ND Coaching Changes 2016

Rocket89

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ND will have all coaching positions endowed. Assistants and I would bet ancillary support personnel as well. ETC.

Endowing all of the coaching positions would be neat, and a nice little money-saver. Many of the top private schools are doing it. With the ND head coaching position already endowed and several others in different sports it makes sense.

The whole program will be endowed. And it sort of does change things. The key argument that has worked for curtailing sports, particularly football, is its drain on resources. Yes there have been other arguments, but they haven't really been effective.

What are you defining as the "whole program?"

Not only all assistant coaches, but the whole strength staff, video coordinators, staff assistants, equipment managers, trainers, doctors, football operations, and nutrition? What about the AD's office like Chad Klunder who report directly to football? Office staff? Recruiting office?

I'm sure Notre Dame would like to set up something similar to the Duke Basketball Legacy Fund. Duke is going on 20 years and I think they are just now finishing up their goals, and that's for the much smaller and manageable hoops program.

Unless there are 50 or more sugar daddy's lined up ready to drop a few million each endowing the whole program would take years and years. It's a slow process.

If it's done, it'd be interesting to see the changes of a self-sustaining program. Sounds enticing for sure, but I doubt it'd be a real game-changer. Even with a little more financial flexibility I'm sure the likes of Alabama, Texas, Stanford and others will get there first.

Even if it happened during an off-season, boy I'd love to see the reaction if basketball still sat there without a new practice facility.
 

BobbyMac

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What's the point in endowing a program that is cash flow positive each year?
 

Free Manera

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What's the point in endowing a program that is cash flow positive each year?

Caveat - I could be completely wrong in this analysis. But, my understanding is that the point is competitive advantage and independence.

Competitive advantage:
If a group of donors submits 15 million per year over 10 years, and it is earmarked solely for the purpose of paying the head ball coach, ND can out bid pretty much everyone. It goes down the line to pay assistants, analysts, nutritionists, sports scientists, etc.

Independence:
If the money is set aside solely for the purposes identified by the donor, then the University can't interfere with how that money is spent. The university would agree to this because the revenue generated by the program, which will likely increase due to this arrangement, still goes to the university in its entirety.
 
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Bogtrotter07

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What are you defining as the "whole program?"

The whole athletic department.

There is a special program to raise the money in a much shorter time-frame.

What's the point in endowing a program that is cash flow positive each year?

Eliminating the argument that the athletic department costs too much money or in other resources, or that the money or resources could be used better elsewhere. If the endowment is for athletics only, then it could be used as needed to make the consistently best program possible, or elite, as some would say, as in building something elite.

A big problem occurs when budgets cannot be planned out long enough in advance, to account for long term development. If you want to add XYZ over five years at a cost of 4 million a year, what good does it do to get through year two, and have the budget reduced? Hot and cold budgets are a huge problem in situations like ND and its athletic department, and I believe has been part of the problem in the past. This would remove those hurdles.

Conversely, how do you say no to a self-funding revenue producer?
 

Rocket89

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The whole athletic department.

Yeah, that's not happening.

There is a special program to raise the money in a much shorter time-frame.

Which seems pretty different than endowing the whole athletic department so the school never has to pay for anything ever again.

Conversely, how do you say no to a self-funding revenue producer?

When there aren't enough donors to create an endowment to make this a reality. :smilewink
 

Southside Sully

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SIAP Alexander seems like a very comfortable speaker, and patient man at least from this little bit. Will be happy to have him going into living rooms of some young men in the future to get them to come to ND. Love to hear what he has to say about Wimbush as well. Kid will be special

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Southside Sully

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There is no doubt in my mind this is the guy we send in to close deals on the trail. Very, very well spoken. You can see how he closed Manti in his demeanor. Says all the right things.
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ulukinatme

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While I'm glad Nevada got rid of Polian so we could have him again, kind of sucks for him that he had to lose a HC job for that to happen. He does seem like a very personable guy that would make a great HC, and I'm sure he could still be a great HC somewhere someday. Seems very knowledgeable about the game. I like what he did on ST while he was here before, we had much better kick coverage at that time.
 

