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***Official*** 2009 Washington Redskins Thread (1 Viewer)

Hog Heaven's offensive review vs. the Rams. That's where I got the link to the previously posted 4th down analysis.

Interesting bit in the "The Receivers" section:

If the Redskins are in the business of winning games, Randle El and Kelly should be the starting receivers on this team, and I would have Santana Moss and Marko Mitchell splitting reps as the No. 3 WR (with Randle El in the slot when applicable, and on the outside when not).
That's completely wrong. If Randle El took Moss's place in the lineup they'd be able to shut him down with 1 DB instead of the 2 it takes to shut down Moss. Randle El is only good in the slot, as WR3#, where they can't really cover him with their lesser DB's.
I agree. The author is clearly missing that ARE's productivity is because of his situation and not necessarily talent. But, I do think Moss needs some kind of wakeup call. He's in a rut. And I wonder if a message can be sent through "not starting". You can "start" ARE and then still have him in the slot on most plays. BTW, I see him lineup outside plenty. He isn't always in the slot.
 
Dead wrong IMHO. Moss has his limitations, but ARE is not an outside receiver. Maybe throw ARE there in a few specific situations, but he otherwise belongs in the slot. Moss is your outside deep threat, for better or worse.
That's completely wrong. If Randle El took Moss's place in the lineup they'd be able to shut him down with 1 DB instead of the 2 it takes to shut down Moss. Randle El is only good in the slot, as WR3#, where they can't really cover him with their lesser DB's.
:unsure:
 
You make it sound like the players were deliberately disobeying direct orders. They are allowed to make adjustments on the field. They thought they were making the right read and adjustment, and they weren't. It's one yard. Forget trying to stretch it out. Just pound it up the gut.
Almost every play that fails, Zorn offers his analysis of what players did wrong to cause it to fail. I can't believe you don't see the pattern here. Consistent underperformance, explained only in terms of what players did wrong, isn't good coaching. His playcalling is bad, and he blames the players, it's really pretty clear by now.
Zorn has said over and over he would call the same play again in that situation. For whatever reason, he truly believes it was the right call. I don't think that's him playing the blame game.But, he has said that he'd rethink the HB pass and probably do it on first down. While not going to the Gibbsian extent of taking blame, he has somewhat put that one on him for calling it in that position. He then goes on to say that the OL didn't sell run hard enough (Portis has said the same thing, even though I doubt it would have mattered), so he's still focusing on execution there.His press conferences and Q&A are a mess. It's pretty difficult to get clear, meaningful answers out of him. And it's not coach-speak. I think it's just him not being good in front of the camera. I hope his team meetings are like that.
 
Hog Heaven's offensive review vs. the Rams. That's where I got the link to the previously posted 4th down analysis.

Interesting bit in the "The Receivers" section:

If the Redskins are in the business of winning games, Randle El and Kelly should be the starting receivers on this team, and I would have Santana Moss and Marko Mitchell splitting reps as the No. 3 WR (with Randle El in the slot when applicable, and on the outside when not).
That's completely wrong. If Randle El took Moss's place in the lineup they'd be able to shut him down with 1 DB instead of the 2 it takes to shut down Moss. Randle El is only good in the slot, as WR3#, where they can't really cover him with their lesser DB's.
I agree. The author is clearly missing that ARE's productivity is because of his situation and not necessarily talent. But, I do think Moss needs some kind of wakeup call. He's in a rut. And I wonder if a message can be sent through "not starting". You can "start" ARE and then still have him in the slot on most plays. BTW, I see him lineup outside plenty. He isn't always in the slot.
I have no problems with occasional lineups made up of Thomas-Kelly-ARE, as much to try to kick start Thomas as to shake up Moss. This WR corps at least theoretically has more versatility to it than has any Redskins WR corps in years, and without an elite WR in it mixing and matching personnel groupings should be a regular staple anyway.
 
"It's just people growing tired," Portis said Wednesday, when asked about the teenage angst that's had D.C. sports fans wearing tight black t-shirts and writing weepy poetry this week. "You come out, you bring a family of four or five to come to a game, that's $500, and then you've got to eat and park. You're spending $700 a week to come out and see some entertainment, and you get there and it's really not a lot of entertainment. I think people just growing weary of that.
And so a few minutes later, someone asked Portis whether Jim Zorn is on the hot seat, which brought us back to the macro existential despair thing.

"Hey, I feel like I'm on the hot seat," Portis said. "I can't speak on Coach Zorn, I don't know. I feel like I'm on the hot seat."

Why, came the follow-up.

