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What Went Wrong: A Belated NFL Black Monday Piece
Joey
Jan 11th
Black Monday in the NFL came and went and despite my best inclinations to write a somethin', I had a nothin' to offer. In many ways, most of the firings were easy enough to figure out. Guys who probably deserved to get canned did get canned. Teams that felt the pressure to save their fanbases made the moves to do so. All in all, it was kind of an expected grouping of firings when you add in the in season removals of Green Bay coach Mike McCarthy and Cleveland coach Hue Jackson. So since it's been a while, I wanted to approach this from a different perspective. Here I want to talk about the eight coaching jobs, what went wrong (on a grander level) and what their replacements need to do to avoid suffering a similar fate. Hold onto ya butts, folks:
Cleveland Hue Jackson
What Went Wrong: Everything
Seriously. Cleveland hired Hue Jackson under the philosophy of taking a long and painful route to relevancy, amassing draft picks, essentially tanking without admitting and hoping that Hue Jackson could in theory keep the organization stable enough until the time came. Depending on who you ask, Cody Kessler was either Hue's idea or some massive analytics based gamble that backfired on Sashi Brown and company, made worse by Cleveland trading BACK in the draft and away from the likes of Carson Wentz. At the end of the day, the plan had some merit to it (as seen by the successes of Sam Heinke and the 76ers eventually) but like most plans that require patience, that patience eventually runs out pretty quickly. It doesn't help that giving Hue Jackson, a guy who was fired from the Raiders after an 8-8 season where undisciplined penalty laden football marred progress, a young team and expecting him to get them up to speed to become eventual contenders was probably a bad idea overall. The arrival of former Kansas City Chiefs GM John Dorsey meant that the patience was out and Hue needed to produce something, especially when hiring a proven OC in Todd Haley and #1 overall pick Baker Mayfield. This job was going to be lost eventually but when Baker looked flat and the team continued to play this broken level of uninspired play, the plug was pulled. Everything that could've gone wrong in Cleveland did go wrong under the watchful eye of Hue Jackson and while I don't fault a guy for taking a gig, immediately jumping over to Marvin Lewis and the Bengals as an assistant probably did little to squash the belief that Jackson was a weasel of sorts who had no problem looking out for #1 at the expense of everyone else. It would take a novel to state everything what went wrong from 2016 to 2018 but just know that at the end of the day, nobody stood up for Hue Jackson when he was ousted and the team took off when he was shown the door.
Enter: Freddie Kitchens
Kitchens' ascent from lowly RBs coach to offensive coordinator to head coach from Jan of 2018 to Jan of 2019 is shit straight out of Narcos. In many ways, I wonder if the thought process went a bit like this: Cleveland had a bunch of candidates in mind with the thought process being that they could find the best offensive mind for their bright generational QB. At the same time, teams began calling for Kitchens to potentially interview for either their head coaching gig or their offensive coordinator position. Cleveland wants to keep Kitchens, other teams want Kitchens and Cleveland probably wants a head coach who will keep Kitchens but can't find him. Cleveland looked around, realized the guy they wanted was probably in house already and they didn't want to lose him SO Kitchens gets to be the head coach. Kitchens is actually surprisingly well traveled; a coach under the likes of Bill Parcells, Ken Whisenhunt and Bruce Arians. Kitchens and Mayfield created some beautiful magic together and so I imagine continuity (as well as a supremely improved offense) pushed Kitchens over the other candidates. There are three factors at play here; 1) Cleveland has expectations now. The 5-3 end of the year plus the young star QB who should only improve makes a lot of people believe you can win. Kitchens will probably not be afforded two abysmal years to figure it out the way that Hue Jackson was. 2) Kitchens has just 8 games worth of play calling experience to his name which means he's got a lot to learn in a short period of time. 3) Kitchens just canned Gregg Williams which means he'll need a new defensive guru of sorts to handle that side of the field.
