I can dig it.Saban
Dabo
Day
Smart
Harbaugh
Riley
B. Kelly
Kiffin
C. Kelly
Leach
Gundy
Fisher
Huepel
Mario
Franklin
Whittingham
Dykes
Doehren
Im just listing names off I would say top 15 ish for Mario.
Your last sentence makes him a disciple.I wouldn’t really call Kiffin a Saban disciple. He had been hired and fired from a couple of big time gigs before working for Saban. I’m pretty sure being around Saban taught him how to properly run a big program, tho.
I disagree. He was with Saban for how long? To me, a coaching disciple is someone that was working under an established coach BEFORE he landed a big time job. Kiffin had 3 major jobs (including one in the NFL) before he ever got to Saban. IMO Kiffin is more of a Pete Carroll disciple, that learned some things while he was having a few cups of coffee in Tuscaloosa. It's semantics, but Saban does deserve a good deal of credit for his current success.Your last sentence makes him a disciple.
And that’s just fanspeak honestly. That’s not how coaches view it amongst themselves. I know lane a little bit too. He had more than a cup of coffee. If you ask him he learned more there than anywhereI disagree. He was with Saban for how long? To me, a coaching disciple is someone that was working under an established coach BEFORE he landed a big time job. Kiffin had 3 major jobs (including one in the NFL) before he ever got to Saban. IMO Kiffin is more of a Pete Carroll disciple, that learned some things while he was having a few cups of coffee in Tuscaloosa. It's semantics, but Saban does deserve a good deal of credit for his current success.
Good one on chip Kelly. I think what he’s done at ucla has been a slow burn but they look good. And they play second fiddle in their own citySaban
Dabo
Day
Smart
Harbaugh
Riley
B. Kelly
Kiffin
C. Kelly
Leach
Gundy
Fisher
Huepel
Mario
Franklin
Whittingham
Dykes
Doehren
Im just listing names off I would say top 15 ish for Mario.
This. Add to it his **** dad was a long tenured nfl coach.I disagree. He was with Saban for how long? To me, a coaching disciple is someone that was working under an established coach BEFORE he landed a big time job. Kiffin had 3 major jobs (including one in the NFL) before he ever got to Saban. IMO Kiffin is more of a Pete Carroll disciple, that learned some things while he was having a few cups of coffee in Tuscaloosa. It's semantics, but Saban does deserve a good deal of credit for his current success.
It seems like they forgot he was a coach in waiting. Bobby Bowden was Lee Corso for those years and basically just the guy that rode out on a golf cart before the games or did in home visits with parents.TrumpyCane wants to know if people forget Jimbo was OC at FSU for 3 years before he took over as HC?
Facts. His dad is like football coaching, royalty.This. Add to it his **** dad was a long tenured nfl coach.
Disagree with that. By the time Jimbo left, that lockeroom was a toxic mess.
