1-Man’s Opinion on Sports-Friday. “PAC-12 Conference–Crisis & Crossroads”

Posted by on January 22nd, 2021  •  0 Comments  • 

 

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“Pac 12 Conference–There Will Be Blood”

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The Pac 12-Conference, the so-called conference of champions, or so says all the promos you could see on their TV telecasts, if you could see their games.

I can see more games on my TV from the home of my Alma Mater (Ohio University), via the Mid American Conference, than I can of USC-UCLA-Oregon-Washington, places where I did play-by-play.  I get that ESPN package on my flat-screen TV.

Hell I can see more games involving Wyoming, Boise State, San Diego State from the Mountain West Conference right next door thanks to the CBS Sports Network via Direct TV.

I can see the Westminster Dog Show and Manchester City-vs-Manchester United soccer and Formula 1-racing because there is NBC Sports Network.

But the old Civil War (Oregon-Oregon State)…the Apple Cup (Washington-Washington State)..the Centennial Cup (Arizona State-Arizona)..very doubtful.  I love the history of this conference.  Love the beauty of the campuses.  Love the dynamics of alot of quality coaches.  I love the logos and the colors.

The man who took over the Pac 12, and took it from a town-and-gown operation, the man who created the Pac 12-Network, the man who has guided his conference to last place in the Media rights business deals, is leaving.

Larry Scott has been ousted as Commissioner of the Pac 12-Network.  The league is in ruin.  It is no longer viewed as a truce National power in football and basketball.  It’s per school revenue share TV payments ,(31M) a year via the network, are at the  bottom of the standings compared to the SEC (51M) per school annually.  It pales in comparison to what Texas or even Wake Forest gets.

Larry Scott, for all his bluster, bombast, and creative license, never got the Pac 12 Network any clearance on Direct TV.  You have to pay to see those games, and not many want to subscribe to even more things.  Instead of the push to get Texas and Oklahoma into the conference, he would up with small market-reputation Utah and Colorado.

 

The pandemic has devastated the league financially, and he had no answers just platitudes and maybe more promises.

I love watching my Ohio Bobcats-vs-Miami Redhawks in the “Battle of the Bricks”.  I can see that, but I cannot see the Ducks-vs-Beavers, Huskies vs Cougars, or other Pac 12 teams that carry the West Coast Flag.

A new day is coming for college athletics, with new leadership in the Pac 12.  The “Conference of Champions” deserves better than what it has had from a leader.

Some 24-hours we have had, getting rid of a bad President, and now a bad Commissioner.

Bills came due.  There had to be an accounting for all the bad decisions made.

To steal the title of the movie we saw…”There Will Be Blood” and there was, in Washington, DC and on the West Coast in college athletics.

A new day dawns without Larry Scott as Pac 12-Commissioner.

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1-Man’s Opinion on Sports-Thursday. “Chargers Great Says Good Bye–Fond Farewell”

Posted by on January 21st, 2021  •  1 Comment  • 

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“Fond Farwell-Philip Rivers”

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Dadgummit.

He’s retired.

He, being legendary quarterback Philip Rivers, who has decided to move on to the next chapter of his life.

A week after his Colts playoff game with Buffalo, he has elected to walk away from the NFL.

Where do you start when discussing a 17-year carrer?

..The hyper-active audible playcalls at the line of scrimage.
..The touchdown passes to Antonio Gates
..The runs-the passes to Ladainian Tomlinson
..The fist bumps with teammates coming off the field after a scoring drive
..The distinctive side arm delivery
..The lifetime bond with his center Nick Hardwick
..The deep TD bombs to Vincent Jackson
..The slants and go to Keenan Allen
..The dump and runs to Danny Woodhead-Austin Ekeler
..The yapping with Broncos QB-Jay Cutler
..The wins at Arrowhead Stadium or at Mile High Stadium
..The war of words with Raiders fans in the Black Hole
..His love of gameday…any time..any place.

The Rivers era ends with pages and pages of statistics.

He leaves the NFL having started 240-games in a row..second only to Brett Favre
He finishes with a (134-106) record and a (5-7) playoff record
He winds up with (63,440Y) passing and 421-TDs…fifth in NHL history
He took (464) sacks..threw (224) interceptions…had a career (95) QB rating

He had just 2-major injuries in 17-years, 16-with the Chargers, a torn knee ligament and a toe injury

He was loud-proud, and stand up guy in the pocket and a stand up guy with the media.

