Why was Shannon ever fired then? He was the one who routinely threw into triple coverage. He was the one who was out of position and had to tackle someone by their hand warmers. What about Coker? What about all of those times he let Kyle Wright get sacked? Or when he ducked under a wide open pass?Gotta love hindsight.
Blame the coaches for EVERYTHING.
Golden threw that screen pass at UL. He also fumbled at Neb in a important moment.
Only game I'll listen to you all about coaching failing is GT.
Nope Shannon was fired because we were in a downward spiral. His recruiting classes sucked and he's was a horrible coach. FSU pounded us in Shannon final season then he goes and takes a L to USF lol
I'll never forget him and his coordinators arguing on the sidelines. How about continuously kicking to CJ Spiller. Maybe it was having a #1 recruiting class and not doing a thing with it or a class after. Guys were flying around tho.
Golden will get and deserves a 5th yr and you decide his future after. Its that simple. The hate our coaching staff receives is hilarious. They went from losing every game after Nebraska in a lot of people eyes on this board to dominating opponents and still getting no credit. Was FSU lost a squandered opportunity yes but it wasn't on coaching. The loss sucks but step back and actually take a unbiased look.
Also if golden is fired you can kiss them 15' & 16' classes bye bye
Our offensive skill positions are a mess next year unless Coley takes a giant leap forward and Rashawn Scott is healthy and back to form. Everybody else is decent at best. RB is trouble.
Our offensive skill positions are a mess next year unless Coley takes a giant leap forward and Rashawn Scott is healthy and back to form. Everybody else is decent at best. RB is trouble.
Disagree big time. Kaaya will have a year under his belt and another summer to get accustomed to guys like Waters, Scott, Berrios, Coley, etc. Once they get that timing down. I think we wil be fine.
I fully expect for Stacey Coley to come back with a vengeance next year and be our #1 WR. For some reason, I am just not worried about him. I am preparing myself for the press release once the season is over that says either he was battling a nagging injury that needed surgery but never complained and just wanted to play through it or that he was dealing with a family issue off the field. Something aint right with him this year.
RB is the last thing I am worried about too. It will hurt not having Duke but a combination of Scarlett, Yearby, Edwards, Walton, and DWilliams will be more then fine. RB is the easiest position to make an impact your T-FR year. I fully expect Yearby and Scarlett to hold things down next year.
When is this site going to do a front page story calling for Golden to be fired?
Never so just drop it
When is this site going to do a front page story calling for Golden to be fired?
As soon as you want all the media access you all pay so much for to get revoked. That's when.
Not exactly ESPN/Miami Herald level clout being wielded around here. Baby steps.
When was the last time this site interviewed a current player or corch?
The second you quit your paying job and start doing it.
When's the last time most on here gave a crap what a coach said in an interview anyway. A head coaches job is 1/3rd coach, 1/3rd car salesman and 1/3rd PR guy anyway.
The value of this site is the inside stuff with people sharing what they find out. Is half of it BS? I'm sure. The rest of it is usually still more info than you'll get with a $9.99 Scout subscription that's for sure.
We're going to be stuck in perpetual "missed opportunity land" unless certain things permanently change. Players will always make mistakes. You will always be able to point to a fumble, missed tackle or bad read. Players just need to be placed in as many opportunities as possible to succeed. Ultimately, that's a coach's entire job - from in-game to off the field. The FSU game wasn't actually an egregious example of poor maximization of talent, but GT and Nebraska were. If we had **** the bed, as we did, against Louisville, won the rest of our games and then choked, as we did, against FSU, I'd have more hope. We'd also be competing for the ACC Coastal.
The bottom line with this team is that it will go down as a extremely talented team (wait till a couple years to see how many NFL players we were playing who *already* had college experience) that was operating on a razor thin margin of error.
Experienced college players on the 2014 squad who will likely play in the NFL:
Duke Johnson
Stacy Coley
Phillip Dorsett
Clive Walford
Ereck Flowers
Jon Feliciano
Herb Waters
Tyriq Mccord
(Anthony Chickillo?)
Denzel Perryman
(Jermaine Grace is a Soph., but may classify as inexperienced)
Artie Burns
Ladarius Gunter
Tracy Howard
Deon Bush
(Antonio Crawford, maybe)
(Corn Elder may not classify because of inexperience)
I'm probably missing some. That's a ****load of talent. I give Golden credit for collecting it. I'm disappointed we're, at best, an 8-4 team. We didn't even suffer significant, team-crippling injuries for extended periods of time, so that can't be an excuse.