Green Bay Packers Mike McCarthy
What Went Wrong: #12
Mike McCarthy deserves a lot of credit for what he did in Green Bay from milking the final years of elite play out of Brett Favre and then grooming Aaron Rodgers into one of the best QBs to ever play the game. I think people forget the job McCarthy and company did when the Packers lost seemingly half of their team to injuries and still won the Super Bowl in 2011 or how he got into the playoffs relying on Matt Flynn in 2013 when Rodgers got hurt. All things go sour eventually though and the whispers that Rodgers was carrying McCarthy year in and year out got a bit too loud. Those whispers combined with the body language yelling whenever Rodgers and McCarthy seemed to have something go wrong became a bit too much and so McCarthy's reign in Green Bay ended unceremoniously after a loss to lowly Arizona. McCarthy might just be a case of "How can I miss you if you won't go away?" and about how everybody in sports eventually gets tired of one another. Aaron Rodgers is a veteran QB who probably did plenty of checks and audibles at the LOS which in turn pissed McCarthy off and conversely I'm sure McCarthy's outdated gameplans and suspect development of talent over the past 2-3 years drove Rodgers crazy. McCarthy's outdated gameplans cost him in the end, especially when it became readily apparent that Rodgers' decline (be it due to age or injuries) made him incapable of overcoming those woes.
Enter: Matt LaFleur
Matt LaFleur's hiring is simple enough I suppose. Aaron Rodgers is in the twilight of an amazing career and "offensive guru" is a hot to trot catch all term. LaFleur cut his teeth under Kyle Shanahan and then moved onto Sean McVay before leaving for the Titans to call his own offense. It was an up and down run for him as the playcaller, probably hurt in no small part by the injuries to Marcus Mariota. LaFleur is a gamble on upside with a somewhat impatient QB who is battling the aging curve. It's a risky move but if LaFleur can get the best out of Rodgers before Father Time takes over? It just might be worth.
Denver Broncos Vance Joseph
What Went Wrong: 50% John Elway 50% In Game Management
Vance Joseph being tabbed to replace the retiring Gary Kubiak always felt like a somewhat shaky hire. Vance Joseph in my estimation was a totally qualified hire but perhaps not quite the hire needed for this specific team. John Elway's teams were mostly veteran squads headed up by veteran head coaches like John Fox and Gary Kubiak. Vance Joseph was a rookie head coach who had proven himself to be an adept and solid defensive coordinator riiiight when hiring THOSE kind of guys was going out of fashion. Elway hired a young coach and then gave him an aging offensive core, opening the pocket books to bring in veteran free agent talent that hasn't quite worked out. Of course we'd be here all day talking about the QB situation from sticking with Trevor Semian a bit too long to the Paxton Lynch draft spot (want to have a fun alternate history for a minute? Picture a world where the Cowboys actually successfully outbid Denver to get Paxton Lynch and Denver has to take another QB later on) to the Case Keenum gamble. Denver in a way tried to replicate the Cowboys formula; run the ball a lot, have a ball control QB and rely on a tremendous defense. It just didn't work as the offense struggled under Joseph (in large part due to the RBs not being Zeke, the QB not being Dak, the OL not being peak Dallas and Demariyus Thomas falling off) and his inability to figure out what he wanted out of Case Keenum throughout the season has left him out of a job and Denver in need of a new QB. Joseph was dealt a bad hand from Elway but in game management was such a glaring problem for Denver, often made worse by their team absolutely not showing up in prime time games. Vance Joseph was the wrong guy for this job and then proceeded to remind people of that every single time he made a bad decision late in games.
Enter: Vic Fangio
First the obvious; Vic Fangio has paid his dues, done his part and at 60 years old, it's very much now or never for an NFL lifer. I have zero qualms with Denver hiring him. I just hope he's being hired because he's the guy they want and not because they had this compulsion to keep Gary Kubiak in some sort of capacity. If Vic Fangio edged out Mike Munchak because one was fine with Kubiak and the other wasn't then it's a bad call. If that's the case then just hire Kubiak to be your head coach again because this sort of helicopter head coaching is sort of unnecessary. Fangio and Kubiak make for a very old duo but also a very credible couple of coaches at the top of the helm. If they manage to get Ed Donatell to become the defensive coordinator then you're now talking about three qualified long term NFL lifers running a young roster. It's a gutsy move by Elway at a time where young hip offensive minded coaches are all the rage. Hopefully it works out better than Vance Joseph did.