He was beloved by his coaches Marty Schottenheimer, Norv Turner and even Mike McCoy.

A devout Christian, he and Tiffany have 9-children.
His most famous vacation, taking his family to the Vatican to meet the Pope.

He was durable, dynamic, an amazing team leader.

And he was ours in San Diego for almost his entire career.

His calling card: Faith-Family-Football-Friends.

A great QB…a greater person.

I read his farewell note…and all I could say was ‘Dadgummit’.

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“Every year, January 20th is a special and emotional day,” Rivers said. “It is St. Sebastian’s Feast day, the day I played in the AFC Championship without an ACL, and now the day that after 17 seasons, I’m announcing my retirement from the National Football League. Thank you God for allowing me to live out my childhood dream of playing quarterback in the NFL.

“I am grateful to the Chargers for 16 seasons, and the Colts for the 17th season.

“Thank you to all my coaches that helped me grow as a player and person.

“Thanks to the support staff.

“I appreciate the opposing defenses making it challenging physically and mentally every week . . . I also enjoyed the banter.

“I appreciate the referees for putting up with all my fussing. I think I was right most of the time dadgummit!

“Thanks to the fans in San Diego and around the nation that both cheered and booed.

“Special thanks to my teammates. Without a doubt my favorite part of the game, being a teammate. Thank you for being mine.

“Lastly, thank you to my wife and best friend Tiffany, and our children Halle, Caroline, Grace, Gunner, Sarah, Peter, Rebecca, Clare, and Anna. Could not have don’t it without y’all’s unwavering support.

“As my playing career comes to an end, the next chapter begins.”

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1-Man’s Opinion on Sports–Wednesday. “NFL Coaching Hires-What’s Wrong–Rooney Rule or Owners”

Posted by on January 20th, 2021  •  0 Comments  • 

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“NFL Coaching Hires–What’s Wrong–Rooney Rule or NFL Owners”

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The NFL has a problem…not a Covid problem…surely not a money problem…definitely not a popularity problem.

But it has an image problem of the “Good Old White Boys Club”…hiring white coaches, ignoring black head coaches.

7-openings this off season…5-jobs filled…2-left…0-African Americans hired yet.

This comes on the heels of last years hiring-firing season with almost the same results.

There are 32-head coaching jobs in the NFL.  There are 2-black head coaches, 1-Hispanic coach, 2-Muslim coach.

The outrage spilling over from the Fritz Pollard Alliance, which helps in the delivery of minority candidates to NFL owners, is strong this year.

Here’s a close up look at the emotion swirling around this year’s hiring cycle..courtesy of the website ‘Undefeated’

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Nearing the close of another hiring cycle, NFL owners have failed again.

In a period in which there were initially seven openings for head coaches and now has only two vacancies remaining, no Black coaches have been tabbed to fill any yet. In most categories, going 0 for 5 is an awful look. This one qualifies.

For proponents of inclusive hiring throughout the league, the lack of progress would be concerning during any cycle. That it has occurred following the previous three cycles, however, is downright alarming for the game’s Black assistant coaches, several told The Undefeated in recent interviews. During the previous cycles, there were 20 openings for head coaches. Only one coach of color was hired in each cycle — and one Black coach total.

As of the publication of this column, the Houston Texans and Philadelphia Eagles had not officially completed their coaching searches. Perhaps a fourth-quarter comeback of sorts will occur, enabling the league to claim a net gain in its number of Black head coaches (at the start of the process, the total stood at only one — Mike Tomlin of the Pittsburgh Steelers; Brian Flores of the Miami Dolphins is Afro-Latino and Ron Rivera of the Washington Football Team is Latino). Of course, even having two or three Black head coaches in a league with 32 teams isn’t exactly something to thump one’s chest about.

Some will point to the hiring of Robert Saleh, the first Muslim head coach in NFL history, by the New York Jets as a sign of progress on the coaching front. Make no mistake, that move is noteworthy. But let’s be real: The NFL has never been Blacker.