"I mean, performance, as a team," Portis said. "We're getting booed coming off the field. So I think everybody in this organization on the hot seat. You know, I think you look at the owner, he on the verge of losing fans. You know, how long before people just give up and stop coming? You look at the players, and people want you out of here. You look at the coach, people want you out of here. So who's not on the hot seat? Until we come out and play to our potential, I think everybody on the hot seat."
Well said
 
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And so a few minutes later, someone asked Portis whether Jim Zorn is on the hot seat, which brought us back to the macro existential despair thing."Hey, I feel like I'm on the hot seat," Portis said. "I can't speak on Coach Zorn, I don't know. I feel like I'm on the hot seat."Why, came the follow-up."I mean, performance, as a team," Portis said. "We're getting booed coming off the field. So I think everybody in this organization on the hot seat. You know, I think you look at the owner, he on the verge of losing fans. You know, how long before people just give up and stop coming? You look at the players, and people want you out of here. You look at the coach, people want you out of here. So who's not on the hot seat? Until we come out and play to our potential, I think everybody on the hot seat."
He learned a lot from Gibbs. :bag:I remember him saying something similar a few years ago and Andy and Steve completely overreacted and thought Portis was hinting at some conversations he had with the team about his future. "He must know something!"
 
I'm catching up!

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Most of the former Super Bowl-winning coaches who have moved on to new teams have done exactly that. I'd be absolutely delighted with a coach who can get us to the playoffs as often as Holmgren did in Seattle, or Parcells in NE and Dallas, or even Johnson in Miami.
:lmao:Of the 26 coaches that have won SBs, 9 were hired by different teams sometime after their SB win, and only 3 had decent/consistent playoff success (the 3 you listed). For numerous reasons, most of the former SB winning coaches either don't go on to coach other teams, or they don't go on to coach other teams successfully.Personally, I'm with redman on this. Find the young assistant who'll be the next SB winning coach. I'm not yet convinced that Zorn can't be that guy.
Out of curiousity, who are the nine? Other than the three I listed and Ditka, the only one I can think of is Lombardi, who only coached for one season in Washington and led the Skins to their first winning record in 14 years in that one season. I'd say that counts as a success too. So already we're almost at a majority of success stories- 3.5, counting JJ as a half. OK, I just did some research and Flores apparently moved on and failed as well, but he was never considered a prime coaching candidate to begin with. Guys like Gruden, Shanahan and Cowher had sustained success that makes their career arcs to date look more like Holmgren and Parcells and JJ than Ditka and Flores (and, I'm guessing, the other failure examples out there). I'm not saying they're guaranteed to succeed, but I am saying that those who think their previous Super Bowl experience means they are more likely to fail are wrong.
 
Most of the former Super Bowl-winning coaches who have moved on to new teams have done exactly that. I'd be absolutely delighted with a coach who can get us to the playoffs as often as Holmgren did in Seattle, or Parcells in NE and Dallas, or even Johnson in Miami.
:goodposting:Of the 26 coaches that have won SBs, 9 were hired by different teams sometime after their SB win, and only 3 had decent/consistent playoff success (the 3 you listed). For numerous reasons, most of the former SB winning coaches either don't go on to coach other teams, or they don't go on to coach other teams successfully.Personally, I'm with redman on this. Find the young assistant who'll be the next SB winning coach. I'm not yet convinced that Zorn can't be that guy.
Out of curiousity, who are the nine? Other than the three I listed and Ditka, the only one I can think of is Lombardi, who only coached for one season in Washington and led the Skins to their first winning record in 14 years in that one season. I'd say that counts as a success too. So already we're almost at a majority of success stories- 3.5, counting JJ as a half. OK, I just did some research and Flores apparently moved on and failed as well, but he was never considered a prime coaching candidate to begin with. Guys like Gruden, Shanahan and Cowher had sustained success that makes their career arcs to date look more like Holmgren and Parcells and JJ than Ditka and Flores (and, I'm guessing, the other failure examples out there). I'm not saying they're guaranteed to succeed, but I am saying that those who think their previous Super Bowl experience means they are more likely to fail are wrong.
It's not that you can't have "success", but it rarely seems to be as much success. Take Parcells, who's about as good as anyone at improving teams he went to. Look at the final extent of his accomplishments stop by stop:Giants: 2 Super Bowl titlesPatriots: 1 Super Bowl appearanceJets: 1 AFC Championship Game appearanceCowboys: 2 playoff appearance (no wins)Holmgren, with fewer stops of course, was the same way. Ditto Ditka and Jimmy Johnson. It just becomes clear that if your goal is to win championships, and when you have one of the most valuable sports franchises in the world it should be, then you need to find someone on the way up. If you look farther down the list, then it's easier to find guys who were more successful in subsequent gigs (Norv, Wade Phillips, Jauron, etc.) but then who really wants them as their coach?
 
With all the "Zorn is in over his head" and "who will be the coach next week/year" speculation going 'round, I'm wondering if anyone really thinks that bringing in the likes of Cower or Shanahan will be the answer?

How many times in NFL history has a SB winning coach changed teams and been anywhere near as successful for the new team? Looking back, I'm seeing precious few, and the degree of success is varaible and debatable. I think Don Shula is the only coach with a championship with 2 different teams, but that's going back before the Super Bowl era. Holmgren and Parcells were good rehires, but that still suggests that success with a "retread" is highly unlikely. Am I missing anyone?
I'm all over this message board saying that when we hire coaches I want to hire the next young coach to emerge, and not the last one. So draining is that job that very few of the very good guys succeed more in their second, third, etc. gigs than they did in their first, and that's true even if you look at great ones like Parcells. The only recent exceptions I can think of are Belichick and Dungy, and not surprisingly they had two all-time great, sure fire HoF QB's to help them in that regard. Get someone young and hungry if you want to have big success over a long time. It won't always work, but you won't hit home runs unless you swing for the fences, so I'm not afraid of striking out.
I thought of another one: Vermeil.Of course, he too had an astoundingly good QB in Warner to help him. Only Gruden seems to vary from that pattern, but then the Bucs were already pretty damn good when he got there.

