Is Rick just stubborn, or is it far worse?

The Franchise

The Best EVER
Premium
Joined
Sep 4, 2012
Messages
43,263
People always talk about coaches being stubborn and having huge egos. Dumb coaches are stubborn. Bad coaches are stubborn. Good coaches who have self-respect and respect for their employers and supporters always adapt and stay on the cutting edge.

Look at the best in the business (Sabag). He used to feature 380 pound DTs and overweight LBs on his D and run an ultra-conservative offense. Then, uptempo teams like Old **** embarrassed him. So he immediately started recruiting more speed and emphasized size less. On offense, he broke away from what he did his entire career and is now wide open.

Would you call a surgeon using outdated equipment and techniques stubborn? Or would you call him a malpractizing idiot who should be jailed?

I understand football isn’t life and death to most sissies these days. But, at the very least, if you’re paying someone a lot more money than most surgeons make, then you, as the entity forking out the $4+M per, think football is incredibly important to your operation.

When the guy you’re paying all that money tells you he’s running the plays he ran 30 years ago and that explosive plays don’t matter and that it’s painfully obvious to everyone who has watched more than 2 football games that his system is antiquated basic garbage that clearly isn’t working, then shouldn’t that chump be subjected to immediate, swift and unequivocal consequences and mandates? Like any other incredibly highly-paid professional who admits to malpractice like Rick has?

Why should a coach making more money than 99% of the population have his malpractice excused away with “oh coach is just stubborn and has an ego?” If he had a legit ego he’d be embarrassed and humiliated by his own public persistent failure. And he’d fix the problem immediately to save his own legacy and reputation if nothing else.

It’s not ego; it’s outright lack of care or lack of the ability or willingness to make tough decisions. Either should be a terminal condition for a professional making over $4M per.
 
Advertisement
Chise we have seen this before but I believe this situation is far worse than the last three coaches.

Richt has enough money to not care what so ever.

Just look at some of the hires he made. They are all geared around his ability to completely control the offense. I hear some people saying Perry is in the doghouse. Ok and? He and his son SIGNED OFF on this kid. Instead of playing Jarren Williams he wants to continue playing a QB who he has stated would never play for him to begin with, but now this same kid whose 1-6 against P5 teams in the last 7 games is the only one to put us in a position to succeed?

Between the commentary of:

"It is really hard to play on the road."

"Virginia and BC are tough environments"

"Well if :insert penalty/excuse: here had happened we wouldn't have...."

"11 teams in the top 25 lost this past weekend"

"If the players executed"


What other coaching staffs did we have all this verbiage from? Rhetorical question to be sure. The last three had a mix of all of this. This guy is not here to win. He wants to retire here. He said that right from the get go.

At best he is in denial about his ability to coach an offense or at worst just doesn't care because his ego or lack of drive.

I think we probably finish the year 8-4.....7-5. I can easily see us losing out.

This is arguably the most talented team in 15 years and when the announces said "Miami just does not have the talent on offense" I **** near shed a tear out of the hoodwinking Corch Richt has pulled off.

He won't be fired this year....or next year but this guy will not win at Miami barring him replacing the entire offensive philosophy and giving someone else control.

Depressing. Purgatory sucks.
 
Little bit of both probably. I think Rick thinks he's a lot smarter than he really is and is out to prove his scheme/methods can still be effective. I also think he's completely oblivious to the fact that the game is a **** hair from passing by (if it hasn't already) if he doesn't adjust. There is absolutely zero creativity in his offensive system. I legit believe the pass DJ threw was inspired by the two BC connected in on prior to that.

I don't think it's too late for him to be a successful HC here if he takes on a strictly CEO/Face of the Program type roll and leaves the X's and O's to dedicated coordinators who are given free reign to implement and run their systems.

But that would require him making the necessary changes to his staff, and I don't think he's willing to make those decisions.
 
I think semi-successful coaches can also just fall victim to believing TOO much in and being TOO loyal to the systems and thought processes that have elevated them to the level where they are making more than 99% of the population.

It's almost a composite of being too stubborn with a touch of ineptitude as they trust their own "process" to a fault.
 
