Quote:This from today's MMQB on Washington:
Does any of this sound familiar?
Yes...2-11 this year and 6-23 the past two years sucks mightily.
But not only does the above show changing coaches may not work, it may actually make matters worse.
In Jacksonville's case, the entire passing offense -which represents the bulk of the team's issues-is being run on the field primarily by rookies, including at QB, 3 WR spots, C, and RG.
Many of the struggles the personnel have had has come from playing while learning the offense (e.g. Marqise Lee).
If you keep the same schemes, Bortles, Lee, and Robinson will have the benefit of doing everything next year with the benefit of experience. There should be a lot less wondering whether people are lined up properly, what receivers should run when coverages show this vs. that, what the protections should be. Players should be making more plays next year based on instinct. That alone should mean improvement. Bortles, now a year into the playbook, can devote more time in honing his fundamentals. Lee and Robinson can work on getting off the jam. Bowanko and Linder can focus on getting stronger. If the team adds a tackle or two to improve the OL, Bowanko and Linder could help get them up to speed with authority, knowing the league a year and knowing the offense.
If you fire the coaches now, if you change schemes now, what will that do to the rookies on the offensive side of the ball?
Instead of Bortles, Lee, and A Robinson becoming less tentative and more decisive and more confident, all three will have to unlearn the scheme here and learn new schemes, prolonging the transition to becoming successful players.
While Linder and Bowanko seem to have played well this year, new schemes would mean them-and the rest of the new OL-learning new protections and possibly becoming more tentative, which leads to miss blocks, miss blitzes, missed assignments, and hits on the QB and RB for lost yards. They may be only slightly more knowledgeable initially on the protections in the new scheme than any tackles they bring in.
Compounding things further, let's assume Blackmon manages to return. He played in the offense briefly in 2013. If you assume some rust from the suspension, keeping the scheme with which he is already familiar will aid in his return. Conversely, changing schemes now may only make things more difficult for him and Bortles to get on the same page.
On top of that, whatever strength the defense represents may be lost with a change in coaching and scheme.
In a nutshell, you risk throwing the baby out with the bathwater on both sides of the ball short term, with no assurances of long term success if you change coaches.
This is a really excellent article that should be 'required reading' before anymore of the 'hang'em all' post show up. There is no question that the team has stunk to the high heavens since Gus has been here (actually, it was awful for years prior to his arrival); but try to keep in mind what Gus and Dave were handed when they got here... a turd!
There is no rock solid guarantee that Gus will be able to turn this team around. But as has been pointed out time and again, turning your coaching staff into a 'revolving door' every couple of years is an almost guaranteed way to assure a team's failure. We have some rookie coaches, and a lot of rookies on our roster at this time. We clearly need more help on our offensive line in order for our rookie franchise quarterback to develop.
As Bullseye said, to fire the head coach now would be to throw out the baby with the bath water...
I y'ams who I y'ams and thats all I y'ams...