 
Most of the former Super Bowl-winning coaches who have moved on to new teams have done exactly that. I'd be absolutely delighted with a coach who can get us to the playoffs as often as Holmgren did in Seattle, or Parcells in NE and Dallas, or even Johnson in Miami.
:no:Of the 26 coaches that have won SBs, 9 were hired by different teams sometime after their SB win, and only 3 had decent/consistent playoff success (the 3 you listed). For numerous reasons, most of the former SB winning coaches either don't go on to coach other teams, or they don't go on to coach other teams successfully.Personally, I'm with redman on this. Find the young assistant who'll be the next SB winning coach. I'm not yet convinced that Zorn can't be that guy.
Out of curiousity, who are the nine? Other than the three I listed and Ditka, the only one I can think of is Lombardi, who only coached for one season in Washington and led the Skins to their first winning record in 14 years in that one season. I'd say that counts as a success too. So already we're almost at a majority of success stories- 3.5, counting JJ as a half. OK, I just did some research and Flores apparently moved on and failed as well, but he was never considered a prime coaching candidate to begin with. Guys like Gruden, Shanahan and Cowher had sustained success that makes their career arcs to date look more like Holmgren and Parcells and JJ than Ditka and Flores (and, I'm guessing, the other failure examples out there). I'm not saying they're guaranteed to succeed, but I am saying that those who think their previous Super Bowl experience means they are more likely to fail are wrong.
It's not that you can't have "success", but it rarely seems to be as much success. Take Parcells, who's about as good as anyone at improving teams he went to. Look at the final extent of his accomplishments stop by stop:Giants: 2 Super Bowl titlesPatriots: 1 Super Bowl appearanceJets: 1 AFC Championship Game appearanceCowboys: 2 playoff appearance (no wins)Holmgren, with fewer stops of course, was the same way. Ditto Ditka and Jimmy Johnson. It just becomes clear that if your goal is to win championships, and when you have one of the most valuable sports franchises in the world it should be, then you need to find someone on the way up. If you look farther down the list, then it's easier to find guys who were more successful in subsequent gigs (Norv, Wade Phillips, Jauron, etc.) but then who really wants them as their coach?
I just don't buy this logic personally, because championships are so unlikely, especially in single-elimination playoff sports. I think that if your goal is to win championships the best thing you can do is hire someone who gets to the playoffs consistently, which gives you a better shot at having the chips fall in your direction. No big deal, you and I just have a different outlook here.
 
His playcalling is bad, and he blames the players, it's really pretty clear by now.
I guess this is where we'll have to agree to disagree. The only thing clear to me is that the offensive players may not be as talented as we would like to believe. I can't chalk up dropped TD passes that hit a player's hands and players making bad reads and play adjustments to bad playcalling. 3 TDs were left on the field Sunday, during 3 different plays, that were completely the fault of the players executing the plays.It's not like the offense completely fails to move the ball, or that we've never seen this offense score in the red zone. Does Zorn shoulder some legitimate blame for the failure of some plays? Sure. Does he deserve to be fired for the overall performance of the offense this past Sunday? Hardly.
 
Alridge definitely understands his role:

"I don't need no rhythm. I just want the ball," he said. "Just throw me in there. Throw me in there [to] try to make some big plays and give it back to Clinton Portis and let him do his thing. That's why he's one of the best in the league and I'm just trying to spell him and give him a break."
 
I just don't buy this logic personally, because championships are so unlikely, especially in single-elimination playoff sports. I think that if your goal is to win championships the best thing you can do is hire someone who gets to the playoffs consistently, which gives you a better shot at having the chips fall in your direction. No big deal, you and I just have a different outlook here.
The flaw IMHO in that sort of thinking is that playoff coaching is its own skill. Some guys just don't seem to be able to up their game against the best opponents in the pressure of the playoffs, and the list is long in that regard. Marty's probably the most famous recent example, but Dennis Green, Herm Edwards, Wade Phillips, Dan Reeves and Marv Levy are all guys who have had multiple playoff appearances with little success, or at least ultimate failure in the case of Reeves and Levy, even with some elite teams and none of them are considered elite coaches. In fact their coaching limitations have been all too obvious. Virtually any team in the NFL year to year can get hot and make the playoffs. Winning championships simply doesn't happen by accident as a matter of coaching IMHO.
 
With all the "Zorn is in over his head" and "who will be the coach next week/year" speculation going 'round, I'm wondering if anyone really thinks that bringing in the likes of Cower or Shanahan will be the answer?