Fbolt

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http://www.onefootdown.com/2017/1/3...-kelly-i-led-this-team-poorly-news-conference

Nuggets:

“It really sent a message to me that I needed to be more involved in both sides - offensive, defensive and special teams,” said Kelly. “The only way to do that is to have somebody calling plays.”

Kelly said there was only a few candidates who both called plays and ran an offense “the way I like our offense to look.” Former Memphis offensive coordinator Chip Long stood out.
____

Tom(my) Rees is officially a graduate assistant, but “fully empowered” to coach quarterbacks on a day-to-day basis. “I have great confidence in his ability to do so,” said Kelly. “Not many guys tat have walked out on that field with the score tied and with the game on the line, and with the pressure on and have turned it around to victories for Notre Dame.”
 

irishff1014

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SIAP Alexander seems like a very comfortable speaker, and patient man at least from this little bit. Will be happy to have him going into living rooms of some young men in the future to get them to come to ND. Love to hear what he has to say about Wimbush as well. Kid will be special

<script height="381px" width="672px" src="http://player.ooyala.com/iframe.js#pbid=5e83fc845d86487e88b6953600eaff54&ec=IzZWthOTE6xKTT0ZVPizwahW6megejt4"></script>

He talks so smooth.
 

NDinBoston

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<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-lang="en"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Check out this updated look at Brian Kelly's new Irish coaching staff:<a href="https://t.co/CGyMcTYO6G">https://t.co/CGyMcTYO6G</a></p>— John Heisler (@NDHeisler) <a href="https://twitter.com/NDHeisler/status/826232383888297986">January 31, 2017</a></blockquote>
<script async src="//platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>

*********************************************
By John Heisler

Media members covering Notre Dame don’t normally expect to hear Shakespeare quoted in the course of analyzation of the Irish football scene.

But that’s what they got Monday as Notre Dame head coach Brian Kelly, in the course of introducing new members of his staff, referenced a soliloquy from Hamlet:

“The slings and arrows of outrageous fortune . . .” noted Kelly, in reference to the regular surveillance he and his Irish program are under by fans, alumni and lots more.

Said the Irish head coach, “I know there's more scrutiny on us this year, but I am focused on the present. I know there's going to be a ton of talk about that, and I get that. That comes with this.

“I think every year that I've gone into this position (as Notre Dame head coach) that it's about excellence. It's about championships. If you fall short of that, it's the slings and arrows of outrageous misfortune. I mean, that's what happened. And, so, I get that.

“My focus is on the present and on this football team and that will drive me every single day.”

Kelly had made all his new hires known over recent weeks with the announcement of new offensive and defensive coordinators, a new strength and conditioning coach, a new special teams coach and three additional assistant coaches.

So, today, beyond officially presenting the newcomers in person (and even if special teams coach Brian Polian and quarterback coach Tom Rees are no strangers), it became about clarifying Kelly’s take on the evaluation process.

Consider Notre Dame’s head coach a relative stranger to such circumstances (the closest season on his resume to 2016 was a 4-7 mark at Central Michigan in 2004, Kelly’s first season there)—and that’s a good thing.

His seven seasons in South Bend have shown him the passion and expectations of the Irish fan base—and that’s why he put particular care into the evaluation process. He spent extensive time with Irish director of athletics Jack Swarbrick in the period after the 2016 finale at USC, and Kelly noted Monday that he met individually with all 96 players to ask for their thoughts and feedback.

So, while some postseason evaluations may occur more routinely, Kelly “gets it”—as he said several times—in terms of the heightened external interest this time around.

“I think it's important to certainly look at where you are and where you were,” said Kelly.

“For me, I know I'm going to always be reminded about last year, and I clearly understand that. But I'm living in the present and building for the future.Having said that, there always are going to be changes when you look hard and look at yourself and look at where your program needs to be.

“Last year we didn't live up to those expectations and that falls on me first and foremost--and so we needed to make some significant changes, not just in terms of personnel but on how we do things on a day-to-day basis. And it starts with me.”