New York Jets Todd Bowles
What Went Wrong: Bad drafting + bad optics
I think Todd Bowles is somewhat of an overmaligned figure in Jets land. After the Rex Ryan Era, the more low key Bowles was probably more of an overreaction to not having to deal with Ryan's madness anymore. Todd had tremendous success in his first season and rallied the Jets to a 10-6 record before the wheels fell apart. In a large part, the talent fell apart around Bowles and the QB situation never truly situated itself with veterans not being good enough and the Jets spending actual draft capital on guys like Christian Hackenberg and Bryce Petty. Bad draft picks led to bad talent on the field which in turn led to the optics. The Jets in 2016 and 2017 seemed to end every year with people wondering about why the Jets looked so disinterested and broken under Bowles, complete with plenty of shots of Woody Johnson's stadium looking emptier and emptier as the year went on. Bowles entered 2018 as basically a dead man walking with a rookie QB and a brand new fill in offensive coordinator. Bowles did about as well as he could but by week 10 or so, the writing was on the wall. Bowles' laid back persona compiled with the Jets' lethargic October and November painted the picture of a team that had given up and given in.
Enter: Adam Gase
The Jets candidates for the most part all have a similar theme. They're offensive minded QB whisperers; guys like Jim Caldwell, Mike McCarthy, Kliff Kingsbury, Adam Gase and Todd Monken. Some are old, some are young, some are retreads and some are college guys (Matt Rhule and the aforementioned Kingsbury). Kris Richard, Dallas DB coach and playcaller, is the only defensive guy to this point who seems to have a shot. The Jets want somebody who a) fits the New York atmosphere that for some reason seems to be harder to figure out than any other spotlight seemingly and b) a coach who can connect with young talented arm Sam Darnold. They'll see if Adam Gase is that dude.
Arizona Cardinals Steve Wilks
What Went Wrong: The defensive guy didn't have a good defense
Black Monday brought a lot of very open discussion about the fact that the famed cut down day for coaches featured five African American coaches getting canned. Of the crew, I feel like Wilks is the one where there is a justifiable grudge to be had. Steve Wilks inherited a middle of the road team that embraced a full rebuild when they moved up to grab Sam Darnold and let some of their star defensive players walk. In response, Wilks was given an undermanned team with a broken Sam Bradford and a green Josh Rosen behind him with some sketchy coordinators to keep everything afloat. It didn't work out, the Cardinals were jabroni'd for pretty much the first eight weeks of the season and OC Mike McCoy got canned halfway through the year even if Byron Leftwich wasn't much better. Cardinals star RB David Johnson struggled after a big deal, defensive players were unhappy with just about everything, Josh Rosen looked horrendous for 85% of the snaps he was on the field for and the Cardinals OL was rough in all facets of the game. I believe Wilks deserved another year (only because of what was given to him at the onset) but if you get the 1st overall pick, you clearly did nothing right during the season. I bet if Wilks' defense wasn't the worst in the league and he fielded a competitive defense while going through rookie QB growing pains then I'd feel pretty confident about his chances to stick around. As it is, he's gone and per the GM, it boiled down to a disagreement on what Wilks considered to be the plan of attack for 2019. Still how do you allow the GM who put this situation together AND chose the head coach to pick the next guy? That's some utter tripe.
Enter: Kliff Kingsbury
We can begin with the obvious reasons for why this move doesn't make any sense. For starters, Kingsbury was just an average head coach at Texas Tech. You can give me plenty of excuses for that record of 35-40 ranging from "It's hard to recruit in Texas when you're not the top school" or "The defenses were bad!" but the record speaks for itself and isn't his job to a) figure out recruiting and b) find a way to fix your defense? I mean Mike Leach and Tommy Tuberville both won more games than Kingsbury at Texas Tech. The question is whether Kingsbury can find a way to get Josh Rosen back to UCLA levels and still somehow win at the NFL level despite his lack of success at the collegiate level. The Cardinals weren't the only team willing to take the plunge obviously but they'll be the ones who get laughed at if this doesn't work.