How many times in NFL history has a SB winning coach changed teams and been anywhere near as successful for the new team? Looking back, I'm seeing precious few, and the degree of success is varaible and debatable. I think Don Shula is the only coach with a championship with 2 different teams, but that's going back before the Super Bowl era. Holmgren and Parcells were good rehires, but that still suggests that success with a "retread" is highly unlikely. Am I missing anyone?
I'm all over this message board saying that when we hire coaches I want to hire the next young coach to emerge, and not the last one. So draining is that job that very few of the very good guys succeed more in their second, third, etc. gigs than they did in their first, and that's true even if you look at great ones like Parcells. The only recent exceptions I can think of are Belichick and Dungy, and not surprisingly they had two all-time great, sure fire HoF QB's to help them in that regard. Get someone young and hungry if you want to have big success over a long time. It won't always work, but you won't hit home runs unless you swing for the fences, so I'm not afraid of striking out.
I thought of another one: Vermeil.Of course, he too had an astoundingly good QB in Warner to help him. Only Gruden seems to vary from that pattern, but then the Bucs were already pretty damn good when he got there.
One more: Coughlin.
 
With all the "Zorn is in over his head" and "who will be the coach next week/year" speculation going 'round, I'm wondering if anyone really thinks that bringing in the likes of Cower or Shanahan will be the answer?

How many times in NFL history has a SB winning coach changed teams and been anywhere near as successful for the new team? Looking back, I'm seeing precious few, and the degree of success is varaible and debatable. I think Don Shula is the only coach with a championship with 2 different teams, but that's going back before the Super Bowl era. Holmgren and Parcells were good rehires, but that still suggests that success with a "retread" is highly unlikely. Am I missing anyone?
I'm all over this message board saying that when we hire coaches I want to hire the next young coach to emerge, and not the last one. So draining is that job that very few of the very good guys succeed more in their second, third, etc. gigs than they did in their first, and that's true even if you look at great ones like Parcells. The only recent exceptions I can think of are Belichick and Dungy, and not surprisingly they had two all-time great, sure fire HoF QB's to help them in that regard. Get someone young and hungry if you want to have big success over a long time. It won't always work, but you won't hit home runs unless you swing for the fences, so I'm not afraid of striking out.
I thought of another one: Vermeil.Of course, he too had an astoundingly good QB in Warner to help him. Only Gruden seems to vary from that pattern, but then the Bucs were already pretty damn good when he got there.
One more: Coughlin.
A few more "one more" and you're going to have to change your position. :goodposting:
 
His playcalling is bad, and he blames the players, it's really pretty clear by now.
I guess this is where we'll have to agree to disagree. The only thing clear to me is that the offensive players may not be as talented as we would like to believe. I can't chalk up dropped TD passes that hit a player's hands and players making bad reads and play adjustments to bad playcalling. 3 TDs were left on the field Sunday, during 3 different plays, that were completely the fault of the players executing the plays.It's not like the offense completely fails to move the ball, or that we've never seen this offense score in the red zone. Does Zorn shoulder some legitimate blame for the failure of some plays? Sure. Does he deserve to be fired for the overall performance of the offense this past Sunday? Hardly.
Well I'm enjoying the talk despite us disagreeing.I agree the offense is not that talented. I agree passes have been dropped. None of those is attributable to Zorn. Bad reads, bad judgment, bad execution --- those things are shared responsibilities of coaches and players. Because if players aren't performing correctly often enough, it's a coach's job to get them to change that, or to put in another player who'll execute better. Our offensive personnel personnel is not the worst in the league, so it's not like there's no one else to put in. Teams who fail consistently due to player execution are generally teams with poor coaches. And poor players perhaps. It's a coach's responsibility to get players to play well. Zorn should not be fired for last Sunday. Add it to the previous Sunday's offensive performance, and the offensive performances of the last 8 games or more last year, and you have much more justification for firing him. They're bad offensively, and scored fewer points against the Reams than they did last year. They're showing no progress or are regressing. I'd love to see Zorn and the team turn it around. But coming out this Sunday doing the exact same things won't do it, no matter how well he explains why things didn't work.
 
A few more "one more" and you're going to have to change your position. :gang1:
:lmao: Yeah, yeah, I knew someone would say that. The point's still valid, however. The guys who have won multiple Super Bowls have been 1st gig guys: Lombardi; Landry; Noll; Flores; Gibbs; Walsh; Parcells; Johnson; Siefert; Shanahan.

The only exceptions to that pattern have been Shula and Belichick.

 
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fatness said:
I'd love to see Zorn and the team turn it around. But coming out this Sunday doing the exact same things won't do it, no matter how well he explains why things didn't work.
Agreed to the first part.As far as Zorn's part goes, I disagree with the second. I don't think he's been the weak link in the chain come Sunday afternoons. Maybe he is failing from Monday to Saturday, which results in player failures on Sunday. I don't know. But it's not like he's "buying the groceries", so I don't think that he can be completely faulted for the roster he has to work with.
 
Maroney=Sped said:
dgreen said:
Analysis of Zorn's 4th down decisions, which I loved at the time (and still do). As tentative as Zorn seems in the redzone, he has a killer instinct when it comes to putting games away. We saw it last year and we saw it again Sunday. He was throwing on the final drive and going for it on 4th down. I like that. It's one of the biggest complaints of Gibbs 2.0 and one of the few areas Zorn seems to "get it."
:thumbup: I agree. This was not a complaint I had about Zorn. He just needs to put the game more into Campbell's hands, particularly in the red zone.
Me too. I was fine with going for it on both 4th downs. I the second one, I think it makes more sense to run up the middle to reduce the chance of losing 2 yards. Making them start the final drive backed up to their end zone is huge.
 
