Caleb played really well in the 2nd half and gave them a shot to win. Dude has been good this year. Had his mistakes, but he's a rookie so it's unrealistic to expect him to do everything perfect.Flus sucks, but also Caleb, feel free to get the play snapped before 3 seconds
Caleb played really well in the 2nd half and gave them a shot to win. Dude has been good this year. Had his mistakes, but he's a rookie so it's unrealistic to expect him to do everything perfect.
Flus has no excuse. Dude is in year 3 and continues to completely screw up late game management.
But one deserves significantly more blame.I'm not expecting perfection. Both coach and professional football player deserve blame.
Yeah no one is saying one deserves more blame in the other, but it definitely feels like you're trying to coddle Williams for a pretty basic situation that you would expect a high school QB to know; let alone a heisman winning, #1 overall draft pick. We're literally talking about simply snapping the ball.But one deserves significantly more blame.
One is a rookie, the other is a 3rd year head coach. One is expected to handle these situations A LOT better. And to date, we've had well over a half-dozen situations where that veteran coach has imploded in the most important moments of the game.
Caleb will improve and has done well over the past few weeks, but Eberflus's ineptitude in the clutch has persisted.
So has flus been fired yet?
It's official!Haha…just came here to ask same thing!
How did he make it past 3:30 central time yesterday???
Still took longer than it should haveHe gone lol. That didn’t take long
He gone lol. That didn’t take long
I think you're right. There are probably a lot of guys out there who wouldn't necessarily be great coordinators but would transition well to HC.No dog in the fight. But I just cannot grasp how, the vast majority of the time, good coordinators don’t end up being good head coaches. There has to be another way to assess people and different avenues by which someone can become a head coach other than by being a coordinator first. I’d take Eberflus back as D coordinator for the Colts in a heartbeat (Gus Bradley stinks), but we knew here in Indy he’d be a terrible head coach back then.
It depends on skillset. A HC has to have some CEO and real leadership qualities to him, where coordinators really just need to be ball coaches and excel at scheme/Xs and Os. Al Golden is a good example of a guy who excels at coaching ball, but didn’t necessarily succeed (at the highest level) of being the CEO type.No dog in the fight. But I just cannot grasp how, the vast majority of the time, good coordinators don’t end up being good head coaches. There has to be another way to assess people and different avenues by which someone can become a head coach other than by being a coordinator first. I’d take Eberflus back as D coordinator for the Colts in a heartbeat (Gus Bradley stinks), but we knew here in Indy he’d be a terrible head coach back then.