Jump to content
  • Welcome!

    Register and log in easily with Twitter or Google accounts!

    Or simply create a new Huddle account. 

    Members receive fewer ads , access our dark theme, and the ability to join the discussion!

     

With all the talk about the next coach who is Gettleman's "guy?"


Happy Panther

Recommended Posts

Here's the breakdown I did before:

Factor in the timing. Right now, Gary Kubiak is one of the hottest names out there in the head coaching prospect search.

Put that together with Gettleman's prior acquaintance with him and it's easy enough to conclude he could be the guy.

The same could be said of Kyle Shanahan, but Kubiak is getting more buzz and has the experience advantage.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I am going scientific with this poo. Based on the Theory of Coaching Short Elasticity and Newton's Law of Gravitational Pull on the Waistband, I deduce that:attachicon.gifImageUploadedByCarolinaHuddle1417558281.918172.jpg

Dave will hire this guy:

attachicon.gifImageUploadedByCarolinaHuddle1417558303.051944.jpg

Or he will hire Parcels:

attachicon.gifImageUploadedByCarolinaHuddle1417558321.186647.jpg

Whenever you post, it's gonna be a classic. You keep us from getting depressed. A truck full of pie for you!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Fun Fact: Dave Gettleman and Bill Parcells never actually worked together.

They're acquainted via mutual friend Ernie Accorsi but were never actually with the Giants at the same time. Parcells had already been gone from the Giants for eight years before Gettleman was hired.

People make a connection because both were with the Giants, but there really isn't one (at least not a direct one).

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I wouldn't mind Kyle Shanahan. He's done good work with Cleveland's offense, did good work with RG3, and who knows, maybe he'll do some good work with Manziel this last month of the season.

What's amazing is, everyone leaves out his best job: OC of the Texans.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

At this point I would take anyone over the cardboard cutout standing on the sidelines now. I had so much hope for Ron, until he promoted Shula. The final indicator for me was the lack of in game adjustments. Last season was the perfect storm for this team. We caught all the breaks and Shula ball worked because we scored on those long time consuming drives and the defense held the leads. There wasn't a need to adjust the scheme because it work finally as we went on a run. The 49ers figured it out in the playoffs and you see the results. Shula ball only works when we score first and the defense can hold the lead.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Archived

This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.


  • PMH4OWPW7JD2TDGWZKTOYL2T3E.jpg

  • Topics

  • Posts

    • Too much to ask picking in the middle of the third round. Unless you are historically lucky. Hell you need luck in the 1st to get that.    The devaluation of the position is hard for me to understand when I look at the difference great MLBs have made to defenses over the years.  Defense needs a good QB too. MLB is the QB of the defense. 
    • Across the league.  5 straight years of decline. Deep pass attempts have fallen to just 7.7 per game in 2024, down from that 2019 peak. Air yards per attempt are at 7.7 yards this year—the lowest in over a decade. Overall passing yards per game have tanked too, from 496 in 2020’s early weeks to a  403 in 2024.    This trend is a result of defenses playing with two-high safety schemes designed to prevent deep passes, forcing offenses to seek yards after the catch on shorter throws.  Two-high safety calls are everywhere now—up from 44% of dropbacks in 2019 to 63% in 2024—forcing QBs to take shorter throws instead of risking picks on bombs. Add in more presnap disguises, faster pass rushes (QB pressure up to 30.1% of dropbacks), and lighter, quicker D-linemen, and it’s a nightmare for deep shots.    Offenses have adapted with emphasizing power run games to counter deep coverage and fast but leaner pass rushers.  Rushing attempts per game are up to 27.9 per game average with top teams significantly in the 30+ attempts.  QBs are emphasizing more short and intermediate throws so that the few deep passes they attempt have a higher completion percentage overall than in years past.    So to everyone who is frustrated with lack of deep passing, it’s all cyclical and right now emphasis on the run and taking more calculated shots is the way to go.  
×
×
  • Create New...