TankRizzo said:
Maroney=Sped said:
dgreen said:
Analysis of Zorn's 4th down decisions, which I loved at the time (and still do). As tentative as Zorn seems in the redzone, he has a killer instinct when it comes to putting games away. We saw it last year and we saw it again Sunday. He was throwing on the final drive and going for it on 4th down. I like that. It's one of the biggest complaints of Gibbs 2.0 and one of the few areas Zorn seems to "get it."
:thumbup: I agree. This was not a complaint I had about Zorn. He just needs to put the game more into Campbell's hands, particularly in the red zone.
I don't know if it was killer instinct or not....to me it looked more like he was a cornered rat. He knew the coming wrath from not scoring points and I think that was a last ditch effort to get into the endzone. I say this mostly because of his playcalling when in the redzone. The playing it safe inside the 20 is in sharp contrast to throwing caution into the wind and going for it on 4th. I think he stepped back, saw the score and instantly felt the pressure to try and save some face.
I listened to Sheehan interview Zorn. Zorn said the last thing he wanted to do was kick the ball off and give them a chance for a big return.Atlhough I was ok with going for it on 4th down, I would have hoped he would be more encouraging about the offense or defense, rather than be scared of a special teams play. And the special teams have played pretty well so far.

 
TobiasFunke said:
Sidewinder16 said:
With all the "Zorn is in over his head" and "who will be the coach next week/year" speculation going 'round, I'm wondering if anyone really thinks that bringing in the likes of Cower or Shanahan will be the answer?

How many times in NFL history has a SB winning coach changed teams and been anywhere near as successful for the new team? Looking back, I'm seeing precious few, and the degree of success is varaible and debatable. I think Don Shula is the only coach with a championship with 2 different teams, but that's going back before the Super Bowl era. Holmgren and Parcells were good rehires, but that still suggests that success with a "retread" is highly unlikely. Am I missing anyone?
Highly unlikely? That suggests an overwhelming number of failures that counter the successes of Shula, Parcells (twice) and Holmgren. The only real retread failure I see on this list is Ditka in New Orleans. I'd consider Jimmy Johnson at Miami to be a wash- decent teams, but no deep playoff runs.So if there's three or four good hires, one bad hire, and one so-so hire out of the examples I remember, why do you say success is highly unlikely? Am I forgetting like ten guys that got rehired?
Tom Coughlin looks like a successful retread. And he was only marginally successful in his first stint.Jon Gruden worked out ok in Tampa for a while.

Ted Marchibroda did well with the Colts (round 2).

Somr bad rehires: Tom Flores, Art Shell, **** Juron.

 
Maroney=Sped said:
TankRizzo said:
Sidewinder16 said:
With all the "Zorn is in over his head" and "who will be the coach next week/year" speculation going 'round, I'm wondering if anyone really thinks that bringing in the likes of Cower or Shanahan will be the answer?

How many times in NFL history has a SB winning coach changed teams and been anywhere near as successful for the new team? Looking back, I'm seeing precious few, and the degree of success is varaible and debatable. I think Don Shula is the only coach with a championship with 2 different teams, but that's going back before the Super Bowl era. Holmgren and Parcells were good rehires, but that still suggests that success with a "retread" is highly unlikely. Am I missing anyone?
Well, you're getting into a numbers game there seeing as how there's only one superbowl winner every year and this decade has been dominated by one coach...the pool of superbowl winning coaches up for being a retread are few and far between. There just isn't a large enough sample size to say this with any kind of conviction.The allure of Cowher was the sheer consistency. He fielded a good team pretty much annually in the face of a LOT of turnover at the player and assistant coach level.

I think my main reasons for wanting the 'skins to hire a coach with a pedigree is the hope that they'll command a level of power over personnel decisions. Ever since Marty, it would appear that Snyder is in search of the subservient head coach who will go along with his BS, no questions asked...which is why the search for a HC wound up such a freak show last go around, what coach wants to come in who doesn't get to choose his assistant coaches?
Gibbs didn't fall into that category, but then there's also only one Joe Gibbs as far as the Redskins are concerned.
Gibbs really had final say over all football matters, but he worked with Snyder and Cerrato and had them included in everything. He publicly stated that decision were a made by committee by the three and it worked well. Unfortunately, Snyder and Cerrato are now convinced that this front office structure is an awesome structure and they just need to find the right head coach to fit into this structure, a head coach without final say on personnel. And no coach that think he will get other opportunities will accept it this front office structure.

So we are looking at more years of Jim Zorn or another bizzarro coaching search, where Danny and Vinny ask questions like, "What do you think about trading two first round picks for Chad Johnson?" and if they respond it is stupid, they are out of the running.

 
Tom Coughlin looks like a successful retread. And he was only marginally successful in his first stint.Jon Gruden worked out ok in Tampa for a while.Ted Marchibroda did well with the Colts (round 2).Somr bad rehires: Tom Flores, Art Shell, **** Juron.
I think these guys are a different story.The reason I looked at Super Bowl winning coaches to begin with is because that's the reason Cower and Shanahan are the top names that get thrown around when discussing the next 'Skins coaching options. They've won Super Bowls.
 
