- Jun 9, 2014
- 78,606
- 111,298
Founding Member
Cant wait to return to this thread in three years.
Our WRs block and block only. He’s built for this.That was a joke. A WR coach doesnt do much. He should be the best recruiter in the staff.
I notice you didnt mention Chimp, Butters and Mullinz threads, huh?I’ll just go back to every time you bashed Trask. You’ll have egg on your face for years based on that alone
I think we should wait and see what kind of players he recruits. I don't think think I've seen too many teams airing it out in the sunbelt. Let's what he does with different personel. What kind of players he recruits would probably be the biggest indicator of what we're gonna do.So winning is irrelevant now? I'm all for an effective passing attack, but the objective is to win. Guys like Leach, Mumme, etc. have thrown for a gazillion yards in their careers and have accomplished or won exactly nothing. We threw for more yards in '95 and '01 than we did in '96. It can't be overlooked but it also can't be the only factor.
You better have great special teams too (ie punter for field position, FG kicker accurate at 50 yds, and great coverage teams... field position is extremely important)Nobody says you can’t win by running it 69% of the time, which is what Napier does. But it better come with an air tight defense and a favorable turnover ratio. A potent passing game can help erase mistakes and ease the margin of error. At the very least, your odds of coming from behind late in the game are better.
Besides, who the eff wants to watch a run-heavy offense? We aren’t Wisconsin. The state of Florida is known for producing skilled-position athletes, not beef.
Dwayne Dixon would disagree with your assessment of "doesn't do much". And so would every receiver he ever coached.That was a joke. A WR coach doesnt do much. He should be the best recruiter on the staff.
I notice you didnt mention Chimp, Butters and Mullinz threads, huh?
Napier's play calling philosophy seems overblown here. Any competent coach will pass the ball more if they have an elite signal caller. He doesn't need to be the offensive coach that Mullen is to be able to adapt to his personnel. Let's observe how Napier coaches this team before projecting the failings of the previous regimes onto him prematurely.
Napier's play calling philosophy seems overblown here. Any competent coach will pass the ball more if they have an elite signal caller. He doesn't need to be the offensive coach that Mullen is to be able to adapt to his personnel. Let's observe how Napier coaches this team before projecting the failings of the previous regimes onto him prematurely.
I'd rather keep observing him coaching another team before I projected his failings.
When we return back to a top contender every year :cool:
To many beta males in here at the moment. Can't bring myself to admit that I paid money to read dirty Donk and the boys biatch religiously about the state of the program. Also, I'm the type of fan that actually expects a return on their investment. I refuse to eat a $hit sandwich, even if it comes from the University of Florida. Give me a reason and proof to invest, and I'm all in.
By the way, I'm still trying restock my Florida apparel from the Tennessee loss in 16.
Any college WR that wants to play in the league had better be willing to run block. So...if you wonder why some of our best WR didn't do well in the NFL, look no further than that.
Toomer
Fitzgerald
Michael Irvin
Jerry Rice
Muhsan Muhammad to name a few
Napier's play calling philosophy seems overblown here. Any competent coach will pass the ball more if they have an elite signal caller. He doesn't need to be the offensive coach that Mullen is to be able to adapt to his personnel. Let's observe how Napier coaches this team before projecting the failings of the previous regimes onto him prematurely.
I thought so
No. I'm EXCITED about him rebuilding the program and working his ass off on the trail.Ok, how about this....are you EXCITED about his offense?
No. I'm EXCITED about him rebuilding the program and working his ass off on the trail.