The league’s on-field workforce is more than 70% Black. Of the 32 players selected in the first round of the 2020 draft, 29 are Black. Black quarterbacks now set the league’s agenda, and the best among them, Kansas City Chiefs wunderkind Patrick Mahomes, is the new face of the NFL. With that backdrop, the NFL is sending a horrible message to its Black assistant coaches.

And don’t count on both the Texans and Eagles to turn to Black assistants to lead their teams. It’s more likely that Kansas City Chiefs head coach Andy Reid would punt on fourth down late in a game while running out the clock to complete a victory is within his reach.

Kansas City Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes (left) talks to Kansas City Chiefs offensive coordinator Eric Bieniemy (right) after scoring a touchdown during the first quarter of Super Bowl LIV on Feb. 2, 2020, at Hard Rock Stadium in Miami Gardens, Florida.

RICH GRAESSLE/PPI/ICON SPORTSWIRE VIA GETTY IMAGES

Commissioner Roger Goodell and his top lieutenants had hoped for better — far better — after high-ranking officials from the league office and the Fritz Pollard Alliance, the independent group that advises the NFL on matters of diversity, intensified their efforts around hiring during the offseason. Their belief was that by incentivizing inclusion and focusing on policies that would potentially accelerate the ability of candidates to move through the pipeline, positive change would manifest in improvement as soon as this cycle. So much for that.

What has occurred since the end of the regular season is yet another painful reminder, coaches say, that the league office can only do so much. The NFL’s hiring problem, at its core, is at the ownership level. And it’s as glaring as ever.

What’s most galling to Black coaches is the clear double standard present in the hiring process. While white assistants with little experience as coordinators or even position coaches are fast-tracked for the top-rung jobs, top-notch Black assistants often toil for years waiting for opportunities that never come, regardless of their role in contributing to an organization’s overall success. For Black assistants, the curious case of Kansas City Chiefs offensive coordinator Eric Bieniemy is just about becoming a cautionary tale.

With their victory over the Cleveland Browns in the AFC divisional round Sunday, the Chiefs will become the first AFC team to host three consecutive AFC title games. For that entire period, Bieniemy has been the Chiefs’ offensive coordinator. Furthermore, Mahomes, who swears by Bieniemy, is 24-1 in his last 25 starts, including a Super Bowl victory. The Chiefs’ success overall and that individually of the team’s young superstar signal-caller should be a launching pad for Bieniemy to run his own shop. Bieniemy is still waiting for it to happen.

Meanwhile, after only one season as a defensive coordinator with the Los Angeles Rams, Brandon Staley has been hired to take over the Los Angeles Chargers. Staley becomes a head coach not even four years after being hired for his first NFL coaching gig. Until this season, he coached outside linebackers. Granted, the Rams thrived under Staley this season, leading the NFL in many categories. But here’s the thing: Bieniemy has been doing it big with the Chiefs for several years.

Then there’s the Detroit Lions’ coaching vacancy.

Reportedly, the Lions are expected to hire New Orleans Saints tight ends coach Dan Campbell, who has never been a coordinator in the NFL. Could Staley and Campbell wind up being successful with the Chargers and Lions, respectively? Absolutely. What their ascent reinforces, though, is the existence of the same double standard on display recently during the sacking of the U.S. Capitol by a crowd of mostly white rioters. The bar is still set much higher for Black assistants.

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Some have suggested that Bieniemy isn’t viewed favorably by owners because Reid handles the Chiefs’ primary play-calling duties, that somehow the play-calling role is all that matters in determining whether a prospective head coach will succeed.

Putting aside that wrongheaded thinking for a moment, you know who also had largely the same working relationship with Reid while they served under him on offense with the Chiefs? Chicago Bears head coach Matt Nagy and former Philadelphia Eagles head coach Doug Pederson. Given the opportunities Nagy, Pederson and other white non-primary play-callers have received, the whole play-calling narrative, with regard to Bieniemy’s lack of advancement, simply doesn’t hold water.

Play-calling has become a lot like those illegal Jim Crow-era voting “tests” Black people endured, such as having to guess how many jelly beans were in a jar. It’s just something used to exclude Black assistants from the hiring process.