TobiasFunke said:
Out of curiousity, who are the nine?
Hmmm, missed Ditka, so there are 10. I believe the ten coaches to win a SB with one team and then coach another team sometime afterward are Ditka, Seifert, Parcells, Lombardi, Jimmy Johnson, Flores, Vermeil, Stram, McCafferty and Holmgren.ETA: And after further review, Week Ewbank is similar to Shula in that he won an NFL Championship with one team (2 with the Colts) and a Super Bowl with another (Jets).
 
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Tom Coughlin looks like a successful retread. And he was only marginally successful in his first stint.

Jon Gruden worked out ok in Tampa for a while.

Ted Marchibroda did well with the Colts (round 2).

Somr bad rehires: Tom Flores, Art Shell, **** Juron.
I think these guys are a different story.The reason I looked at Super Bowl winning coaches to begin with is because that's the reason Cower and Shanahan are the top names that get thrown around when discussing the next 'Skins coaching options. They've won Super Bowls.
:no: I'm pretty confident that the team and the fan base are not just looking for "good". They're looking for someone who can build a strong, long-term winner and win championships. The basis for comparison, therefore, is guys who have won Super Bowls.

 
TankRizzo said:
Maroney=Sped said:
dgreen said:
Analysis of Zorn's 4th down decisions, which I loved at the time (and still do). As tentative as Zorn seems in the redzone, he has a killer instinct when it comes to putting games away. We saw it last year and we saw it again Sunday. He was throwing on the final drive and going for it on 4th down. I like that. It's one of the biggest complaints of Gibbs 2.0 and one of the few areas Zorn seems to "get it."
:no: I agree. This was not a complaint I had about Zorn. He just needs to put the game more into Campbell's hands, particularly in the red zone.
I don't know if it was killer instinct or not....to me it looked more like he was a cornered rat. He knew the coming wrath from not scoring points and I think that was a last ditch effort to get into the endzone. I say this mostly because of his playcalling when in the redzone. The playing it safe inside the 20 is in sharp contrast to throwing caution into the wind and going for it on 4th. I think he stepped back, saw the score and instantly felt the pressure to try and save some face.
I listened to Sheehan interview Zorn. Zorn said the last thing he wanted to do was kick the ball off and give them a chance for a big return.Atlhough I was ok with going for it on 4th down, I would have hoped he would be more encouraging about the offense or defense, rather than be scared of a special teams play. And the special teams have played pretty well so far.
:popcorn: His explanation certainly lacked inspiration. But, like I've said, I think that's just the way Zorn comes off in interviews. He isn't a wordsmith and he's kind of goofy.

 
We are the laughing stock of the league :mellow: It pains me to watch the Giants, the Steelers, the Ravens, even the Eagles. Why cant we be like them. What has to happen? Is Synder to arogant to give up control to win SuperBowl(s)? Why can't we get a proven personnel person in here? A good young HUNGRY coach, not scared to make calls. Someone who can build this team correctly. Again we are farther away then we want to belive. This team is 3 plus years away. And needs to be reshuffled alot. Our oline has guys that played with leather helmets. Our db's seem to have no hands. I just don't understand why we can't get on the right track. I'm 35 years old. I want to enjoy a superbowl as an adult, and I don't mean an old man ####ting in my diaper. I'm not even sure that we would win with no salary cap. I'm sorry back to the regular program.

 
Quite a bit of talk on the radio on my way home about how it appears the fans and media are really getting to the players. The sense is that they are focusing more on booing, negative articles, and a lot of questioning than the Detroit Lions. Of course, the self-righteous media says the Skins should ignore it all...and then ask yet another question about playcalling or booing or someone getting fired.

This week is a big test for Zorn. Hopefully he can get them focused, and be focused himself, and perform Sunday.

 
Quite a bit of talk on the radio on my way home about how it appears the fans and media are really getting to the players. The sense is that they are focusing more on booing, negative articles, and a lot of questioning than the Detroit Lions. Of course, the self-righteous media says the Skins should ignore it all...and then ask yet another question about playcalling or booing or someone getting fired.This week is a big test for Zorn. Hopefully he can get them focused, and be focused himself, and perform Sunday.
I really want Zorn and Campbell to succeed. If they don't it's just one more transition, only this time the makeover will be major.
 
ChrisCooleyFan I feel your pain. I'm not quite 5 years your senior, but it would be nice to watch the Skins win a SB as an adult. And I too think until we get a great GM, and a better coach, we're going to be behind the 8 ball every year. :lmao:

 
Great! Clinton Portis was limited in Redskins practice Wednesday with an ankle injury. I guess adding Alridge might pay dividends right away... :thumbup:

 
Ever notice how we have the best conversations here when we're all afraid the Skins are on the verge of collapse?

Anyway, the Lions have a horrible pass defense, and if the Redskins aren't balls-to-the-wall passing on Sunday then something's wrong.