(Also real quick let's take a second to acknowledge either the absurdity of this situation or the honesty of at least one NFL team to embrace the change here. After years of hearing how QBs and OL and WRs were being hampered by collegiate schemes, we now have pro teams hiring college coaches to run their gimmicked offenses at the NFL level because they can't develop QBs or OL anymore at the pro level. Either the NFL has learned its lesson or it's just about given up. Either one is an acceptable choice.)
Cincinnati Bengals Marvin Lewis
What Went Wrong: Everything over time
Kudos to the Bengals organization for their loyalty to Marvin Lewis, likely in no small part due to Marvin rebuilding that franchise and then keeping them stable from the Palmer to the Dalton eras. I have zero doubt that Lewis is a good coach but like Mike McCarthy, eventually you run out of rope and time. It didn't help that Lewis was incapable of stopping the gradual decline from consistent playoff team (lack of success aside) to mediocre team, in no small part due to his inability to replenish the well along the coaching staff. Marvin Lewis was just too old, too stubborn and too incapable to overcome the changing NFL scene.
Enter: ?
The current word is the Bengals are looking at Rams QB coach/passing game coordinator Zac Taylor. Taylor was a disaster as the Dolphins interim OC under Dan Campbell but resurrected his stock as a key hand in the development of Jared Goff as well as his tutoring under Tommy Tuberville in Cincy. Taylor is at least an intriguing hire as a 35 year old passing game guru and, of course, the Bengals could be back on the market for a QB eventually as Andy Dalton enters his age 31 season.
Tampa Bay Dirk Koetter
What Went Wrong: The QB
Lovie Smith and Dirk Koetter ultimately shared the same fate after all. Despite paying Smith a lot of money and giving him the keys to the kingdom, Smith was gone after two seasons and Dirk Koetter was retained by Tampa Bay due to the feeling that 1) they were going to lose him elsewhere and 2) he could get the most out of #1 overall pick Jameis Winston. He couldn't. Winston off the field was a mess and on the field he didn't fare much better either. When you're the QB guru and the star QB has to be benched, you're probably going to get fired. It doesn't help that Koetter and chosen defensive coordinator Mike Smith struggled to field a competent defense for three years.
Enter: Bruce Arians
This...is interesting. Arians is a pretty damn proven and downright solid head coach who has technically won in two different locations (Indianapolis as an interim coach and in Arizona). Arians' health and his declining results in Arizona led to a year in the booth for Bruce but now it seems like he thinks he's ready to handle it again. Arians teams have only finished under .500 once at the pro level and while his success is somewhat overstated recently, there's no doubt that Arians will bring stability and fire to an organization that has felt marred with drama under Koetter.
Miami Dolphins Adam Gase
What Went Wrong: Greg Schiano-itis
It would be far too easy and perhaps even a touch unfair to simply say that Gase's problem is his player-coach marriage to Ryan Tannehill. A coach getting hooked on a QB and believing he can unlock him leads to a lot of firings and Gase may be no different. Gase's bigger problem, at least from my standpoint, is a problem most coaches have in various forms or fashions. I'll use Greg Schiano as an example because he's the one that's more readily apparent to me. Schiano took a bad going nowhere spot in Tampa Bay (Raheem Morris had 3-13 and 4-12 sandwiched around 10-6) and with a young roster, Schiano improved them to 7-9. That improvement combined with what most people consider to be a natural tendency to be a bit of a dick, lead to Schiano getting more egotistical and more aggressive as a coach. The second year everything cratered and Schiano was fired. Adam Gase took over a Miami Dolphins club that had gone through a pretty rough run over Tony Sparano and then interim coach Dan Campbell. Gase started off poorly and then earned some plaudits for cutting offensive linemen mid week after Ryan Tannehill had been pretty much caved in by pass rushers. A winning streak followed and Gase made the playoffs in his rookie year----but that apparently led to Gase becoming more and more of an authoritarian. Players seemed to hate him (There wasn't much love for Adam Gase after his firing with key offensive players past and present openly gloating about his removal) and the owner got tired of Gase seemingly toward the end of the season. That to me strikes me as a coach who got a little too successful early on and struggled when the NFL eventually humbled him as is often the case if you don't have Tom Brady.