On the point of sufficient talent and where we are going forward, I think that somewhat surprisingly, it's the talent that we're losing on offense and the guys that are supposed to fill that void that, at least in the short term, will be the biggest issue and may prevent us from "trending" in the right direction. There are obviously guys that will step up, just like a guy like Dorsett stepped up after losing Hurns, but I think that next year our offense has a ton of question marks.
I think the people that are saying that Yearby, Gus, Gray? and the freshmen RBs that are coming in will definitely replace Duke are significantly undervaluing Duke. He may not be quite as talented as Edge or McGahee, but as solid as Yearby has been, there is absolutely a big dropoff. Dorsett has the ability to take the top off a defense unlike anyone else, including Coley, and he also was a very tough player and reliable blocker on the outside. Waters disappeared as the season went on, Lewis isn't nearly as quick as he was, and Berrios is a good slot guy but didn't flash game changing skills. Rashawn Scott has been hurt or suspended seemingly his whole career and who knows what we have in Langham or Brady.
Walford has developed into a beast, and what makes us think that Dobard is definitely going to be able to replace him? We're likely losing the starting left side of our OL and our starting C. McDermott may be a JAG, but who is going to replace him? Gall has been hurt and is unproven. We return S. McDermott, Gadbois, Darling, Linder and Isidora (a very solid OL), but what depth do we have? Are we going to have to rely again on true freshmen on our OL to provide depth in year 5?
I think that with the guys we had this year that are graduating or will leave early, there was simply no reason to be an 8-4 team. The whole "young team" narrative was really inaccurate, because other than our QB and the right side of our OL, we were a team with experienced guys starting at almost every position. In college football, you're obviously going to lose some players every year, but this is a year where we're losing some pretty significant players without knowing who will be replacing them next year. As good as Kaaya is, I guess I just don't see us as a team that is ready to make that next step, at least not with this coaching staff and the mentality/strategy they bring.
I can't believe this dude just typed that
Let ME know where I'm wrong. I'm down to be wrong and completely off base.
I can't believe this dude just typed that
Let ME know where I'm wrong. I'm down to be wrong and completely off base.
In the 3 years leading up to Jimbo winning a National Championship, he won:
10 games
9 games
12 games
2 ACC titles
3-0 bowl games
Finished every season ranked in the top 25
Golden has won.......?
0 ACC titles.
Coastal Titles? Nope. Can't win his division.
Finish the year ranked? Fail.
Double digit games in a season? Ha.
Not to mention, this whole "learn how to win games" shlt is funny, how are you supposed to learn how to win games you keep losing? That's like saying I wanna learn how to cook, so I go into my kitchen once a week and throw eggs at the wall while I shlt my pants.
Lastly, it's not about the players learning how to win these games, college football rosters flip quicker than a flapjack at sunrise (wut). The head coach needs to know how to win big games.
The most talented players on this team are gone next season. GOLDEN needs to know how to win these games, and he needs to pass that on to the next crop of kids every season. This isn't the NFL where the team will have the same players for 6 or 7 years. It falls on the head guy.
And guess what? For the second season in a row, Golden has lost to the 4 best teams he's played. That's 0-8 over the last 2 season against the best competition, so as much as I hate the man, don't disrespect Jimbo by comparing him to this fking hack.





Thankfully, RB is one of the few positions where a true freshman can easily step in and play D1A football (pass pro is the biggest challenge). I'm hopeful ONE of the guys can provide meaningful carries. I'm also hopeful Gus can continue his improvement as a reserve bruiser. Quiet as kept, I think him being out against FSU did something to our RB rotation.
I'm not too worried about TE because I really like Dobard and Herndon and (hopefully) Njoku can be adequate replacements.
Like Lu said, Linder's play this year has made a huge difference in the outlook for next year. KCM, TD have shown that they can be solid players next year and I'm sure the coaches will give Linder a shot at Center. That would be ideal.
Lastly, WR - biggest question mark. Scott can't stay healthy and Dorsett is a tremendous field stretcher. Coley can be that guy but he's been in another universe this year. Coaches only seem to use him as a decoy or a bubble screen guy. NEed to get him touches. Waters and Lewis are unreliable and frankly, not very good (Lewis is a couple steps slow). Hopefully Berrios can have a nice spring.
Why does everyone seem to ignore that Jimbo was effectively the shadow HC at FSU for THREE seasons before Bowden retired? And he lost SIXTEEN (16) games. He also lost 10 games his first 3 seasons as official HC.