Another common criticism of Black assistants, albeit one that may be made up of whole cloth, is that they do not interview well. Impressing owners, especially during the initial get-to-know-you sessions, is key in advancing in the process. Besides laying out an X’s-and-O’s vision for success, many owners want coaches who seem capable of inspiring players. Supposedly, another knock on Bieniemy is that he doesn’t command the room.

Look, short of Bieniemy rapping all of his answers to questions, there’s no way he could interview so poorly, relative to his role in the Chiefs’ spectacular success, to still be shut out. It just doesn’t add up.

The other whispers around Bieniemy concern incidents that occurred during his playing days and time as a young coach, though nothing that has been publicly revealed in the past 20 years. By all accounts, Bieniemy has set a positive example while delivering daily for the Chiefs.

The Jacksonville Jaguars hired Urban Meyer, who hasn’t proven anything in the NFL, despite the fact that while coaching at Ohio State, he reportedly knew about spousal abuse allegations against assistant coach Zach Smith before Smith was fired. The school suspended Meyer for three games after an independent investigation determined he failed to uphold the values of the university. None of that stopped Meyer from getting an opportunity at football’s highest level. Or is it that only Black coaches are disqualified because of issues in their past?

The thought process about Black assistants, generally, is warped. In many respects, it’s the same type of flawed, outdated outlook that resulted in Mitch Trubisky being selected ahead of Mahomes and Deshaun Watson in the 2017 draft. What’s most harmful, it has stymied the careers of many Black coaches.

Chicago Bears general manager Ryan Pace saw himself in Trubisky. Does that mean Pace is a virulent racist? Of course not. Often, people in decision-making lean on their life experiences. Their frame of reference sometimes plays an outsize role in planning. It just so happens that the overwhelming majority of high-level decision-makers in the NFL are white men. There’s no sugarcoating where things stand, and there are no signs of improvement on the horizon.

When it comes to hiring coaches, NFL owners couldn’t make their feelings more clear. All that’s needed now is to hang the sign: Black men need not apply.”NF

 

 

1-Man’s Opinion on Sports–Tuesday “Chargers Coach–Who-Why-How?”

Posted by on January 19th, 2021  •  0 Comments  • 

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“Chargers Coaching Hire–How-Why”

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Everybody comes from somewhere.

That’s how to view what the Chargers just did in hiring a new coach to replace Anthony Lynn, who replaced Mike McCoy.

It’s the Flavor of the Month choice for the Chargers in hiring a new head coach, again.  Taking someone else’s hot coordinator.

Brandon Staley, coming from the Rams,  is a hot candidate but so was Brian Daboll of the Bills.

Staley’s resume is short.  1-year as Defensive Coordinator of the Rams, but that was an impressive one year.  He moved the chess pieces around the board, left by the fired Wade Phillips, and constructed a #1-ranked defense in a division with high powered offenses.

Staley spent just 3-other years, as a linebacker coach, with the Broncos and the Bears.  His paths crossed with great talents like Von Miller in Denver and Khail Mack in Chicago.  He helped design defenses that was dominant in sacks, takeaways and in the red-zone.

His work sheet with the Rams was indeed impressive.  A defense that allowed 29-TDs in 16-games.  Had 53-sacks, 22-takeaways and 102-QB pressures.  Top ranked in yardage allowed defense and scoring defense.  And this was in a division that featured the brilliance of 42TD-QB-Russell Wilson in Seattle…the do-everything skills of Arizona’s Kyler Murray (4800APY)…and Jim Garoppolo in San Francisco.

But this will be a different roster he inherits when he dons Chargers Powder Blue colors.

He won’t have super-star DT-Aaron Donald, the big brute that is Michael Brockers, the stud that was DB-Jalen Ramsey or blitz LB-Leonard Floyd, plus a host of guys who made plays off the bench.

The Chargers incoming head coach has the one dimension excellence of Joey Bosa, the developing Jerry Tillery, the brilliance of Derwin James, young LBs in Dru Tranquill and Kyzer White, and a veteran group of CBs-Casey Hayward-Chris Harris and Michael Davis.

But aside from Bosa and James, everyone else he inherits has not accomplished much or may have their better days behind them.

Staley comes with his own portfolio of positive traits.