Kelly offered a cornucopia of thoughts on the staff additions:

--On defensive coordinator Mike Elko: “I was looking for someone that would take the football away, somebody that has had great success in doing so, as well as continued success as a coordinator. Mike Elko's name just kept coming up at the top of the list.

“I was going to look for somebody that could work both at a three-down and a four-down fashion, but he had to understand who we were going to be able to recruit to Notre Dame and needed to have the ability to play a defense shaped around the kids that we can recruit.

“He attacks protections as well as anybody out there. What stood out to me was his ability to dissect an offense, its strengths and weaknesses. Take away their strengths and attack their weaknesses. And then eliminating the big plays.

“Mike does a lot of things that are hard to decipher, but easily taught. He does an incredibly efficient job at communicating what he's teaching.”


--On offensive coordinator Chip Long: “I was looking for, first and foremost, a play-caller. One of the things that was pretty consistent across the board (when he talked to players) was that when I spent time on defense, our defensive personnel and players in particular really enjoyed having me part of that day-to-day schedule. That’s one that I'm not normally part of--most of the time I'm on the offensive side of the ball.

“So it really sent a message to me that I needed to be more involved in both sides, offense, defense and special teams. The only way to do that is to have somebody calling plays. And as I looked around the country, I was able to compile a very short list of guys that called plays through my eyes. In other words, the way I like our offense to look.


“Not only did Chip call offenses in a similar fashion, but I loved the way he called the game. He was able to use the run late in games—he didn't rely heavily on a passing game when he was forced to make up ground late in games. He utilized two tight ends, which was going to be a mode that we have to move towards with the great depth that we have at that position.


“Chip is going to bring some things in that we did not have. At the end of the day, we're not going to change the entire offense and teach a new system to this group. But you're going to see some things that you've never seen from this offense before. And it's going to be inclusion of the backs and the tight ends in the passing game.

“There will be some things that we change in terms of verbiage to make it cleaner, more streamlined and easier to call so we can move a little bit faster.”


On director of football performance Matt Balis: “He's already made a very big impact on our football team. Developing that environment is so crucial to all the elements that are needed: Strength, toughness, the ability to handle stress and mental fatigue moving forward. You can see the passion that he has on a day-to-day basis for being here at Notre Dame is felt every single morning with our football team.”

On linebacker coach Clark Lea: “Since he previously had worked with Mike Elko, he knows him well, knows the system we'll be employing defensively. He has built great relationships early on that have come to fruition for us in recruiting.”

On receiver coach DelVaughn Alexander: “What I loved about DelVaughn are his organizational skills and his ability to teach the wide receivers. He’s a veteran coach who has built great relationships with his players.”

On Polian: “That was a position that I thought was important to immediately address and upgrade—and we were able to hit a home run with Brian. As a head coach, he brings such a great perspective on the overall workings on a day-to-day basis in developing players. He's also an outstanding recruiter and he's able to recruit from coast to coast.”


On Rees: “He is officially in a graduate assistant's role (and could become full-time if NCAA legislation approving a 10th full-time assistant passes), but he is fully empowered to coach them (the Irish quarterbacks). He will have the room. There are not many guys that have walked out on that field with the score tied, with the game on the line, with the pressure on and have turned it around to victories for Notre Dame. There's nobody better to be able to teach that position than somebody who has done it here at Notre Dame, and he'll be able to mentor our quarterback group in a manner and fashion that nobody else in the country can.”


Ultimately, Kelly determined he was not going to stand pat after the 2016 campaign:

“That's really what this is about--how much change versus continuity. I think where we were as a program, we needed some change. Change in personnel relative to our staff, and then messaging. And so both of those are happening at the same time.


“With Jack (Swarbrick) we discussed a blueprint for what we needed to do to be successful. What are the tough decisions that need to be made to ensure success?

“The great thing about Notre Dame is that you're not defined by what happened in the past--it's about what you do in the future. And we all know that we did not live up to the expectations. Our mission is a mission of excellence. It's to win championships and to graduate our players. We fell short of that.

“But we didn't sit around talking about what we didn't do. We spent all of our time thinking about what we needed to do to be successful. We didn't waste time on discussions that were not tangible or specific to how do we get better.