Jimbo has certainly finally gotten it right at FSU, though we will see how he does without Winston, who has taken them where they are. But lets also not act like Jimbo just walked right in and magically transformed FSU into a powerhouse overnight.
waste of a season & talent.
Dorsett, Duke, Flowers, Armbrister, Walford, Perryman, Mongo, Chick, Gunter, etc. all gone.
I'm concerned if we can fill these holes next year and there's nothing to show me that we will turn those missed opportunties into capitalized moments.
Why does everyone seem to ignore that Jimbo was effectively the shadow HC at FSU for THREE seasons before Bowden retired? And he lost SIXTEEN (16) games. He also lost 10 games his first 3 seasons as official HC.
Jimbo has certainly finally gotten it right at FSU, though we will see how he does without Winston, who has taken them where they are. But lets also not act like Jimbo just walked right in and magically transformed FSU into a powerhouse overnight.
Shadow? Cool, great experience. Golden was a HEAD coach for 5 seasons.
And I love pointing out his losses, let's ignore the 2 double digit win seasons, 3 bowl game wins, and 2 ACC titles. Good lord.
Why does everyone seem to ignore that Jimbo was effectively the shadow HC at FSU for THREE seasons before Bowden retired? And he lost SIXTEEN (16) games. He also lost 10 games his first 3 seasons as official HC.
Jimbo has certainly finally gotten it right at FSU, though we will see how he does without Winston, who has taken them where they are. But lets also not act like Jimbo just walked right in and magically transformed FSU into a powerhouse overnight.
Shadow? Cool, great experience. Golden was a HEAD coach for 5 seasons.
And I love pointing out his losses, let's ignore the 2 double digit win seasons, 3 bowl game wins, and 2 ACC titles. Good lord.
Yes, but you are really going to compare Temple to Florida State?? Jimbo was brought in to be the HC in waiting, and was the defacto HC at FSU while Bobby was drooling on himself and everyone was waiting for him to just retire because no one wanted to 'push out the legend".
Jimbo showed up in 2007, and in his first 3 seasons, FSU went on to have 2 of the WORST seasons in 40 years. Losing SIXTEEN games those 3 years. People were ready to HANG Jimbo at FSU, but Bobby took the blame, even though he wasn't even running his own diaper drawer by then.
And then Jimbo OFFICIALLY takes over, and in his first 3 years? TEN losses.
It wasn't until Winston showed up that Jimbo's fortunes really improved. So lets stop acting like Jimbo is some sort of Demigod that parted the Red Sea in Tallahassee and saved them from wandering the desert when he arrived. Jimbo was basically running that program for 6 years before he did **** up there. And his first 5 were a total disaster.
Why does everyone seem to ignore that Jimbo was effectively the shadow HC at FSU for THREE seasons before Bowden retired? And he lost SIXTEEN (16) games. He also lost 10 games his first 3 seasons as official HC.
Jimbo has certainly finally gotten it right at FSU, though we will see how he does without Winston, who has taken them where they are. But lets also not act like Jimbo just walked right in and magically transformed FSU into a powerhouse overnight.
Shadow? Cool, great experience. Golden was a HEAD coach for 5 seasons.
And I love pointing out his losses, let's ignore the 2 double digit win seasons, 3 bowl game wins, and 2 ACC titles. Good lord.
Yes, but you are really going to compare Temple to Florida State?? Jimbo was brought in to be the HC in waiting, and was the defacto HC at FSU while Bobby was drooling on himself and everyone was waiting for him to just retire because no one wanted to 'push out the legend".
Jimbo showed up in 2007, and in his first 3 seasons, FSU went on to have 2 of the WORST seasons in 40 years. Losing SIXTEEN games those 3 years. People were ready to HANG Jimbo at FSU, but Bobby took the blame, even though he wasn't even running his own diaper drawer by then.
And then Jimbo OFFICIALLY takes over, and in his first 3 years? TEN losses.
It wasn't until Winston showed up that Jimbo's fortunes really improved. So lets stop acting like Jimbo is some sort of Demigod that parted the Red Sea in Tallahassee and saved them from wandering the desert when he arrived. Jimbo was basically running that program for 6 years before he did **** up there. And his first 5 were a total disaster.
FSU in Jimbo's first 3 years won 10+ games twice, won their division of the ACC twice, and won the ACC. Just stop. Basically every coach that has done great things at their school in the BCS era has won pretty big within 4 years, and that's the bottom line that isn't debatable.
