Well it seems like Sparano's a goner. Whose the best fit for the franchise down the line in your opinion based on talent available, attitude, NFL experience and what not. I'll start with my name. I'll get the explanation in later. Jeff Fisher.
Someone who can develop a QB and comes from an offensive background. I don't know who that might be. Any possible chance if we land Gruden he can bring his brother Jay from Cinci? Guy is doing a good job with Dalton right now. Perhaps we need to look to college ranks for an O?
Hard to say. Seems like we've tried every single kind of coach since Shula and nobody has worked. I think we need a capable QB and a ****ing front office who will finally make finding a QB the priority it should be. Enough with this arrogance of thinking you can win with a sub par below mediocre QB.
It depends with quarterbacks. If Barkley and Luck aren't available I'm not up for taking Jones too high. One attractive option is building off of what we have on offense and finding a way to bridge that red zone gap through great red zone running. Jeff Fisher- Would look towards Coples as his Kevin Carter of the late 90s. Could create a real rough, aggressive pressure defense perfect for battling the teams we have in the division now. Would run the ball relentlessly to stop the Pats and Bills passing attacks.
I don't know about best fit. I just know what I want to see. I think we are to the point where the Miami Dolphins, as an organization, need to just be different from the rest of the league and basically attempt to set a knew paradigm for the NFL. We need to get rid of the tried and true philosophy of running the ball, play defense, and win the kicking game that we have had since 1996 and go to more of a philosophy that fits with image people have of the City of Miami - Flashy, up tempo, and exciting. This is why I think Jon Gruden is the guy I want. The reason for this is because he has spent a lot of time since his last job with guys like Chip Kelly, Urban Meyer, and other college spread guys that he may actually be the guy that attempts to bring the college spread to the NFL. Well, maybe the second guy. As alen1 pointed out to me, Chan Gailey is basically running a college spread in Buffalo right now and is very, very effective with it despite not having the best talent. What I'm wanting to see is a high energy coach who will bring all sorts of spread formations and passing philosophies for the spread, and will even utilize the zone read some in the running game.
Well, this thread started off wonderfully. Okay, just to indulge the premise, some potential HC candidates for next year: Russ Grimm - Assistant Head Coach/Offensive Line for the Arizona Cardinals. Also coached the Steelers' OL under Bill Cowher. The Steelers interviewed Grimm along with then-OC Ken Whisenhunt for the then-vacant HC position that was filled at the last minute by Mike Tomlin. Whisenhunt left for Arizona and Grimm, angry with the Steelers for apparently snubbing him and Whisenhunt, took the AHC/OL job in Arizona. Positive: the Steelers thought he was head coaching material due to their interviewing him. Negative: the Steelers didn't think he was head coaching material because they passed; Arizona OL is not very good; he would also basically be Sparano redux, given their similar roles and mentality. Rob Ryan - Defensive Coordinator for the Dallas Cowboys, formerly of the Cleveland Browns and Oakland Raiders. Rex Ryan's brother, and thus gets head coaching press for the same reason Jim Harbaugh got head coaching press: his brother is an NFL HC. Positive: good coach, gets a lot out of his players considering he's never coached a fully-loaded defense. Negative: everything both good and bad about Rex Ryan applies to Rob, both strengths and limitations. Jon Gruden - former HC of the Bucs and Raiders, current ESPN MNF color commentator. Positive: has HC experience while still being relatively young, has studied college offenses and seems willing to innovate in the NFL based on new ideas from the college game (think Wildcat). Negative: gradually loses the locker room's attention, has never developed a young quarterback (prefers veterans like Rich Gannon), has been known to be a nightmare to work with/for ala Nick Saban. Bill Cowher - former Steelers HC, current CBS NFL analyst. Positive: drafted Ben Roethlisberger, appeared in two Super Bowls (won 1), is rested and refreshed four years out of the game. Negative: retread ala Jimmy Johnson, unsure if he'll put in the hours he did before he won the Super Bowl, unknown if he attributes his win to the acquisition of Ben Roethlisberger or if he'll trot out the likes of Tommy Maddox or Kordell Stewart again. Jeff Fisher - former Titans/Oilers HC, current couch potato. Positive: good coach who prepares his team well, understands the need for good quarterback play and pass defense, still hungry for a Super Bowl win. Negative: his idea of good quarterback play was Matt Leinart, who he infamously was overruled on, with Bud Adams ordering the team to draft Vince Young instead. Runs the 4-3, which would set our defense back a year or two as the personnel is turned over. IMO, 2012 is a very bad time to have a head coaching vacancy. Mass hirings over the last few years have generally depleted the coordinator/assistant coaching ranks, and it's tough to find the prototypical young, hungry guy ready to take the next step and win as a head coach. College now holds more appeal for those sorts of coaches, since they can make almost the same amount of money (sometimes even more) while controlling a program in the way they wouldn't be able to do in the NFL.
