I have been out of pocket all weekend and kept thinking ND was bringing in that clown Derrick Mason. Thank you it's a guy named Brian Mason.
Lol Mason is an viable DC option so I wouldn’t exhale yet
To be fair to Derrick Mason, the Auburn D was good this year. Some it is them playing conservative, burn clock style; as my brother and I say they are a “junker” team. But it was a legitimate good defense. However, yeah he was a clown as Vandy head coach.
To be fair to Derrick Mason, the Auburn D was good this year. Some it is them playing conservative, burn clock style; as my brother and I say they are a “junker” team. But it was a legitimate good defense. However, yeah he was a clown as Vandy head coach.
WTH is a stinking point?
I'm slowly falling out of the modern lingo
Taking Alabama to the wire purely on the strength of their defensive performance has to be pretty attractive.
This is concerning (from the same Athletic article):
The Bearcats struggled with place kicking at times, most notably this past season, when they converted just 9 of 19 field goal attempts.
I've never thought of FG kicking as a skill that's heavily influenced by coaching at the college level. Kickers need two things: (1) a big leg; and (2) the mental discipline to follow through on a simple action he's practiced thousands of times in stressful situations. Good kickers have both. Average kickers only have one. How much credit does a ST coach get for either of those things?
With Watt willing to come in a support role, to me that smells like 2years of HH and Watt takes over. Recruiting benefit of having HH on board may be negligible. Even if not true, I think that’s the message it sends. Negative recruiting from other teams will tell recruits that anyhow.
With Watt willing to come in a support role, to me that smells like 2years of HH and Watt takes over. Recruiting benefit of having HH on board may be negligible. Even if not true, I think that’s the message it sends. Negative recruiting from other teams will tell recruits that anyhow.
I've never thought of FG kicking as a skill that's heavily influenced by coaching at the college level. Kickers need two things: (1) a big leg; and (2) the mental discipline to follow through on a simple action he's practiced thousands of times in stressful situations. Good kickers have both. Average kickers only have one. How much credit does a ST coach get for either of those things?
This is concerning (from the same Athletic article):
The Bearcats struggled with place kicking at times, most notably this past season, when they converted just 9 of 19 field goal attempts.
This is concerning (from the same Athletic article):
The Bearcats struggled with place kicking at times, most notably this past season, when they converted just 9 of 19 field goal attempts.
I've never thought of FG kicking as a skill that's heavily influenced by coaching at the college level. Kickers need two things: (1) a big leg; and (2) the mental discipline to follow through on a simple action he's practiced thousands of times in stressful situations. Good kickers have both. Average kickers only have one. How much credit does a ST coach get for either of those things?
Regarding kicking, I don't know the numbers but I've never felt less confident every time he steps up for a kick. It's either going to be crushed or lame duck and not even close. Don't feel like that was on Polian. But as a HC I'd want a guy with a smaller leg who you know is going to kick it well. Hard to make game time decisions when your kicker can make it from 53 but miss from 27 with equal probability.
He was a 76.2% kicker in 2021. When you are offering scholarships to kickers you have to be better than that at ND.
This is concerning (from the same Athletic article):
The Bearcats struggled with place kicking at times, most notably this past season, when they converted just 9 of 19 field goal attempts.
I've never thought of FG kicking as a skill that's heavily influenced by coaching at the college level. Kickers need two things: (1) a big leg; and (2) the mental discipline to follow through on a simple action he's practiced thousands of times in stressful situations. Good kickers have both. Average kickers only have one. How much credit does a ST coach get for either of those things?
While this might be true, will it work is the real question? I'm doubtful it does. I think by that time HH, Watt, and Rees will have a great product to sell that will supersede any negative recruiting that would come with HH leaving.
Why? Every program has ga's and assistants at almost every position. What would be different about Watt?
If your go to recruiting pitch is 'don't go to school A because there's a chance your position coach might not be there in 3 years even though he's the best in the business', you're not going to have a lot of success.
His classes, and Stanford’s classes in general recruiting wise in that period, were very top heavy. A couple legit top 100 guys but majority three star each year. Auburns class is awful IIRC this year.