Intellectual, or as another NFL exec told me “Rhodes Scholar Smart” in football.  He comes with passion, worth ethic, enthusiasm.  He comes as a “Teacher of Technique” that puts people in the right position to make plays.

I looked back at that Tampa-New Orleans playoff game, not so much Tom Brady-vs-Drew Brees, but what was happening on defense.  You don’t limit Anthony Brown, Rob Gronkowski, Mike Evans to 1-catch each or shut out Michael Thomas completely, unless your defense is well coordinated upfront, has great linebacker play, or smothering cornerback coverage packages.  That’s what we saw on Sunday.

That will be the challenge for Brandon Staley.  Brought what he learned under Sean McVay with the Rams, and teach it, implement it, and make it work for the woeful Chargers.

I look at him and I see high octane energy, a-la Pete Carroll, McVay, Sean McDermott, crossed with the fire of Bill Cowher.

He does not have the same quality of players who wore the Rams horns, but he has athletes who can run, are hungry, are athletic.  Now he just has to move them around the chess board to try and fix something that had become woeful.

He also inherits a defense that blew 13-16-16-17-and-21 point leads in the Anthony Lynn season of failure, and needs an overhaul of confidence.

Brian Daboll would have been a good hire to grow QB-Justin Herbert, but its evident the Chargers brass felt they had to fix the defense.  Now they have to convince the new coach to keep the key assistants, components on the offensive side of the ball, Shane Steichen and Pep Hamilton to stay.

Tom Telesco and John Spanos are under the gun.  Telesco told me a couple of weeks ago, the next hire had to be the right hire, because he probably wouldn’t get another chance to fix what is wrong with the Bolts.

The front office failed on the Anthony Lynn-Mike McCoy hires.  It hasn’t been a fruitful 8-years has it?

Everyone comes from somewhere.  Brandon Staley steps off the fast track to take over the Chargers.

His first chance at being a head coach.  Last Chance Saloon for Telesco-Spanos.

A clean piece of paper for the Chargers and their fans.

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1-Man’s Opinion on Sports–Monday. “The NFL–Coaching Carousel”

Posted by on January 18th, 2021  •  0 Comments  • 

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“Countdown to Coaching Hires”

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The NFL coaching vacancies are being filled at a quick pace.
3-hires in a 48-hour span at the end of last week.
4-more jobs open though the playoffs may slow the pace of the final decisions.

The Chargers  said they would be patient to replace fired coach Anthony Lynn.  That should have been the signal that this was going to be a slam dunk hire.  Tom Telesco would hire someone he was familiar with.  The someone is Brian Daboll of Buffalo.  Then late Sunday came word of a 2nd meeting with Rams Def Coord-Brandon Staley.

Here’s a look see at who is still available, and who has been hired:

“WHO’s HOT”

BRIAN DABOLL…a lock to take over the Chargers.  He has learned well, with coaching stops in New England, Kansas City, Miami, Alabama.  When you have crossed paths with Bill Belichick, Andy Reid and Nick Saban, that’s quite a learning curve.  What he has accomplished in two plus years with Bills QB-Josh Allen has been spectacular.

ERIC BIENEMY…Might he miss the coaching cycle again?  That’s what people think, but this may have more to do than the fact his Kansas City Chiefs are always in the playoff hunt, preventing him from accepting  a job.
There is an undercurrent theme he has had poor interviews and the rumbling he does not call the plays, Andy Reid does.  Maybe he is not a complete candidate.  If not Houston, then anywhere?

DAN CAMPBELL…Appears headed to Detroit after a late series of interviews, he comes from New Orleans without alot of public following, but anyone who has been with Sean Payton has credentials.  He also served as interim head coach in Miami.

BRANDON STALEY….A late entrant into the interview process, all of a sudden getting alot of play.  The Chargers interviewed him a second time on Sunday now that the Rams are out of the playoffs.  Might he become the next coming of Sean McVay or possibly a John Harbaugh?  Stay tuned for a possible surprise this week.

JOE BRADY….A brilliant year at LSU”s national championship team with Joe Burrow a year ago, he went to Carolina as the offensive coordinator on a new coaching staff.  But the Panthers didn’t accomplish much so does anyone know how really good Brady is in the NFL?

