that includes Brohm and Gundy.
 
#16
#16
He should be about 85th on the list. I'd take Morris in a heartbeat over him. At least Morris was in a big time national program at Clemson and has did heavy recruiting in the Southeast and Texas. Not to mention he's the best offense coach by far we've looked at and that includes Brohm and Gundy.

He was DC at Wisconsin that's a big time national program

Doeren, who has packed a career’s worth of experience into his 22 years in the coaching profession, is a living example of a single-minded focus on a goal.* After eschewing medical school to follow his passion, he climbed rapidly through the coaching ranks.
He came to NC State after leading the program at Northern Illinois to its most successful two years in program history.* His first Husky squad won the school’s first Mid-American Conference Championship since 1983 and tied the school record with 11 wins.* His second version repeated as league champions and set a new school record by posting 12 victories for the season and earned a trip to the Orange Bowl - the first BCS berth ever for a MAC school.* Doeren was a finalist for several national coach of the year awards following the 2012 campaign.
Under Doeren’s leadership, NIU boasted the nation’s longest conference winning streak with 17 straight wins versus MAC opponents.* The Huskies never lost a home game during his tenure in DeKalb, winning a dozen home contests in his two seasons to extend the nation’s longest home winning streak to 21 games.* The Huskies’ Academic Progress Rate (APR) ranked among the top five nationally as well. *
Prior to his stint in DeKalb, Doeren spent five seasons in the Big Ten at Wisconsin, where he served as defensive coordinator and linebackers coach.* During Doeren’s time in Madison, the Badgers posted a 49-15 overall mark and played in the Champs Sports Bowl twice, the Outback Bowl, the Capital One Bowl and the Rose Bowl.
For his first two seasons in Madison, he served as co-defensive coordinator/recruiting coordinator/linebackers coach and in 2008, was named the primary defensive coordinator. *
Doeren arrived at Wisconsin after four seasons (2002-05) at the University of Kansas, where he served as linebackers coach and recruiting coordinator for three seasons before being promoted to co-defensive coordinator under head coach Mark Mangino.*
During Doeren’s time at Kansas, the Jayhawks ended a seven-year bowl drought, earning bids to the 2003 Tangerine Bowl and the 2005 Ft. Worth Bowl.* The opponent in that first bowl appearance was a Philip Rivers-led NC State team. *
In 2000 and 2001, Doeren coached the secondary at NCAA Division I-AA (now Football Championship Subdivision) powerhouse Montana, also serving as the Grizzlies’ recruiting coordinator for one year. Montana advanced to the the I-AA national championship game in 2000, losing by two points, but returned to win the national title the following season.* The Grizzlies posted a 28-3 record and won two Big Sky Conference championships in his two years with the program and he coached five All-Americans, four All-Big Sky performers and two league defensive MVPs.
Doeren grew up right outside of Kansas City, where he watched his grandfather, Thomas Glennon, coach high school basketball and track. He loved the respect his grandfather commanded from his players, even after he retired from coaching.
When he left for college at Drake University in Des Moines, Iowa, his goals were to play football, earn a pre-med degree, go to med school and become an orthopedic doctor.* He accomplished the first two.
He lettered at tight end for the Bulldogs, catching 19 catches for 237 yards for his career.* He majored in pre-medical biology, earning Academic All-American as a senior.* He took the Medical College Admission Test (MCAT).* His plans for the future changed, however, during the summer between his junior and senior years when his former coach at Bishop Miege High School asked him to lead seven-on-seven drills. *
Doeren says from that moment on, he decided he wanted to be a coach.* He pursued that goal with a relentlessness that never wavered.* Instead of heading to med school, he landed his first coaching job in 1994, right there in Kansas at Shawnee Mission High School.* His collegiate coaching career began just a year later, when he was named an assistant coach at Drake, leading the linebackers from 1995-97 before adding defensive coordinator chores in 1997. * He also earned his master’s degree from Drake in educational leadership.
Doeren got his first taste of a bowl experience as a defensive graduate assistant at the University of Southern California.* During his stint with the Trojans, he began work on his Ph.D.
 