Enter: ?
The Dolphins head coaching interview list reads like a true mish mash. Offensive coordinator Dowell Loggains, special teams coach Darren Rizzi, Pats defensive ace Brian Flores and Cowboys play caller/secondary coach Kris Richard seem to be the candidates in the running and so you've got two holdovers, one guy hoping to become a winning member of the Bill B coaching tree and Kris Richard who helped take the Cowboys defense to new heights in 2018. All seem logical----but none seem like any sort of a pattern or a theme is emerging. Maybe that's the best way to go instead of trying to force a fit because you NEED a QB guru.
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June 15 in Music History
1636 Birth of composer Johann David Mayer.
1707 Hiring of J.S. Bach as organist at Blasiuskirche, in Muehlhausen, Germany.
1727 Birth of French soprano Marie Favart in Avignon.
1728 Birth of composer Pietro Alessandro Pavona.
1734 Birth of composer Johann Ernst Altenburg.
1749 Birth of composer George Joseph Vogler.
1763 Birth of German composer Franz Danzi in Mannheim.
1772 Death of French composer Louis-Claude d'Aquin in Paris.
1810 FP of L. Von Beethoven's Egmont Overture and Incidental Music, with Goethe's drama at the Court Theater in Vienna.
1813 Birth of English tenor William Harrison in London.
1821 Birth of composer Nikolay Ivanovich Zaremba.
1843 Birth of Norwegian composer Edvard Hagerup Grieg in Bergen.
1861 Birth of Austrian-American contralto Ernestine Schumann-Heink.
1864 Birth of French composer Guy Ropartz in Guingamp.
1865 Birth of French tenor Albert Vaguet in Elbeuf.
1865 Birth of composer Paul Gilson.
1869 Death of Belgian composer Albert Grisart in suburban Paris.
1872 Birth of German soprano Johanna Gadski in Anklam.
1884 Birth of soprano Anna Edstrom in Vanersborg.
1886 Birth of composer Charles Wood.
1889 FP of J. P. Sousa's Washington Post March. Sousa conducting the U.S. Marine Band outside the Smithsonian Institution, in Washington, DC.
