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I find this cringe-worthy to say, but as it relates to ON THE FIELD, I think Randy Shannon showed more flexibility and willingness to adjust than we have seen so far from the current staff.
- Shannon went from predominant Man under to transitioning to some underneath zones. The notable Sharpton pick-6 toward the back end of Shannon's tenure as a Head Coach is one example.
- Shannon went so far as to hire Whipple and Bill Young. Both are guys who strayed pretty far from what Shannon had showed were his core, on the field, philosophies. Young was a zone blitz guy. Whipple was a chuck it guy.
- Shannon also made swift decisions when something didn't work. The notable example is Tim Walton. He was immediately fired. Say whatever you will (and most of it is likely very accurate), but Tim Walton actually grew to become an NFL defensive Coordinator under a pretty legitimate Head Coach.
We're talking about on the field, here. I can't believe what I just wrote.
I agree with this. BUT, wasn't this one of the things Golden actually singled out as something he thought was a problem? The constant changing and turnover on the staff? Golden stated that he felt the musical chairs on the last staff hurt more than it helped, and that he wanted some continuity and stability on the staff. Now, that continuity of staff may suck, but I think it was more by design.
I do agree Shannon desperately tried to bring in help to get things right, but Im not sure it was the best situation for the program either. Some of these guys obviously did not have great chemistry with Shannon and weren't a great fit.
I think there is SOME validity to Golden's philosophy on "continuity" and consistency of the staff, but it has to be QUALITY on the staff to begin with. I think that's where our real problem lies. We don't have very good assistants either, so continuity of what we have has done nothing for this team.
Continuity for the sake of continuity does not produce results. I have always said Golden has a plan and Shannon never seemed to have anything in place. He was reacting. In the same breath, so to speak, I've also always said that Golden's plan can fail or succeed, obviously. A plan doesn't mean you automatically succeed. It's just less sloppy.
He's pretty obviously not an analytics guy. When you start seeing evidence of failure... hate to use this word here, but you have to pivot. It doesn't mean change his entire philosophy (vision). It would have just meant changing the course to get there. To me, it seems like we're not seeing any changes on the field. Now that we do have more talent, I was prepared to see the adjustments. We haven't yet.
I completely agree on the first part. Continuity doesn't matter if what you are continuing is mediocrity and bad coaching. Im just saying, Shannon was always in reactive mode, whereas what people see as Golden being "stubborn" or "refusing to adjust" I think is more by design where he thinks if he just gives it enough time, it will all come together and finally execute.
Im not saying he's right. Im just saying that I think Golden INTENDED to do what he's doing.
I agree with that. I always have. Even his defensive concepts. They're conscious decisions. Just his style of play (read: philosophy).