I respectfully disagree because I know quite a bit of college coaches, and the ones I talk to, lean more in the opposite direction. We're all branches off of someone's "tree". The disciple stuff is just fanspeak, but the thought is once you become an established coach (head coach, OC, or DC), your underlings are effectively the start of your own "tree", even though you're still a branch off of someone else's. All coaches have roots (whether it's O/D scheme, play calling, terminology, or whatever) in systems that they believe in. Like I have been in this coaching thing for so long (about 25 years), I can **** near tell an OC's or DC's system roots, just by watching game film, or hearing him make a play call. You can see and hear the similarities in each call. Once you become an established coach, you can pick up stuff you like from other coaches, but you not from their "tree". Like Rhett Lashlee can work for Manny Diaz, for 12 years, but he's not, nor will he ever be from the Manny Diaz "tree" (LMAO at the thought of Manny actually having a coaching tree). He's a Gus Malzhan guy. Same with Mullen, he can work anywhere he chooses, for anyone he chooses to work for, for however long he wants to, but he's still a branch off of Urban Meyer. If you ask me, the Saban/Kiffin marriage was a helluva trade off. Lane got the info on the inner secrets of how to coach a big time program and Saban got the ins and outs of a modern day pro style offense, which as of 2022, Bama's O still has some of Lane's fingerprints on it. Now you don't have to agree with me. It's your right, but that's how coaches see it.And that’s just fanspeak honestly. That’s not how coaches view it amongst themselves. I know lane a little bit too. He had more than a cup of coffee. If you ask him he learned more there than anywhere
We can agree to disagree for sureI respectfully disagree because I know quite a bit of college coaches, and the ones I talk to, lean more in the opposite direction. We're all branches off of someone's "tree". The disciple stuff is just fanspeak, but the thought is once you become an established coach (head coach, OC, or DC), your underlings are effectively the start of your own "tree", even though you're still a branch off of someone else's. All coaches have roots (whether it's O/D scheme, play calling, terminology, or whatever) in systems that they believe in. Like I have been in this coaching thing for so long (about 25 years), I can **** near tell an OC's or DC's system roots, just by watching game film, or hearing him make a play call. You can see and hear the similarities in each call. Once you become an established coach, you can pick up stuff you like from other coaches, but you not from their "tree". Like Rhett Lashlee can work for Manny Diaz, for 12 years, but he's not, nor will he ever be from the Manny Diaz "tree" (LMAO at the thought of Manny actually having a coaching tree). He's a Gus Malzhan guy. Same with Mullen, he can work anywhere he chooses, for anyone he chooses to work for, for however long he wants to, but he's still a branch off of Urban Meyer. If you ask me, the Saban/Kiffin marriage was a helluva trade off. Lane got the info on the inner secrets of how to coach a big time program and Saban got the ins and outs of a modern day pro style offense, which as of 2022, Bama's O still has some of Lane's fingerprints on it. Now you don't have to agree with me. It's your right, but that's how coaches see it.
Kiffin is also the son of NFL DC Monte Kiffin, and an assistant under Norm Chow and HC Pete Carroll at USC.Yes, for making him a better overall coach and CEO of a program. But unlike his other "disciples", or branches of his tree, he had other big time jobs before Saban. Even a NFL gig.
Dennis left a much bigger mess.....FSU didn't lose 31 schollies and have to pay back $250,000 when Jimbo left....Would you say it was similar to the mess left behind by Dennis Errickson?
My point being that winning a national title absolves a coach of how they left the program. Jimbo won a title at FSU.
This is how i see it.I respectfully disagree because I know quite a bit of college coaches, and the ones I talk to, lean more in the opposite direction. We're all branches off of someone's "tree". The disciple stuff is just fanspeak, but the thought is once you become an established coach (head coach, OC, or DC), your underlings are effectively the start of your own "tree", even though you're still a branch off of someone else's. All coaches have roots (whether it's O/D scheme, play calling, terminology, or whatever) in systems that they believe in. Like I have been in this coaching thing for so long (about 25 years), I can **** near tell an OC's or DC's system roots, just by watching game film, or hearing him make a play call. You can see and hear the similarities in each call. Once you become an established coach, you can pick up stuff you like from other coaches, but you not from their "tree". Like Rhett Lashlee can work for Manny Diaz, for 12 years, but he's not, nor will he ever be from the Manny Diaz "tree" (LMAO at the thought of Manny actually having a coaching tree). He's a Gus Malzhan guy. Same with Mullen, he can work anywhere he chooses, for anyone he chooses to work for, for however long he wants to, but he's still a branch off of Urban Meyer. If you ask me, the Saban/Kiffin marriage was a helluva trade off. Lane got the info on the inner secrets of how to coach a big time program and Saban got the ins and outs of a modern day pro style offense, which as of 2022, Bama's O still has some of Lane's fingerprints on it. Now you don't have to agree with me. It's your right, but that's how coaches see it.