“ I know I'm going to be reminded about the past, and yet I've focused so much of my time on the present. As I reflect at it, there are no bad football teams. There are just poorly-led football teams--and I think I led this team poorly. And I think that's probably what I learned more than anything else.”

Kelly understands there will be plenty of eyes on the 2017 Irish—to see if they can inject themselves back into the national conversation.


“I would tell you that every year that I've stood before you, that it's a make-or-break year. I don't think I've gone into a year going, hey, I can take this year off. Not going to worry about it.


“ I think it's energizing. When you know that you didn't do the job that you expect, that your expectations have been set for you, then you're more energized, you're more focused.

“That's what envelops me on a day-to-day basis—and it’s not worrying about what the perception is. It's more about how I can't wait to get this team on the field.”

Even if it takes a little Shakespeare to get his point across.

Senior associate athletics director John Heisler has been part of the Notre Dame athletics communication team since 1978.
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BGIF

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Shakespeare quoted ...

Shakespeare quoted ...

“The slings and arrows of outrageous fortune . . .” noted Kelly, in reference to the regular surveillance he and his Irish program are under by fans, alumni and lots more.


More apropos would have been:

Hoisted on one's own petard!


As ALL those replaced were hired by himself.
 

Blaise

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I am excited for this coaching staff, I think we have the talent in OL, QB, RB to have a pretty good offense next year... If we get the defense on that level, no reason we can't be a 9/10 win team... Coach up this talent..
 
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Bogtrotter07

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Did I understand that Brian Polian is being named Recruiting Coordinator?
 
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Bogtrotter07

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no, elston was just called it by BK in presser

Thanks, looking back at tape, more than one commentator said what I think to be a 'mistake' as you answered my question. I think what they both meant to say was former Recruiting Coordinator at ND. I think it is what we could call a Freudian slip!

I bet if we fast forward a couple of years we look at uber-Recruiting superstar Brian Polian and his bookend Hawaiian defensive behemoths, as nothing more than the delineation of a brief pause in the masters work. Brian's last great get for ND before he left was Manti Te'o, and his first get upon his return is Myron Tagovailoa-Amosa.

Myron is bigger than advertised, and I have heard more than just a couple that know scouting and film say he has the biggest first step they have seen out of a high schooler in a long time. I asked one guy how he compared to Sheldon Day. Knowing that I am a big Sheldon fan, he said better. Just a bit, but better.

He also likened Myron's hands to Sheldon's coming out of high school. But he reminded me Myron is growing right now, is bigger than advertised, and is about three to four inches taller than Sheldon, and just as beefy. This guy in particular says that Myron is going to be the incoming Freshman that has a big profound affect on the team from day one. He thinks Myron may be good enough to play as a freshman, but he knows he is good enough to push the play of the whole position group forward.

These guys really like Myron, Darnell, and Kurt. They say this is a really good defensive beef-crust haul. Good bodies, plenty to develop, and they will change the tone and timber of the Irish defense. These are exactly the kind of guys Elko needs in that position group. So the overall point is, this is Polian, Elko, and Lea, making a hugely fast and accurate connection through Elston to get what the Irish need next season now.

This is, from what I have been told, exactly why Elko makes a huge difference in his first year, and controls his program and moves it solidly forward every season thereafter.

Also, look at the concept of adding just one more guy, with a special talent or skill, to push the skill level of the whole group forward.

And look at a coach whose ego parks at the locker, before he goes to work. Look for consensus building, and incredible communication and teaching skills.
 
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Bogtrotter07

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To contrast, this was a sub conversation in the St. Brown thread. It started with Father Brown's displeasure at the strength and conditioning program, and picked up some if the ire recently directed toward BK for some of his apparent miscues :

Disagree, BVG was the worst coach to happen to ND during Kelly's tenure. Bad hire, bad coach, terrible situation.

Good news is, his train wreck of a defense shouldn't affect this team anymore. Amon-ra is going to be a stud.

I don't disagree with you.

But I also agree that Kelly showed the program great disrespect, and totally hurt the program by what he let happen to strength and conditioning.