Lester, then we force him to make said changes, ALL of them, or he’s gone. I’m tired of him robbing the university that’s served 3 generations of my family. I’ve pumped $$$ after $$$ as a booster and I’m done. Either he changes, gets his **** canned, or the money dries up. I have the faith in the BoT that they see this sh** show for what it is, and will make the necessary changes required to move the program in a positive direction. We don’t put $34 million into an IPF and allow it to be misused by this chump. Let him sit up on his perch; but take his hands off the offense and defense and ST’s. He either learns how to be an effective and efficient CEO, or push him off the perch I paid good, hard earned $$$ for, and send him packing.
 
People always talk about coaches being stubborn and having huge egos. Dumb coaches are stubborn. Bad coaches are stubborn. Good coaches who have self-respect and respect for their employers and supporters always adapt and stay on the cutting edge.

Look at the best in the business (Sabag). He used to feature 380 pound DTs and overweight LBs on his D and run an ultra-conservative offense. Then, uptempo teams like Old **** embarrassed him. So he immediately started recruiting more speed and emphasized size less. On offense, he broke away from what he did his entire career and is now wide open.

Would you call a surgeon using outdated equipment and techniques stubborn? Or would you call him a malpractizing idiot who should be jailed?

I understand football isn’t life and death to most sissies these days. But, at the very least, if you’re paying someone a lot more money than most surgeons make, then you, as the entity forking out the $4+M per, think football is incredibly important to your operation.

When the guy you’re paying all that money tells you he’s running the plays he ran 30 years ago and that explosive plays don’t matter and that it’s painfully obvious to everyone who has watched more than 2 football games that his system is antiquated basic garbage that clearly isn’t working, then shouldn’t that chump be subjected to immediate, swift and unequivocal consequences and mandates? Like any other incredibly highly-paid professional who admits to malpractice like Rick has?

Why should a coach making more money than 99% of the population have his malpractice excused away with “oh coach is just stubborn and has an ego?” If he had a legit ego he’d be embarrassed and humiliated by his own public persistent failure. And he’d fix the problem immediately to save his own legacy and reputation if nothing else.

It’s not ego; it’s outright lack of care or lack of the ability or willingness to make tough decisions. Either should be a terminal condition for a professional making over $4M per.

Perfectly stated!
A HC should not be married to a system or a philosophy.
He should not be coordinator.
He should not be so close to his staff that their livelihood and well being becomes more important than what’s best for the football program.
The HC should be the ultimate evaluator. Constantly evaluating every aspect of his football program and making adjustments and changes as needed.
 
Advertisement
It's absolutely stubbornness mixed with ignorance. Richt's admitted to running the same stuff that worked for him 30 years ago. This is what made him successful before so he figures it'll work now. Problem is, the game's evolved and we're not gonna out-athlete people like he used to.

Now he needs to evolve but he's too antiquated to adapt to the new systems and schemes out there. An offensive coach who had his hands on the offense for the past 15 years, unlike Richt, would be going to offensive coaching clinics and staying up to date. I don't think Richt in his time at UGA stayed current. Now his ignorance of modern offensive philosophies is lacking and we're stuck with this old, plodding system with no hope of evolving.
 
People always talk about coaches being stubborn and having huge egos. Dumb coaches are stubborn. Bad coaches are stubborn. Good coaches who have self-respect and respect for their employers and supporters always adapt and stay on the cutting edge.

Look at the best in the business (Sabag). He used to feature 380 pound DTs and overweight LBs on his D and run an ultra-conservative offense. Then, uptempo teams like Old **** embarrassed him. So he immediately started recruiting more speed and emphasized size less. On offense, he broke away from what he did his entire career and is now wide open.

Would you call a surgeon using outdated equipment and techniques stubborn? Or would you call him a malpractizing idiot who should be jailed?

I understand football isn’t life and death to most sissies these days. But, at the very least, if you’re paying someone a lot more money than most surgeons make, then you, as the entity forking out the $4+M per, think football is incredibly important to your operation.

When the guy you’re paying all that money tells you he’s running the plays he ran 30 years ago and that explosive plays don’t matter and that it’s painfully obvious to everyone who has watched more than 2 football games that his system is antiquated basic garbage that clearly isn’t working, then shouldn’t that chump be subjected to immediate, swift and unequivocal consequences and mandates? Like any other incredibly highly-paid professional who admits to malpractice like Rick has?