Gruden has a pretty nice job with MNF right now. I don't see him going anywhere, despite his less than subtle attempt at impressing Ross in that interview. To me, the real question is what is Cowher's status at right now ?? That's the guy we need...so we'll end up with some other recycled HC that can't build a team...
Oh give me a break I don't have time today. Just wanted to start the thread. By the way I don't think the 4-3 would hold us back. I think Dansby, Burnett, Odrick, Starks, Wake, and a few others could easily play in a 4-3 under.
I'm not talking about your OP, I'm talking about posts #2 and #4. I disagree. While our DL could do it, seeing as how they all came from 4-3 teams in one way or another, I don't think our LBs would handle the transition well and I think it would put additional pressure on our secondary without that extra linebacker out there in coverage to help out.
Well let's look at it: Base package 4-3 under: RE - Wake DT - McDaniel one-gap one technique DT - Starks three technique OE- Odrick two-gap SOLB- Dansby MLB- Mitchell WOLB- Burnett versus DE- Starks two-gap NT- Soliai two-gap DE- Langford two-gap SOLB- Taylor SILB- Dansby WILB- Burnett WOLB- Wake I think the first group stops the run due to their ability to penetrate into the backfield if they can get a new MLB (they also reduce cost with Soliai) and they'll get much better pressure while putting their LBs in natural positions.
As much as I want to say no, I just can't manage to not like the idea of Rob Ryan. Just a question, Anyone from Green Bay or New Orleans look available?
I think McCarthy in GB does all his own playcalling. Not sure about NO, but I think Payton is similar.
No one is afraid of that defense at all. Just run outside or throw screens. By the way, I notice a distinct lack of Koa Misi on your roster. Don't expect Sparano to be fired mid-season. Ross will probably let him go down with the ship.
Ya... Run outside? What? How is that any weaker than the current group. Throw screens? They're faster than the current group.
The point is that shifting to the 4-3 doesn't schematically enable the current group of players to perform any better than they currently are, even though you're saying they'd be better suited for the 4-3 and we'd have more defensive success by transitioning.
I think they'd put a good amount more pressure on the QB with that group. I think the DL have a better shot at pressuring the QB and the LBers in better positions for their skillsets.
Gloria Estefan. I remember that time she climbed out of the window of her sky box since the door was stuck. She's got more guts than our current staff, no doubt.
We need a coach that will light a fire under the collective azzes of these players The Sparano everything is great/everyone is doing a good job philosophy sucks It creates lazy players who claim responsibility for nothing JUST LOOK AT THIS TEAM other than a few players the effort as well as the smarts are non existent during games To many primadonnas on this team
maybe not a HC caliber yet...but with his background and his record at his elevating statis at the differant schools he has coached and is now coaching (USF)......I'd hire him as OC/AHC.......Louis Leo "SKIP" Holtz Jr......his track record is really very impressive. His total record is at Wikipedia.....check it out. 1986 Notre Dame Position(s) Wide receiver Coaching career (HC unless noted) 1987–1988 1989 1990–1991 1992–1993 1994–1998 1999–2003 2004 2005–2009 2010–present Univ. of South Florida - Tampa Colorado State (WR) Notre Dame (WR) Notre Dame (OC) Connecticut South Carolina (OC) South Carolina (QB) East Carolina South Florida Head coaching record Overall 84–55 Bowls 2–3 Tournaments 1–1 (NCAA D-I-AA playoffs) Statistics College Football Data Warehouse Accomplishments and honors Championships 2 C-USA (2008–2009)
Schotty? Really? At that point you might as well haul Don Shula out of retirement, or just dress up Vince Lombardi's decomposed corpse and put him on the sidelines.
Jeff Fisher is an interesting choice. Always thought he was a pretty good coach in TN. AS far as his choice of Matt Leinart, all I can say is he was not the only one who liked him when he came out.