1893 Death of Hungarian opera composer Ferenc Erkel.
1894 Birth of soprano Rachaeli Mori in Pavio.
1894 Birth of American composer and arranger Robert Russell Bennett.
1895 Death of Polish-Prussian composer and conductor Franz Friedrich Genee
1897 Birth of American soprano Mary Ellis.
1898 Birth of English composer, conductor Sir Thomas Armstrong.
1900 Birth of American composer Otto Luening in Milwaukee, WI.
1901 Birth of composer John Wesley Work.
1902 Birth of German-American conductor Max Rudolf in Frankfurt am Main.
1903 Birth of composer Huldreich Georg Fruh.
1908 Birth of Italian soprano Maria Carbone in Castellammare di Stabia, nr. Naples.
1910 Birth of Dutch composer Berend Giltay in Hilversum.
1912 Birth of New Zealand bass Oscar Natzka.
1922 Birth of composer John Veale.
1924 Birth of English soprano Adele Leigh in London.
1924 Birth of tenor Andre Dran in Metz.
1926 Birth of tenor Louis Devos.
1926 Birth of Swedish composer Jan Axel Carlstedt in Orsa.
1926 Birth of American administrator Carol Fox.
1929 Birth of Australian pianist Geoffrey Parsons.
1929 Birth of composer Gideon Nxumalo
1934 Birth of tenor Andre Mallabrera in Oran.
1934 Death of French conductor Louis Charles Bruneau in Paris.
1934 FP of Erik Satie's Mercure in Paris.
1936 FP of Françaix's "Le Roi Nu" Paris.
1936 Birth of composer Alexandru Hrisanide.
1937 Birth of German composer Rolf Riehm in Saarbrücken.
1938 FP of Krenek's "Karl V" Prague.
1938 Birth of composer Jean-Claude Eloy.
1940 Birth of Dutch composer Willem Frederik Bon in Amersfoort.
1947 Birth of American tenor Howard Crook in Passaic, NJ.
1947 Birth of English composer Paul Patterson in Chesterfield.
1947 FP of Orff's "Die Bernauerin" Stuttgart.
1951 Death of American mezzo-soprano Adrienne Von Kraus-Osborne.
1953 Birth of English cellist Rafael Wallfisch.
1954 Birth of American composer Brenda Hutchison.
1954 Birth of Dutch composer Chiel Meijering in Amsterdam.
1957 Birth of Dutch composer Margriet Verbeek in Leiderdorp.
1958 Birth of Hungarian soprano Andrea Rost.
1959 Birth of English cellist Robert Cohen.
1960 FP of Badings' "Martin Korda" Amsterdam. 1970 Birth of Maltese composer Anthony Bonello in Pieta..
1972 Death of Italian bass Salvatore Catania.
1980 FP of David Byrne`s High Life for Strings during the New Music America Festival at the Guthrie Theater in Minneapolis, MN.
1989 FP of Michael Torke's ballet Slate. New York City Ballet Orchestra, Hugo Fiorato, conducting at the New York State Theater.
1991 FP of David Ward-Steinman's Cinnabar for viola and piano, at the 19th Annual Viola Congress. Karen Elaine was soloist with the composer at the piano in Ithaca, NY.
2003 Death of Russian conductor Yevgeny Kolbov in Moscow
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Nieuwe Film Merchandise op https://filmflits.nl/dagboek-van-een-herdershond-serie-2/
Dagboek van een Herdershond Serie 2
EAN: 8711983951402
INFO: DVD | Nederlands | 17 augustus 2010
PRIJS: €10,99
Dagboek van een Herdershond Serie 2 Gegevens
Releasedatum: 17 augustus 2010
Distributeur: Bridge Entertainment
Dagboek van een Herdershond Serie 2 Cast & Crew
Acteur(s): Rudi Falkenhagen, Kees Brusse, Jo de Meyere, Renée Soutendijk, Bruni Heinke, Jan Teulings
Regisseur(s): Willy van Hemert
Dagboek van een Herdershond Serie 2 Kijkwijzer
Advies: Angst, Geweld
Adviesleeftijd: Vanaf 6 jaar
Dagboek van een Herdershond Serie 2 Specificaties
Drager: DVD
Aantal stuks in verpakking: 2 discs
Verpakking: Amaray
Speelduur: 430 minuten
Regiocode: 2
Taal: Nederlands
Overige talen: Nederlands
Ondertiteling: Nederlands
Beeldkleur: Color
Beeldformaat: 4:3
Audio: Dolby digital 5.1
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Dagboek van een Herdershond Serie 2
Nieuwe Film Merchandise op https://filmflits.nl/dagboek-van-een-herdershond-serie-2/
Dagboek van een Herdershond Serie 2
EAN: 8711983951402
INFO: DVD | Nederlands | 17 augustus 2010
PRIJS: €10,99
Dagboek van een Herdershond Serie 2 Gegevens
Releasedatum: 17 augustus 2010
Distributeur: Bridge Entertainment
Dagboek van een Herdershond Serie 2 Cast & Crew
Acteur(s): Rudi Falkenhagen, Kees Brusse, Jo de Meyere, Renée Soutendijk, Bruni Heinke, Jan Teulings
Regisseur(s): Willy van Hemert
Dagboek van een Herdershond Serie 2 Kijkwijzer
Advies: Angst, Geweld
Adviesleeftijd: Vanaf 6 jaar
Dagboek van een Herdershond Serie 2 Specificaties
Drager: DVD
Aantal stuks in verpakking: 2 discs
Verpakking: Amaray
Speelduur: 430 minuten
Regiocode: 2
Taal: Nederlands
Overige talen: Nederlands
Ondertiteling: Nederlands
Beeldkleur: Color
Beeldformaat: 4:3
Audio: Dolby digital 5.1
0 notes