#18
#18
Kiffin has made it clear he is waiting by the phone. Warts and all he can coach circles around Dave, and he will excite the recruiting classes.
 
#19
#19
He was DC at Wisconsin that's a big time national program

Doeren, who has packed a career’s worth of experience into his 22 years in the coaching profession, is a living example of a single-minded focus on a goal.* After eschewing medical school to follow his passion, he climbed rapidly through the coaching ranks.
He came to NC State after leading the program at Northern Illinois to its most successful two years in program history.* His first Husky squad won the school’s first Mid-American Conference Championship since 1983 and tied the school record with 11 wins.* His second version repeated as league champions and set a new school record by posting 12 victories for the season and earned a trip to the Orange Bowl - the first BCS berth ever for a MAC school.* Doeren was a finalist for several national coach of the year awards following the 2012 campaign.
Under Doeren’s leadership, NIU boasted the nation’s longest conference winning streak with 17 straight wins versus MAC opponents.* The Huskies never lost a home game during his tenure in DeKalb, winning a dozen home contests in his two seasons to extend the nation’s longest home winning streak to 21 games.* The Huskies’ Academic Progress Rate (APR) ranked among the top five nationally as well. *
Prior to his stint in DeKalb, Doeren spent five seasons in the Big Ten at Wisconsin, where he served as defensive coordinator and linebackers coach.* During Doeren’s time in Madison, the Badgers posted a 49-15 overall mark and played in the Champs Sports Bowl twice, the Outback Bowl, the Capital One Bowl and the Rose Bowl.
For his first two seasons in Madison, he served as co-defensive coordinator/recruiting coordinator/linebackers coach and in 2008, was named the primary defensive coordinator. *
Doeren arrived at Wisconsin after four seasons (2002-05) at the University of Kansas, where he served as linebackers coach and recruiting coordinator for three seasons before being promoted to co-defensive coordinator under head coach Mark Mangino.*
During Doeren’s time at Kansas, the Jayhawks ended a seven-year bowl drought, earning bids to the 2003 Tangerine Bowl and the 2005 Ft. Worth Bowl.* The opponent in that first bowl appearance was a Philip Rivers-led NC State team. *
In 2000 and 2001, Doeren coached the secondary at NCAA Division I-AA (now Football Championship Subdivision) powerhouse Montana, also serving as the Grizzlies’ recruiting coordinator for one year. Montana advanced to the the I-AA national championship game in 2000, losing by two points, but returned to win the national title the following season.* The Grizzlies posted a 28-3 record and won two Big Sky Conference championships in his two years with the program and he coached five All-Americans, four All-Big Sky performers and two league defensive MVPs.
Doeren grew up right outside of Kansas City, where he watched his grandfather, Thomas Glennon, coach high school basketball and track. He loved the respect his grandfather commanded from his players, even after he retired from coaching.
When he left for college at Drake University in Des Moines, Iowa, his goals were to play football, earn a pre-med degree, go to med school and become an orthopedic doctor.* He accomplished the first two.
He lettered at tight end for the Bulldogs, catching 19 catches for 237 yards for his career.* He majored in pre-medical biology, earning Academic All-American as a senior.* He took the Medical College Admission Test (MCAT).* His plans for the future changed, however, during the summer between his junior and senior years when his former coach at Bishop Miege High School asked him to lead seven-on-seven drills. *
Doeren says from that moment on, he decided he wanted to be a coach.* He pursued that goal with a relentlessness that never wavered.* Instead of heading to med school, he landed his first coaching job in 1994, right there in Kansas at Shawnee Mission High School.* His collegiate coaching career began just a year later, when he was named an assistant coach at Drake, leading the linebackers from 1995-97 before adding defensive coordinator chores in 1997. * He also earned his master’s degree from Drake in educational leadership.
Doeren got his first taste of a bowl experience as a defensive graduate assistant at the University of Southern California.* During his stint with the Trojans, he began work on his Ph.D.

Big deal. None of this means he is a good fit for UT, especially right now.
 
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