JOSH MC DANIELS….A tremendous success story with Tom Brady in New England.  A hot coordinator years ago, he got his chance with the Denver Broncos, but it all fell apart with the enormous QB problems the John Elway-led franchise has had.  McDaniels went back to Foxboro and picked up where he left off.  But he walked out a day after accepting the Colts job, and then did not wind up in Cleveland.  Something seems amiss in his relationships?  Maybe this late interview with the just-opened Eagles job gets him back as a head coach.

MATT EBERFLUS…The least known of the gang being interviewed.  He is credited with creating a very good Indianapolis Colts defense that wound up in the playoffs, though GM-Chris Ballard has done a superb job tracking that Colts roster.  Might be a bit of a reach to hire him after one good season.

JIM CALDWELL…There seems to be alot of sentiment after the successes he had with the Colts and Lions, and a (62-50) record deserves respect, but he was axed by two teams, when his QBs got hurt, or was that because he worked for bad owners, Jim Irsay and the Ford Family?  Seems to be the outside looking in.

MARVIN LEWIS…A long run with the Bengals and their poorly led owner Mike Brown, most feel he did a rock solid job as a head coach, after all those years as an assistant with the Baltimore Ravens.  But you cannot set aside this piece of history, (0-7) in the playoffs.

LESLIE FRAZIER…A highly regarded defensive coordinator, who failed with the Bears, but has rebuilt his reputation again in Buffalo.  Great coordinator but poor head coach?

RAHEEM MORRIS…The same storyline as Frazier, and did a decent job rallying the Falcons as interim head coach, but they did not retain him, so what does that say?

TODD BOWLES…Cut from the same cloth as Frazier and Morris and continues to be strong as a respected coordinator and leader.  His bad stretch as head coach of the Jets was while back.

DOUG PEDERSON…This ended so badly in Philadelphia, but he didnt’ get stupid ih just one season.  Injuries destroyed the Eagles offensive front, 5-of-6 starters gone for the year, and no wide receivers either with injuries. But Carson Wentz declined badly and Pederson could not stop the erosion.  Maybe he winds up as a coordinator for a year.

“WHO’S BEEN HIRED”

URBAN MEYER…This was a surprise hire, in that Meyer had never shown any inkling of wanting back in coaching, and then presto, he goes back home, to Jacksonville, a just an hour from all those great years in Gainesville with the Florida Gators.  He won 3-playoff titles, and went (83-9)  at Ohio State, but left those two jobs with burnout and heart issues.  The NFL is a different world.  Meyer was used to have 5-star bluechips all over his roster.  In the NFL he inherits a threadbare roster, no quarterback, gets two first round picks this year and 77M in salary cap space.  But he’s not used to losing, and they are going to lose for the next group of years, even with Trevor Lawrence as their quarterback.  Does he have the patience, fortitude and health to do this.  History is there to look at.  Outside of Jimmy Johnson (Dallas) and Pete Carroll (Seattle)…the road is littered with college coaches who failed in the NFL, from Barry Switzer to Lou Holtz to Steve Spurrier and even Nick Saban.

ARTHUR SMITH…An unsung smart guy, winds up in Atlanta after doing marvelous things with Tennessee.  He groomed Marcus Mariota with the Titans, till injuries impacted Mariota’s career.  Then he designed a tremendou playbook as he reconstructed the career of QB- Ryan Tanneill, built an offensive line, and fed the ball to power back Derrick Henry.  He walks into Atlanta with a star QB-Matt Ryan, WR-Julio Jones, but needs lots more players.

ROBERT SALEH…He had his choice of three jobs, and took the Jets job, despite a bad roster, an unsteady GM office and questionable ownership.  He does have a battered QB-Sam Darnold and some young athletes, plus a 5 year contract.  He is smart, passionate, and well groomed for this job.

“NFL OWNERS”

A tough call for the owner of a troubled team.

Do you hope you can catch “Lightning in a Bottle” and hire the right coordinator like Sean McVay, Sean McDermott, Kevin Stefansk?

Do you think you can hire a “retread” who has struggled somewhere else but could succeed a second time as a head coach.

Is there a college coach you think can do this, like they’ve invested in Matt Rhule.

Stay tuned, the next two weeks will be something to follow.

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