I may be misinterpreting what you’re saying here but I thought he did a pretty good job coaching TEs this year. Mayer did Mayer, Bauman looked solid pre-injury, two freshmen were field ready (pre-Raridon injury), and Evans was pretty crucial to our offense’s success in the later games of the year.I’m not sure but I thought there was talk at one point that Freeman sort of expected the new hires to commit to multiple years (probably barring a clear upgrade like a big time OC offer or something).
If that’s the case it’s be pretty crummy to toss them for a new OC.
Besides, Parker is probably the only one on the offensive staff who isn’t an A-level coach. And he’s Freeman’s guy right?
Yeah, it's great optics to trust an inexperienced GA with the best QB talent we've brought in since Weis was coach. I'm sure those guys will be fine with a temporary solution that shows no commitment or regard for their development.I don’t see a problem with a GA being the defacto QB coach
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Doesn’t matter what nd does, someone will always complainYeah, it's great optics to trust an inexperienced GA with the best QB talent we've brought in since Weis was coach. I'm sure those guys will be fine with a temporary solution that shows no commitment or regard for their development.
Moorhead - Very good OC, would potentially be a good fit. Unlikely to stay in SB for a long time and no idea if he can recruit that side of the ball at the level that he needs to.
Joe Brady - Honestly, I think he’s mediocre as an OC. I’m 95% sure that most of this bird could’ve put up big numbers in college football with Joe Burrow throwing to Justin Jefferson and Jamarr Chase. I do think that he’s a good QB coach and a big name.
Brian Johnson - Best upside and track record of the bunch. Would he be willing to come back to college to get a path to being a college HC in ~2 years? Seems like it’d be easier just to take an NFL OC job this off-season.
Haven’t seen any other names that would be palatable. And all three of these seem like long shots.
Frost won 16 games at Nebraska in 5 seasons, just 10 conference games in the far weaker West B1G division. Tommy has two bowl wins and won at least 9 or more games each season as an OC. He also broke a Fiesta Bowl record and beat a few Top 10 teams. Thanks, but no thanks.
Parker is fine (as a tight ends coach). He’s not a minus. But Heistand, DMC and Stuckey have demonstrated themselves to be excellent, each a major plus in their way.I may be misinterpreting what you’re saying here but I thought he did a pretty good job coaching TEs this year. Mayer did Mayer, Bauman looked solid pre-injury, two freshmen were field ready (pre-Raridon injury), and Evans was pretty crucial to our offense’s success in the later games of the year.
If Shane Steichen gets a HC gig, then the rumor is Brian Johnson gets bumped up to OC. That said, would he really be the OC or would Sirianni call the plays? My worry with BJ would be him being a 1-2 year OC before going back to the NFL.Is there any reason to believe that ND could actually get Brian Johnson? Surely he is in line for an OC promotion to somewhere in the NFL after this season.
Maybe Zac Robinson who was the favorite for the Chargers OC gig until Kellen Moore was made available? Maybe Joe Lombardi?Moorhead - Very good OC, would potentially be a good fit. Unlikely to stay in SB for a long time and no idea if he can recruit that side of the ball at the level that he needs to.
Joe Brady - Honestly, I think he’s mediocre as an OC. I’m 95% sure that most of this bird could’ve put up big numbers in college football with Joe Burrow throwing to Justin Jefferson and Jamarr Chase. I do think that he’s a good QB coach and a big name.
Brian Johnson - Best upside and track record of the bunch. Would he be willing to come back to college to get a path to being a college HC in ~2 years? Seems like it’d be easier just to take an NFL OC job this off-season.
Haven’t seen any other names that would be palatable. And all three of these seem like long shots.
I would consider 1-2 years of an OC before going to the NFL a very successful OC hire, regardless of who it isIf Shane Steichen gets a HC gig, then the rumor is Brian Johnson gets bumped up to OC. That said, would he really be the OC or would Sirianni call the plays? My worry with BJ would be him being a 1-2 year OC before going back to the NFL.
Go directly to jail. DO NOT PASS GO. DO NOT COLLECT $200.Two words: Charley Molnar
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Idk why Brian Johnson would take this job or any college job for that matter. Successful NFL OCs have been bumped to HCs after just a one or two strong season. He’s going to be an OC in the near future. Going back to the college level to OC would set that trajectory off a bit, unless he prefers the college game
Yea I can name a few OC’s that could be described as Hot Messes and are now P5 HCs because they were very good OCs.That bomb would be 40 pints a game.
*points
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Would be a home run hire in my opinionI saw Byron Leftwich already mentioned which seems unrealistic to me but would be a great hire if he would take the job and is interested in being in college coaching.
He doesn't have any college coaching experience does he? I don't know how you go from coaching Tom Brady to dealing with high school kids and their parents (recruiting ) on top of the time constraints of coaching 'student' athletes. I think it will be a hell no for him. Let alone his unrealistic expectations of reading the defense and understand his terminology, seems like a mess to me.Would be a home run hire in my opinion
Is Greg Roman on anyone’s list?
Leftwich would be my top choice coached Tommy Brady and he’s young would be a home run hire but would most likely only be here 1-2 years but regardless whoever you hire I don’t think they’ll be here long
They were 0-12 but had the pieces in place FOR a turnaround regardless of whoever was coach. He brought the Oregon offensive philosophy with him, yes, and took them to 6-7, then 13-0, then he was gone. After he left, Heupel went 12-1 and 10-3 before the Covid season. When Frost left those wheels didn't just fall off.I’m not a Frost fan by any means, but he absolutely deserves credit for turning around UCF. They were 0-12 the year before he arrived.
And those offenses were very, very good. His failure with Nebraska are much more of an indictment on the state of that program as opposed to his failings as a coach.