The main thing to fear about the Lions is the fans. :goodposting:

(watch the whole thing)

"The two girls in front of us were drunk before the game started. They grabbed one of our signs and trashed it (real classy) because were Vikings fans, and then spent most of the first half mocking us instead of watching the game because the Lions were ahead.

They left their seats and we thought they were gone for good but somehow they managed to buy even more beer and get back to their seats. They were spilling beer on themselves, the seats, and some of the other fans. After they spilled quite a bit of beer on the guys in the row below them, they turned around and told them to SIT DOWN. One girl didnt like that so she poured the rest of her beer on his head. Then I knew it was time to start the camera :thumbdown:"
 
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TobiasFunke said:
Out of curiousity, who are the nine?
Hmmm, missed Ditka, so there are 10. I believe the ten coaches to win a SB with one team and then coach another team sometime afterward are Ditka, Seifert, Parcells, Lombardi, Jimmy Johnson, Flores, Vermeil, Stram, McCafferty and Holmgren.
Vermeil didn't win a Superbowl with the Eagles. They lost
 
Zorn's exchange with Sonny Jurgensen after the week 1 loss to the Giants:

Sonny Jurgensen: Again, one offensive touchdown.

Zorn: Thank you (looks to Michael).

Jurgensen: I mean, this is something we've been talking about. You know, you've got to get into the end zone.

Zorn: Yes (looks to Michael).
Zorn's exchange with Sonny Jurgensen after the week 2 win over the Rams.
"Third down, I'm the quarterback, and you call the halfback throwing the ball for me, I'm calling timeout or calling an audible," Jurgensen said. "I'm not letting the halfback throw it. That's what you pay me for."

"Well then, I would have to take you out of the game," Zorn countered. "As soon as you called timeout, I'd say what's wrong with my play, because...."

"It didn't work!" Jurgensen interrupted.

There was a long pause.

"No, but I called it to work. Alright?" Zorn said. "We called it to work. It didn't work. There were a lot of plays out there that didn't work. And I'd take you out of the game. Sorry, Sonny."
"Sorry, Sonny"
Hearing Zorn's voice in the audio clip I heard on sportscenter, you can sense he is really feeling the pressure and that the criticism is getting to him. This is very close to becoming a lost season already. Now I'm not too much of a :goodposting: to think they are super bowl contenders at this point, but I really did believe coming into this season that team had a decent shot at the playoffs.
 
if the Skins lose to Detroit (which a lot of people are predicting) how bad do you think the players quit on Zorn? There's already a feel that the team is 0-2 instead of 1-1 as most took that Rams "win" as a loss since the performance was so poor. I'd hate to think this team would quit, but it's hard to imagine them rallying around the guy Portis called a "genius". Oh wellz. Time to draft more "U" players for the Skins. Jacory Harris and Graig Cooper would be good fits :goodposting:

 
fatness said:
I'd love to see Zorn and the team turn it around. But coming out this Sunday doing the exact same things won't do it, no matter how well he explains why things didn't work.
Agreed to the first part.As far as Zorn's part goes, I disagree with the second. I don't think he's been the weak link in the chain come Sunday afternoons. Maybe he is failing from Monday to Saturday, which results in player failures on Sunday. I don't know. But it's not like he's "buying the groceries", so I don't think that he can be completely faulted for the roster he has to work with.
didn't you read Nittany Lion's post :goodposting: you've got it completely backwards!
 
if the Skins lose to Detroit (which a lot of people are predicting) how bad do you think the players quit on Zorn? There's already a feel that the team is 0-2 instead of 1-1 as most took that Rams "win" as a loss since the performance was so poor. I'd hate to think this team would quit, but it's hard to imagine them rallying around the guy Portis called a "genius". Oh wellz. Time to draft more "U" players for the Skins. Jacory Harris and Graig Cooper would be good fits :goodposting:
That's a veteran team and a good locker room. It's going to take more than a 1-2 start for that team to fall apart. Now, the fans and maybe Snyder might come unglued, but not the team IMHO.
 
if the Skins lose to Detroit (which a lot of people are predicting) how bad do you think the players quit on Zorn? There's already a feel that the team is 0-2 instead of 1-1 as most took that Rams "win" as a loss since the performance was so poor. I'd hate to think this team would quit, but it's hard to imagine them rallying around the guy Portis called a "genius". Oh wellz. Time to draft more "U" players for the Skins. Jacory Harris and Graig Cooper would be good fits :)
We could take a whole bunch of them 'Canes!!! Harris better not come out...he needs to stay there until he graduates, he has us lookin' too good! VA Tech is next!!! :thumbup:I'll get to see them when they come here to UCF, looking forward to it!
 
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I really wish I had better appreciated the Year of Marty - 2001. Possibly the most satisfying non-playoff season ever.

Marty was hired and Vinny was fired. The little boy king promised to butt out.

We were building something then. We started off 0-5, just like with Gibbs 1.0. Only it was more horrible - instead of Theismann, we had Jeff George leading 3-30 at SD and 0-37 at GB. Then Tony Banks took over, and little by little, they started playing better. Marginally at first, but the players were starting to buy into what Marty was selling. And it was old-school hard-nosed football. Freaking Kent Graham was QB-ing the team to road wins in Denver!

