johnnd05
Johnny T. works for me
- Messages
- 4,522
- Reaction score
- 275
August 16, 2007
Thursday Notebook
by TODD D. BURLAGE
Assistant Editor
The meetings have begun and the player evaluations are starting to yield some answers.
Charlie Weis met with his staff Thursday morning to begin trimming the depth charts and “getting to the guys that you would actually play in a game.”
The objective sounds simple enough, but getting there is a multi-step process.
“You have to look at it as if you’re cutting the team down to a more manageable size of players,” Weis said. “(Those that) are going to be going to a game if you’re going to an away game, and then even to a smaller size as to who the 2-deep are that you’re going to play.”
A little more than two weeks of training camp remain but Weis said he is “pretty close” to knowing what the depth charts are going to look like. Like Weis said last Saturday, “either you’re in the mix, or the ship has sailed.”
“There’s very little time left for people to play themselves into that two-deep rotation,” Weis added Thursday. “...I’m pretty close. In most cases, I’m pretty close.”
Weis didn’t offer names or details about any of the competition for starting spots – most notably the quarterback – but he did say that some positions will go deeper than two spots and the objective the rest of this week is to settle on who is ready to play.
Those final decisions are made as an entire staff with the position coaches and the coordinators offering input. But, of course, Weis carries the power of veto.
“We’re usually fairly close to being on the same page,” Weis said. “Every once in a while, if it’s too close to call, I’ll let them make the call. Or else, if I really feel strongly about the potential upside of one guy over another, then I’ll say, ‘If that’s how close it is, then let’s play the guy with the upside.’”
Through the first two weeks of camp, the No. 1 offense has worked against the No. 1 defense. “This allows you to best evaluate where you are on both sides of the ball,” Weis said.
That will change next week when the second part of practice will feature show teams and the start of Georgia Tech preparations. At that point, Weis said the depth chart needs to be pretty much set.
“You have to start getting the guys ready to play the game and play it with some kind of continuity so you know what your rotations are going to be like once you start playing,” Weis said.
More Than Xs and Os
Weis said when it comes to coaching quarterbacks, there’s more to it than simply teaching plays and schemes, especially when you’re working with three.
In Sharpley the junior, Jones the sophomore and Clausen the freshman, the three quarterback candidates have a different familiarity level with Weis. All three also have unique personalities.
Jones is friendly and impossible not to notice, while Sharpley is more outgoing and Clausen more reserved than most perceive them to be.
“I think that it’s a learning process of their personalities of making sure you know how far you can push them before it becomes detrimental,” Weis said of handling the three. “I’ve dealt with some players in the past where the first time you even looked at them the wrong way, they’d go in the tank. I wouldn’t say any of these guys fit that bill.”
Time Demands
Being the head coach at Notre Dame is a job many could only dream about. Money, fame, perks, pressure, who wouldn’t sign up? But for Weis and others who have held the position, the time constraints are tough and saying “no” to endless appearance and interview requests can build some resentment.
Weis wasn’t complaining, but he said trying to get football, family and charity to peacefully coexist can be challenging enough without additional time demands.
“You have to say no to an awful lot of things,” Weis said. “People think the reason you are saying no is the wrong reason. In reality, there are only so many windows of opportunity for you to do something. And when you’re trying to spread them in between being the head coach at Notre Dame, your family and own charity, you spread yourself a little thin.”
Quoteable:
“Sometimes I say this too often that I’m never happy but I’m pleased where we are right now. Obviously, we’ll find out Sept. 1, but based off of the evidence of what we’ve had in practice right now, I’m pleased.” -- Charlie Weis on the progress of his defense
Thursday Notebook
by TODD D. BURLAGE
Assistant Editor
The meetings have begun and the player evaluations are starting to yield some answers.
Charlie Weis met with his staff Thursday morning to begin trimming the depth charts and “getting to the guys that you would actually play in a game.”
The objective sounds simple enough, but getting there is a multi-step process.
“You have to look at it as if you’re cutting the team down to a more manageable size of players,” Weis said. “(Those that) are going to be going to a game if you’re going to an away game, and then even to a smaller size as to who the 2-deep are that you’re going to play.”
A little more than two weeks of training camp remain but Weis said he is “pretty close” to knowing what the depth charts are going to look like. Like Weis said last Saturday, “either you’re in the mix, or the ship has sailed.”
“There’s very little time left for people to play themselves into that two-deep rotation,” Weis added Thursday. “...I’m pretty close. In most cases, I’m pretty close.”
Weis didn’t offer names or details about any of the competition for starting spots – most notably the quarterback – but he did say that some positions will go deeper than two spots and the objective the rest of this week is to settle on who is ready to play.
Those final decisions are made as an entire staff with the position coaches and the coordinators offering input. But, of course, Weis carries the power of veto.
“We’re usually fairly close to being on the same page,” Weis said. “Every once in a while, if it’s too close to call, I’ll let them make the call. Or else, if I really feel strongly about the potential upside of one guy over another, then I’ll say, ‘If that’s how close it is, then let’s play the guy with the upside.’”
Through the first two weeks of camp, the No. 1 offense has worked against the No. 1 defense. “This allows you to best evaluate where you are on both sides of the ball,” Weis said.
That will change next week when the second part of practice will feature show teams and the start of Georgia Tech preparations. At that point, Weis said the depth chart needs to be pretty much set.
“You have to start getting the guys ready to play the game and play it with some kind of continuity so you know what your rotations are going to be like once you start playing,” Weis said.
More Than Xs and Os
Weis said when it comes to coaching quarterbacks, there’s more to it than simply teaching plays and schemes, especially when you’re working with three.
In Sharpley the junior, Jones the sophomore and Clausen the freshman, the three quarterback candidates have a different familiarity level with Weis. All three also have unique personalities.
Jones is friendly and impossible not to notice, while Sharpley is more outgoing and Clausen more reserved than most perceive them to be.
“I think that it’s a learning process of their personalities of making sure you know how far you can push them before it becomes detrimental,” Weis said of handling the three. “I’ve dealt with some players in the past where the first time you even looked at them the wrong way, they’d go in the tank. I wouldn’t say any of these guys fit that bill.”
Time Demands
Being the head coach at Notre Dame is a job many could only dream about. Money, fame, perks, pressure, who wouldn’t sign up? But for Weis and others who have held the position, the time constraints are tough and saying “no” to endless appearance and interview requests can build some resentment.
Weis wasn’t complaining, but he said trying to get football, family and charity to peacefully coexist can be challenging enough without additional time demands.
“You have to say no to an awful lot of things,” Weis said. “People think the reason you are saying no is the wrong reason. In reality, there are only so many windows of opportunity for you to do something. And when you’re trying to spread them in between being the head coach at Notre Dame, your family and own charity, you spread yourself a little thin.”
Quoteable:
“Sometimes I say this too often that I’m never happy but I’m pleased where we are right now. Obviously, we’ll find out Sept. 1, but based off of the evidence of what we’ve had in practice right now, I’m pleased.” -- Charlie Weis on the progress of his defense