Check out this Q&A with Shanahan after the press conference. I REALLY like him so far!
New Redskins coach Mike Shanahan during his news conference today was not very specific about the direction in which he wants to take the team. He offered few details about his plan. However, he was a bit more specific when he met with beat writers for about seven minutes in a session that wasn't broadcast. You should find these comments a bit more enlightening than what he said during the news conference. He touches on the quarterback and offensive line positions, Albert Haynesworth, Jerry Gray and the Clinton Portis-Jason Campbell feud. Enjoy:
You said you watched a ton of games this season. What stood out about the Redskins?
"They lost some close games against some good football teams. They had a few injuries on the offensive line. Some games the defense played spectacular. The 7-6 game against Dallas comes to my mind. A lot of teams don't do that against a good football team, especially the offense that Dallas is playing with. But more importantly, I'm looking forward to getting the chance to study everybody. When you watch TV, it's not like going through cut-ups and getting the chance to isolate each guy on every play; not only one year, but a couple years. So I'm [looking] forward to not only studying them but getting to know them and getting evaluations from previous coaches on what they feel and trying to put the best football team we can on the field."
What qualities to you look for in a quarterback?
"There's so many different things. Number one, you've got to be accurate. Number two, you've to be passionate for what you're doing. You've got to study the game inside and out. You're looking for guys that carry that over to the football field. Some guys are talkers, other guys are quiet. I've seen people lead in a lot of different ways. The Joe Montanas, the Steve Youngs, the John Elways that I've been with, each guys is a little bit different in their own way. They're all Hall of Fame quarterbacks. You get in there and get a guy like Steve Buerlein that would just go out there and find a way to win. Everybody had different characteristics. You've got to have a burning desire to want to be the best at what you do."
Are you aware of the type of player Albert Haynesworth is and do you want him to be very comfortable in whatever defense you run?
"I've gone against Albert Haynesworth for a couple of years. He is a difference maker. You don't want to go against him if you're on the team because he is very disruptive. The thing I'm hoping is that we can keep him healthy. What that takes as you get older is a great offseason program. We'll do the things that we need to do to get them in the right position to have success. I'm sure glad he's on our football team."
How do you address the need to keep problems in-house? "I think you address it as a team. You talk about what a team is about and keeping things within. That will happen, I guarantee you. But that's a message that you have to send, and it's what's important for an organization to be successful. There's always disagreements about a lot of different things. It could specific. It could be offense, it could be defense, special teams, the PR staff, the grounds crew. But we're a team. We're the Redskins, and we'll stay as the Redskins. That message will get across in time."
Will your non-coaching duties be the same as you had in Denver? The power and the autonomy?
"I think the thing that people get a little carried away is because it was reported that I had final say. I do have final say. But I never used it in Denver. What I'm looking for is putting the strongest staff I can together, and that's why people talk about Bruce. I said I'm so excited to get Bruce because I watched him operate when he was with the Raiders as executive of the year, when he was with Tampa Bay. I just watched him-as an agent, as a lawyer, as guy that's in charge of the cap. I said, ‘Hey, this guy, I can't believe is out on the street.' And so when you get a guy like that, you say, ‘Hey, let's gobble him up.' I think you'll find that it's a team. The only way you win championships is you get the best at every position. I don't care if it's secretaries. I don't care if it's offense, defense, special teams. We're going to get the best people at every possible position, even outside the program, to do what we need to do to get this thing where it has been."
Do you need to restructure the scouting department or any other area of the organization?
"We'll find out. I'm going to take a look at everybody. We're going to get the best at every position. If we don't have people willing to make that commitment, then we'll have to make some changes."
How involved do you get with the defense?
"The only way I think you stay in the position of the head football coach is you better know offense, defense and special teams. You better know it as good as your assistants, or at least try to, because your team knows it. If you know offense, you know defense, you know special teams, because you're in charge of the whole team. They have to understand that all three areas are very important. I enjoy football, in general, so that's pretty easy for me."
Are you aware of the disagreement between Jason Campbell and Clinton Portis?
"Yes I am."
How would you diffuse that?
"I think, in time, what I'll do is talk to the football team. We'll talk about, hey, if we've got some problems or some business, we'll keep it inside the organization. I understand how that happens, but what you have to do is you have to talk about these problems before they happen. They happen all the time. But some organizations, they don't happen [publicly]. Other organizations, they do. I think players will get the message that the Redskins will stay together."
Are you familiar with secondary coach Jerry Gray and his credentials?
"Very much so. I'm aware of everybody, every coach. That's what I do. I study coaches. I study coordinators. I know what they've done. I know where they've been. He's got a very, very good past. I'm looking forward to talking to him."
When you look at this team, do you see 4-12 and a bad team? Or do you see a team that could have been 7-9, 8-8?
"You are what you are. If you're 4-12, you're 4-12. I'm looking forward to watching a lot of film and evaluating this guys and figuring out how we're going to get better."
What do you look for in an offensive line?
"You know you've got to have players up front. I don't care if it's offensive line, defensive line. You win with those big guys up front. You have to have that, so that will always be an emphasis for me because you can't find teams that are successful without that."
Will blocking follow the scheme you used in Denver?
"It all depends on the players that we have. We've had success doing not only zone schemes, but power schemes as well. Denver, even though it's noted to be a zone blocking scheme, there's a lot of things that Denver did outside just a zone, and we'll continue to do those types of things. We'll evaluate that once we get a better feel for our personnel."