zelezo vlk
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I think he and Kraemer were splitting time at RT in 2017.Not sure what he is going for, but Hainsey got early PT - can't remember who he beat out though
I think he and Kraemer were splitting time at RT in 2017.Not sure what he is going for, but Hainsey got early PT - can't remember who he beat out though
Harry played his blue chippers early and rode those guys in cohesive units for years... that's why ND had great line play as the different core's matured. What HH didn't really have was an overload of blue chippers but thanks to the elite guys hitting and a lot of luck that the Martins/Stanley/Q/McG types weren't frequently on the IR, he used a small group of guys to do a lot of damage in his 6 years.HH seems like a new man, so not sure if things have changed….
… but the old HH would start the Sophomore with the NFL-upside over the lower-ceiling upper-class man every time.
In fact, the main gripe with HH from his previous stint is that he seemed to focus on the latest stud he recruited and not really pay attention to or develop the backups. So basically, if you were a 4-5 star and recruited as an OT you were going to play (they may slide you in), if you were a 3-star or recruited as an OG you were not. (There we’re a couple exceptions.)
Now the reality is that the 4-5 star OTs are just better talent, so much of this is just life and sour grapes. If you are a good, but not great, P5 online recruit and want to play, ND is not the safe bet! However, HH sounded like a grumpy perfectionist, so it wouldn’t be shocking if he lacked some patience with the projects and less-talented kids.
Coach Hiestand had to stack a fairly thin cupboard when he originally came. Fortunately he had his starters and two very young guys to later lean on (NMart and Stanley.) His first full recruiting year added 5 guys, and the next year 4 more. That re-loaded the room. But then he had an almost total miss in the 2015 class (Tillery would have solved some of that had he stayed on offense in the staff's mind, but it is telling that Coach Kelly felt that Coach Hiestand had things under control even with the missing OLine class.) Coach H had Elmer, McGlinchey, Bivin, McGovern, Bars, Mustipher, and Q to mature into a High Quality pair of lines by 2017-8 era, and leave a player like Tillery on Defense. With the miss in 2015 and just the three man class in 2016 (two of which hit big admittedly) we were good on the field and still too thin on the bench. We needed a normal sized class in 2017, and Coach H came through with four decent prospects (Hainsey, Lugg, Banks, and Gibbons.)
The "first Hiestand era" was characterizable by OLine rooms running fairly thin in numbers (you should have about 16 out of 85 scholarships therein), but high-end stars utilizable as intensely worked 5-man units. It was also begun with pretty bad QB passing play, allowing much box stacking and therefore "limping" running success. Bad QB play is not the OLine's fault in these cases, and often protection breakdowns weren't either --- if one watched our pitiful RB allegedly blitz blocking attempts (and even TE blocking some years.)
The gripe against Coach, I felt, was the missing 2015 recruiting year, and the fact that we only got three the next (one of which, Boudreaux, turned into a miss.) That pair of years, adding only two viable OLinemen to the room, was not good recruiting. MAYBE, the fact that he had to get out and really hustle in 2017 contributed to him looking to get away from that aspect of things for awhile. Hopefully, he and Freeman have worked this out if it's even an issue.
i not 100% sure, but i bet it's safe to assume anyone working under cmf has to put in effort on the recruiting trail.Hopefully, he and Freeman have worked this out if it's even an issue.
Gotta figure he'll turn up in AEW at some point. JR was big on him I think.Parker Boudreaux spent four years at UCF after transferring from Notre Dame prior to the 2017 season. Started at right guard for all 13 games in 2019. Had a concussion issue in 2020 that kept him out.
Turned to Pro Weestling signing a deal with WWE, but was recently released by them.
HH must be already impacting rankings. Is this where I am supposed to say screw Jeff Quinn?
This line will succeed and HH will be given all the credit. Far more complicated than that.
The 2017 line was pretty ridiculous. Josh Adams averaged 6.9 per carry and Dexter Williams averaged 9.2. As a team they ran for about 270 yards per game.As I recall it, the years during HH's tenure when we had a "dominant" OL often felt like let-downs for good chunks of the season. There were slow starts, inexplicable off-days, and bad games against top competition.
Nevertheless, the end-of-the-year statistics and NFL Draft usually indicated that the line was objectively good.
I can't remember a season where the OL was dominant as our imaginations said they should be in. Lower expectations are good.
The 2017 line was pretty ridiculous. Josh Adams averaged 6.9 per carry and Dexter Williams averaged 9.2. As a team they ran for about 270 yards per game.
But I kind of agree with you on the whole.
It's kind of concerning to me that OL recruiting seemed better when ND had no offensive line coach than it has been since HH returned.