I could go on and on. In retrospect, it was a great 8-8 season:

The year we had no Vinny Cerratto

My point:

I firmly believe that had Snyder left well enough alone and not fired Marty (and he fired Marty because he couldn't stand not running the day-to-day affairs of the team), year 9 of Martyball would have us looking more like the Giants and Eagles than what we actually are: Bengals, Lions, etc. Consistenly solid, playoff caliber teams. Maybe even Marty would have won a title.

Instead, the franchise is a complete mess. We're looking like a 3-5 win team.

And as long as Snyder owns the team - and I say this all the time - any success will be fleeting and attributable more to simple randomness than anything else.

 
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Hearing Zorn's voice in the audio clip I heard on sportscenter, you can sense he is really feeling the pressure and that the criticism is getting to him. This is very close to becoming a lost season already. Now I'm not too much of a :D to think they are super bowl contenders at this point, but I really did believe coming into this season that team had a decent shot at the playoffs.
Coming into the season I thought they had the potential to fall anywhere between 6-10 to 10-6. After they put kelly as the #2 I was really optimistic about things....then they took the field. :towelwave: I really just don't get Zorn at all. If he puts it all together this week and blows out the Lions, I think the majority of this will go away as long as the offense continues to look competent. I think the general consensus is that him getting cold feet in the redzone is due to lack of faith in Campbell. He needs to trust him during the game and let him play. Let him screw up or otherwise give you reason to play it safe down there, but it's like Campbell's abilities are top secret and nobody is allowed to see it. If he continues down the same old path though, things are only going to get hotter for him...like it or not, this is what he signed up for.
 
I like the attitude I am hearing from the players right now. A good coach would let that act as motivation.

I can't wait to see how they play Sunday.

 
http://chriscooley47.blogspot.com/

Alright, I've spent the last two days listening to never ending gripe about how terrible the Washington Redskins are. Our coaching is dreadful. Zorn is on the hot seat. Our play calling is outright awful. Anyone can call better red zone plays. Our team is a bunch of overpaid bums. Getting booed by a bunch of "dim-wits." And I don't even need to mention the way fans despise our ownership. IT'S ALL BULL####.
:rolleyes:
- Does it irritate players when a fan refers to his favorite team as "we"

"We" are the fan's team. That's why we are here playing football. I think it's great to have loyal fans that feel like we are their team. The only time guys get tired of the "we" thing is when fans tell us what we should and shouldn't be doing on the field. There is a reason that fans are fans. My job is to play tight end and yours is to cheer loud. To be the best "we" all gotta play our roles.
:wall:
 
I firmly believe that had Snyder left well enough alone and not fired Marty (and he fired Marty because he couldn't stand not running the day-to-day affairs of the team), year 9 of Martyball would have us looking more like the Giants and Eagles than what we actually are: Bengals, Lions, etc. Consistenly solid, playoff caliber teams. Maybe even Marty would have won a title.
I was JUST about to say "one thing I think we can all agree on is that firing Marty was probably one of the worst things Snyder has done". The team was set up nearly PERFECT for Marty. Stephen Davis carrying the ball and I was salivating over the prospect of switching to the 3-4 and finally seeing Lavar's true potential. Short of hearing the cloak and dagger story about Gibbs coming back, I think that 8-8 season with Marty is the happiest I've felt about the 'skins since Snyder took over.
 
TobiasFunke said:
Out of curiousity, who are the nine?
Hmmm, missed Ditka, so there are 10. I believe the ten coaches to win a SB with one team and then coach another team sometime afterward are Ditka, Seifert, Parcells, Lombardi, Jimmy Johnson, Flores, Vermeil, Stram, McCafferty and Holmgren.
Vermeil didn't win a Superbowl with the Eagles. They lost
Vermeil won a Super Bowl in St. Louis and then went on to coach at KC.
 
fatness said:
I'd love to see Zorn and the team turn it around. But coming out this Sunday doing the exact same things won't do it, no matter how well he explains why things didn't work.
Agreed to the first part.As far as Zorn's part goes, I disagree with the second. I don't think he's been the weak link in the chain come Sunday afternoons. Maybe he is failing from Monday to Saturday, which results in player failures on Sunday. I don't know. But it's not like he's "buying the groceries", so I don't think that he can be completely faulted for the roster he has to work with.
didn't you read Nittany Lion's post :tinfoilhat: you've got it completely backwards!
Maybe I should have been more specific and stated that I don't think the particular plays being called are the weak link. Maybe he's so engrossed in the playcalling that managing the rest of the game is too much for him. If that is truly the case, I absolutely believe he needs to delegate some responsibilities. If that's what brings the ship down, I hope he at least learned a valuable lesson. But it's not like he doesn't have handpicked guys on his staff. Sherman Smith, Stump Mitchell, Chris Meidt and Scott Wachenheim were all Zorn hires, weren't they? Why wouldn't he trust any of them to help out?ETA: But that still doesn't change the fact that he's somewhat handcuffed by the roster. He may have a say in player acquisition, but I don't think there's any of us that believe he's free to hire and, maybe more importantly, fire whoever he wants to fit his system.
 
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