Why should a coach making more money than 99% of the population have his malpractice excused away with “oh coach is just stubborn and has an ego?” If he had a legit ego he’d be embarrassed and humiliated by his own public persistent failure. And he’d fix the problem immediately to save his own legacy and reputation if nothing else.

It’s not ego; it’s outright lack of care or lack of the ability or willingness to make tough decisions. Either should be a terminal condition for a professional making over $4M per.
In hiring, it all reduces to skill and will.

Richt has neither.

Sorry. He doesn’t.

Not an offensive mind, not a great hirer of staff, not a great evaluatory of talent, or motivator.

Not a guy who anyone (himself included) would say winning really matters to him more than other things. Not driven by passion to suceed at football.

Not skilled to be great head coach. Not the will to be a great head coach.

Someone move that deck chair. Someone else play a sonata. The boat isn’t sinking. It can’t be. It’s unsinkable.
 
It seems to be a combination of incompetence and stubbornness. His words and actions show he won't change. But even if he did, I doubt he has the aptitude to make any changes that would result in improved performance.
 
Advertisement
All jokes side, I honestly think he feels under no circumstances whatsoever does he need to do anything differently. He genuinely feels his way works all the time, we just need to shut up & let him do God's work.

One major Red flag was this offseason when Richt would constantly make the "we won 10 games" excuse to justify sticking with Malik, he was defensive about people questioning whether we would go with a new QB. Then the fact we had a faux QB competition actually set us behind the 8ball big time because none of the younger QB's got a real chance to prove themselves.

Him insisting on calling plays & not hiring anybody on the offensive staff with real experience that could challenge his authority speaks to me as a Coach that was ****-bent on proving the administration at UGA wrong when they forced him to get an OC.

I just think Richt is burnt out & refuses to change because this is his last stop, he's not really trying to get another big time gig, so he's taking his time slow & steady, while in the meantime Miami just isn't up to par to be a Conference contender.

What we need is to go the Lincoln Riley route & hire a young up comer that comes from an innovative offensive background & can put the focus on bringing Miami into the 21st century with offensive production, which will help our recruiting & get us those easy wins against teams when we have the decided talent advantage.
 
To me, it is egoism first. He hasn't really taken responsibility for the lack of offensive effectiveness. It is always "our 11 guys failed to execute" or like you said "these plays have been working for 30 years."

If he truly thinks his plays work with such damning evidence against that, not only is he stubborn, but he's ignorant as well.
 
People always talk about coaches being stubborn and having huge egos. Dumb coaches are stubborn. Bad coaches are stubborn. Good coaches who have self-respect and respect for their employers and supporters always adapt and stay on the cutting edge.

Look at the best in the business (Sabag). He used to feature 380 pound DTs and overweight LBs on his D and run an ultra-conservative offense. Then, uptempo teams like Old **** embarrassed him. So he immediately started recruiting more speed and emphasized size less. On offense, he broke away from what he did his entire career and is now wide open.

Would you call a surgeon using outdated equipment and techniques stubborn? Or would you call him a malpractizing idiot who should be jailed?

I understand football isn’t life and death to most sissies these days. But, at the very least, if you’re paying someone a lot more money than most surgeons make, then you, as the entity forking out the $4+M per, think football is incredibly important to your operation.

When the guy you’re paying all that money tells you he’s running the plays he ran 30 years ago and that explosive plays don’t matter and that it’s painfully obvious to everyone who has watched more than 2 football games that his system is antiquated basic garbage that clearly isn’t working, then shouldn’t that chump be subjected to immediate, swift and unequivocal consequences and mandates? Like any other incredibly highly-paid professional who admits to malpractice like Rick has?

Why should a coach making more money than 99% of the population have his malpractice excused away with “oh coach is just stubborn and has an ego?” If he had a legit ego he’d be embarrassed and humiliated by his own public persistent failure. And he’d fix the problem immediately to save his own legacy and reputation if nothing else.

It’s not ego; it’s outright lack of care or lack of the ability or willingness to make tough decisions. Either should be a terminal condition for a professional making over $4M per.

Ive said it for awhile, the guy is a narcissist and delusional
 
Majority of coaches are stubborn especially when it comes to themselves. The difference is the great coaches dont hold on too long and let shît get out of hand.
 
Back
Top