People have made the point that Kelly rode it all the way down the toilet with BVG. And it is true. BVG should have been gone a year earlier, or at least before last season. That is all good and true.

But he didn't even have to fire Longo, he could have moved him sideways, gotten him help, any one of a number of things. Think about it.

I got the loyalty thing. I am pissed as hell. I am hearing it ad nauseam from my up-channel connections. I said to one guy I talk to, "So you are telling me if you have a guy working for you, and he has an assignment that is pretty clear, in terms of a measurable goal, and he doesn't get to it, and you analyze things, and it turns out he blows one of the tasks he is responsible for, it is okay if it involves his loyalty to a friend?" I really held him to it, for saying it was okay for that guy to not do the job he was hired because it got in the way of his personal friendship.

Screw that, it is just a stupid excuse! I told him, that every time I heard someone give an excuse like that for someone who clearly didn't do their job, that was a reflection to me that no one involved, and therefore the institution didn't have the will to do what they said they were going to do.

Nobody needs to talk about winning, or why ND doesn't as long as anyone excepts BS excuses for not getting the right thing done.

And the absolute irony is, the healthy perspective is, with Longo and Kelly in this case, if Kelly actually gave a shit about his 'friend' he would have gotten him help before it got to a permanent or long-term disability!

You and I know there are hundreds of ways that Kelly and Swarbrick could have flooded that strenght and conditioning program with support, preserved Longo's title and Reputation and moved ND forward.

Because the fact is, everyone including Kelly acknowledged after the 2013 NC game that ND needed to be bigger and stronger to compete at the elite level on the national stage!

I am so serious about this. The new coaches Polian, Alexander, Long, Elko, Lea, Balis, etc., are totally different cats than the old ones. And as a matter of fact Kelly fits in more closely with the ones no longer here.

That is the difference in a commitment to winning big; and that is the difference in the changes in the program.

Kelly will get credit for all these changes, that was the plan going in, but don't anyone kid yourself. When you see a much better defense than ND has fielded for more than just one season, in the last twenty, and when you see an offense that can knock other defenses on their asses, and are feeling all giddy, remember there was a reason for it happening, and its origin was outside the coaching staff, prior to this season.
 

Luckylucci

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I hope we can't just get back to the standard that Diaco set, prior to his departure. Top 25-30 defenses. I think Elko could take it to another level, but I'd be happy with those numbers, that we had previously. We had a top 30 defense, it was destroyed. I have a lot of confidence in Elko and Lea, couldn't be more excited. Let's get back to those days, when we could count on the defense.
 

Luckylucci

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As of today, I'm not sure who I'm a bigger fan of Coach Lea or Elko. Both seem like incredible coaches. They just seem to get the game and their players.
 

Sherm Sticky

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Does no one else feel very uncomfortable with Alexander as a coach at Notre Dame. It makes my skin crawl...I just can't trust him if it comes down to ND vs USC for a kid.


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BobbyMac

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Does no one else feel very uncomfortable with Alexander as a coach at Notre Dame. It makes my skin crawl...I just can't trust him if it comes down to ND vs USC for a kid.


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I wonder how the fans felt about hiring Ara from rival NW... the guy who went 4-0 against the Irish? Not sure how they felt in the beginning, but I know how they felt 2 National Championships later.
 

Free Manera

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Does no one else feel very uncomfortable with Alexander as a coach at Notre Dame. It makes my skin crawl...I just can't trust him if it comes down to ND vs USC for a kid.

Nah. He's a professional like all coaches are. He is not going to risk his livelihood out of love for his alma mater.

It's like a lifelong Red Sox fan, turned Red Sox player, who signs with the Yankees as a free agent. He'll play just as hard for the Yanks, especially against the Sox, because he has something to prove. He will always have a soft spot for Boston but he ain't going to let that take money out of his kids' pockets.
 

phgreek

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Nah. He's a professional like all coaches are. He is not going to risk his livelihood out of love for his alma mater.

It's like a lifelong Red Sox fan, turned Red Sox player, who signs with the Yankees as a free agent. He'll play just as hard for the Yanks, especially against the Sox, because he has something to prove. He will always have a soft spot for Boston but he ain't going to let that take money out of his kids' pockets.