Coach Hiestand had to stack a fairly thin cupboard when he originally came. Fortunately he had his starters and two very young guys to later lean on (NMart and Stanley.) His first full recruiting year added 5 guys, and the next year 4 more. That re-loaded the room. But then he had an almost total miss in the 2015 class (Tillery would have solved some of that had he stayed on offense in the staff's mind, but it is telling that Coach Kelly felt that Coach Hiestand had things under control even with the missing OLine class.) Coach H had Elmer, McGlinchey, Bivin, McGovern, Bars, Mustipher, and Q to mature into a High Quality pair of lines by 2017-8 era, and leave a player like Tillery on Defense. With the miss in 2015 and just the three man class in 2016 (two of which hit big admittedly) we were good on the field and still too thin on the bench. We needed a normal sized class in 2017, and Coach H came through with four decent prospects (Hainsey, Lugg, Banks, and Gibbons.)
The "first Hiestand era" was characterizable by OLine rooms running fairly thin in numbers (you should have about 16 out of 85 scholarships therein), but high-end stars utilizable as intensely worked 5-man units. It was also begun with pretty bad QB passing play, allowing much box stacking and therefore "limping" running success. Bad QB play is not the OLine's fault in these cases, and often protection breakdowns weren't either --- if one watched our pitiful RB allegedly blitz blocking attempts (and even TE blocking some years.)
The gripe against Coach, I felt, was the missing 2015 recruiting year, and the fact that we only got three the next (one of which, Boudreaux, turned into a miss.) That pair of years, adding only two viable OLinemen to the room, was not good recruiting. MAYBE, the fact that he had to get out and really hustle in 2017 contributed to him looking to get away from that aspect of things for awhile. Hopefully, he and Freeman have worked this out if it's even an issue.
... the stats don't only show the OLine at work. I used to analyze those games play-by-play and the breaks were almost always due to bad execution by other elements of the team (plus stacked up opponents.) If everyone would admit that they only watch the fancy boys and then check the stats after the game to gripe about the OLine, OLinemen would catch a lot less grief.
As I recall it, the years during HH's tenure when we had a "dominant" OL often felt like let-downs for good chunks of the season. There were slow starts, inexplicable off-days, and bad games against top competition.
Nevertheless, the end-of-the-year statistics and NFL Draft usually indicated that the line was objectively good.
I can't remember a season where the OL was dominant as our imaginations said they should be in. Lower expectations are good.
You're a good coach, that's a big reason why your high school is successful. There's certainly are a lot of moving parts in the run game. Everyone has to do their job, and even then there are unfortunate circumstances where the right defense was called or other factors like poor field condition come into play. You're absolutely right though, it's not just the OL. It starts with those guys, but sometimes an impatient back will cost you a play, or a late handoff can result in a running lane getting filled.I am an O Line coach at in a very successful high school program and I can tell you with 100% certainty that most of the time a running play wasn't successful, it wasn't my lines fault. Either the back went to the wrong hole, or a different back missed their block, the QB made the wrong read, etc. Everyone that doesn't know yells come on line! It looks like our line is getting blown up and then I watch it on film and my line was DOMINATING on those no gains. The casual fan doesn't see this or understand this. A successful running play has way more parts than just the line doing their job.
AmenI find the concerned talk BS. The only point worth founding an opinion upon is that Coach Hiestand wants these guys.
The rest of this is noise to me, probably based upon having nothing better to worry about.
Yep Hiestand doesn’t miss.I find the concerned talk BS. The only point worth founding an opinion upon is that Coach Hiestand wants these guys.
The rest of this is noise to me, probably based upon having nothing better to worry about.
To be fair, apparently Nicholas Petit-Frere was a silent to ND until Harry left.Yep Hiestand doesn’t miss.
Just look at the 2018 class.
We have no proof that all of them were Hiestand's #1 choice, though. I always take issue with "coach wanted them" arguments when they might have been the coach's plan C or D option. I'll bet anything you put a gun to Hiestand's head he tells you he preferred Freeling to Paige and Siereveld to Otting.I find the concerned talk BS. The only point worth founding an opinion upon is that Coach Hiestand wants these guys.
The rest of this is noise to me, probably based upon having nothing better to worry about.
We have no proof that all of them were Hiestand's #1 choice, though. I always take issue with "coach wanted them" arguments when they might have been the coach's plan C or D option. I'll bet anything you put a gun to Hiestand's head he tells you he preferred Freeling to Paige and Siereveld to Otting.
I'll bet anything you put a gun to Hiestand's head he tells you he preferred Freeling to Paige and Siereveld to Otting.