I can't believe this dude just typed that
Let ME know where I'm wrong. I'm down to be wrong and completely off base.
You're talking about maturation process when our roster is littered with upperclassmen and massive amounts of experience.
Besides QB, who would you say has a lot of maturing to do? Mind you Kayaa is extremely mature and poised for a true freshman QB.
Our RB is an all-american junior RB who's been getting major minutes since he was a freshman.
Same goes for our LT who will be drafted in the first two rounds next year. Feliciano and McDermott have massive amounts of experience. Yes, Linder, Isadora and Darling are young, but they held their own.
Senior, possibly all-american TE.
Senior, deep threat WR in Dorsett. Waters, a junior. Lewis, a 3rd year player, who's 100% after is bad injury two years ago.
On defense, Pierre and Chick are both seniors with massive amounts of PT. Heurt is a JuCo transfer who's played well for us all year.
DP and Thurston are seniors. McCord is a junior. Kirby is a junior who's finally put it together. Grace is a sophomore with great instincts.
Gunter, a senior. Howard a junior who's played since he stepped on campus. Crawford is a junior. Burns, a high-school all-american sophomore.
Bush, has played since he stepped on campus. Crawford, is a 3rd year player (?) back at DB after a year at RB. And our coaches are set on playing Fentress, and I feel like he's been at Miami forever.
So again, where do you see us maturing?
It's not about the year next to their name. It's about playing in big games against good competition and learning what needs to be done in close games to win them. I'm not saying that this is 1999, but a junior Santana Moss, a junior Dan Morgan, a Junior Damione Lewis, and a junior Reggie Wayne lost close games as well to good competition.
If even they had to go through this stage, where it seemed that the talent was there, but the results didn't add up, what makes you think that a team that is nowhere NEAR as talented as that team was, can simply skip over this stage in their development?
It's not about them being great players individually. They've done the work required to improve themselves and become technically sound football players, it's about learning how to apply that to WINNING. Everything that is available to read from any successful coach is that winning is just as much a skill as shooting a basketball or cut blocking or hitting a baseball. It's a learned exercise.
I think that's why there was an outpouring of love and understanding from the Cane Alumni after the game. There are a lot of guys who have been at that point where it isn't adding up and even though they themselves are great players, they were still losing games. Mel Bratton, Zo, Jerome, and the rest of those boys lost 5 times in '84 and most of them in wretched fashion whether it be a Hail Mary or blowing a massive lead.
Standish Dobard is a talented kid who is probably going to go on to be a whale of a player here, but as of right now, he's young. Standish has probably been told time and again by coaches on the staff about protecting the football and the importance of securing and on numerous occasions, he has probably thought to himself, "I got it, I wish they would stop talking about that dumb ****" or just out and out ignore it. He wet the bed on National Television for the whole wide world to see. Most lessons are all lessons learned through experience. I'm sure he understands now. That pain the he felt in the locker room after the game, will push him to be better, to be more fundamentally sound, to be more accountable to his teammates...TO "REFUSE TO LOSE." Same goes for Braxton Berrios, Sunny Odogwu, Michael Wyche and HOPEFULLY Al Golden, James Coley, and Mark D'Onofrio.
There is no consoling in the praise of moral victories, but to not acknowledge where these guys have come from is ignorant. Do you guys remember K. State? Notre Dame? Where they were just some little punk kids gettin mushed about the field? They're a long way from that and the hope is that they finally put it all together.
Everyone like to win. It's good. Feels good.
But what separates Golden from Saban, or JJ, or any number of other Head Coaches, past and present is - Golden doesn't hate to lose.
Think about Saban. He hates to lose. In fact, anything short of a perfect game to Saban is Hateful. His dissatisfaction after every game is something to see. Ol' Ball Coach hates losing worse than anything. These are MEN.
Golden doesn't enjoy losing, but Golden doesn't hate it. And if you have any doubts, consider the interviews by players over the past damned-near-four years. Not one of them is ****ed. Not one of them has said they hated losing by either words or attitude. Snickers was a prime example of a Golden-give-a-**** indoctrination.
A man cannot have two fears of equal strength. He'll fear losing, or his hatred of losing - only one can dominate.
Golden fears losing - thus the prevent style lockup in his bowels in games with any difficulty whatsoever.
Golden's FEAR of LOSING, is stronger than his HATRED of LOSING.
And that's in him. His DNA. His core personality.
And that will NOT change. That's why he'll never win a championship. Golden couldn't win a championship with the '72 Dolphins.