Agree. There is also the ethical part that says you owe allegiance to he who writes the check. I've worked for really difficult and not real well like customers...and I never let there be a mixed message...he writes the checks, as long as he doesn't ask me to do something immoral or unethical, he is owed my effort and loyalty.
 

Grahambo

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I'm gonna go out on a limb and suggest Alexander is not here to sabotage ND in their recruiting efforts against USC.

Big risk on my part but you know, yolo.
 

Sherm Sticky

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I'm gonna go out on a limb and suggest Alexander is not here to sabotage ND in their recruiting efforts against USC.

Big risk on my part but you know, yolo.



Lmao...I know.

But it just makes me feel so weird...


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Bogtrotter07

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I hope we can't just get back to the standard that Diaco set, prior to his departure. Top 25-30 defenses. I think Elko could take it to another level, but I'd be happy with those numbers, that we had previously. We had a top 30 defense, it was destroyed. I have a lot of confidence in Elko and Lea, couldn't be more excited. Let's get back to those days, when we could count on the defense.

Wow! I can agree with that sentiment! I'll bet the biggest difference we will see between Elko's and Diaco's defense, both being good, is turnovers and how slow the offense plays against the defense.

I think Elko's defense with be off the charts in turnovers with the athletes Mike and Clark have to work at, at every position. Just wait. I have a really strong feeling.

And if you listen to any coach that goes against Elko, the first thing you hear is how damned hard it is to figure out what he is doing. With that rover, and some of the athletic skill Elko has to work with, it is going to give offensive coordinators a case or two before playing the Irish.

I could see 60-75 play offenses down to 50, unless they want to risk regularly turning over the ball. At the same time I feel Long and Alexander are going to up the offensive play count for ND. A really good thing!

As of today, I'm not sure who I'm a bigger fan of Coach Lea or Elko. Both seem like incredible coaches. They just seem to get the game and their players.

I could tell you stories about how they relate to their players. I talk to the father of another player on my son's b-ball team who was a linebacker for them at BGSU. And I could tell you about some recruits they have spoken with, who hold them in the highest regard. So high it's almost spooky. I am telling you, I rarely if ever have seen guys that can relate to others like these guys. I am telling you, when the whistle blows it is like one heartbeat, with the commitment they pull from their kids. I almost believe their kids would walk through walls for them.
 
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Bogtrotter07

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I'm gonna go out on a limb and suggest Alexander is not here to sabotage ND in their recruiting efforts against USC.

Big risk on my part but you know, yolo.

I think Alexander, like all the other newly hired coach's is exactly the right guy for our receivers. The guy is great at getting his players to play more physically, and contest balls. He can build big guys into unstoppable receivers. Don't be surprised if Jones becomes an absolute beast split out wide.
 

Valpodoc85

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I think Alexander, like all the other newly hired coach's is exactly the right guy for our receivers. The guy is great at getting his players to play more physically, and contest balls. He can build big guys into unstoppable receivers. Don't be surprised if Jones becomes an absolute beast split out wide.

Agree with this. Alexander is a competitor. He's wearing Irish colors. He wants to win. No question where that goes come USC.
 

Sherm Sticky

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I think Alexander, like all the other newly hired coach's is exactly the right guy for our receivers. The guy is great at getting his players to play more physically, and contest balls. He can build big guys into unstoppable receivers. Don't be surprised if Jones becomes an absolute beast split out wide.


To me this makes me think that ESB will get he most out of Alexander. What ESB lacked the most last year was a physicality aspect to his game. If Alexander can get that out of ESB, he will be unstoppable.


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Bogtrotter07

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To me this makes me think that ESB will get he most out of Alexander. What ESB lacked the most last year was a physicality aspect to his game. If Alexander can get that out of ESB, he will be unstoppable.


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When I tell you every coaching move this past year was based from a carefully analysis, coaching ranks were scoured, all candidates were vetted and when more than one passed muster, the best for ND, and its players were picked, I am not kidding.

This all was so well orchestrated it is not funny.
 
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