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Mr. Scot

HUDDLER
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Everything posted by Mr. Scot

  1. This actually isn't the first time we're hearing stuff like this about Tepper. The talk that he's an extremely difficult person to work for has been around for a few years now.
  2. For anyone wondering, Dorsey doesn't have any connections with Frank Reich that I know of so I don't know that I'd foresee any indication of him coming here.
  3. The one thing I've noticed is that nobody seems to want to blame Josh Allen for anything. I'm not so sure that's the right approach.
  4. That article isn't nearly as negative about Frank Reich as some of you think.
  5. Dorsey and Brian Daboll might both turn out to be "Peter principle" examples.
  6. Yeah...not the correct read at all. What it's actually a sign of is that Tepper is likely going to screw up whomever works here. Rayzor had it right.
  7. Definitely. And we can only imagine how the nature of the NFL might magnify those issues.
  8. Re: Bill O'Brien, this respondent to Russini has a point...
  9. To be fair, that probably has more to do with it being the offseason where you've got more time to spruce up and take care of yourself as opposed to in-season when all your time is taken up by football stuff. But yeah, working for David Tepper probably does wear on you...a lot.
  10. Here's the thing... Whether or not David Tepper influenced the pick of Bryce Young, he absolutely and wholeheartedly signed on to it. That means any admission that Young was a mistake is a tacit admission that he made a mistake. And naturally, that's impossible So then who do you blame? The GM who only did what you either influenced or agreed with, or the coach who's responsible for the product on the field? If what one of our folks with inside connections reported about Fitterer being organizationally "close" to Tepper is true, that potentially colors all future moves.
  11. Dorsey might be a better quarterback coach than OC.
  12. I don't want Reich to call plays again. Handing the playcalling over to Jim Caldwell would be an option though.
  13. There's also word that he wants the Bears job. A coach who can't even win at the college level? We already tried that. (so did the Cardinals)
  14. We don't have the right kind of linemen to run a zone scheme, especially on the left, but we're trying to do it anyway.
  15. Would be even harder if he fired everybody this season, especially Reich. They go in the next offseason with Adrian Wilson having been added to the front office. It's possible other changes might be made. I've never been a big fan of Cole Spencer myself. Would love to lure Lake Dawson away from the Bills to run the scouting department but I don't know if that's possible. Adding in Scot McLoughan would also be a good move provided there are conditions related to his sobriety. On the coaching staff, I've already said I could see James Campen (unfairly) fired, maybe Thomas Brown as well. OC job could ideally go to someone like Jim Caldwell but Diana Russini mentioned Bill O'Brien as an option that could make sense as well.
  16. We have an offensive line. We're not using them properly.
  17. See above... Might not have thrown a name out there, but the ideas mentioned would definitely fit O'Brien.
  18. I get the "why" of it, but given how bad our offense is right now a change may be inevitable. For what it's worth, Russini said "leadership" wants an offense that more closely resembles Young's college scheme. That may be where the O'Brien idea comes from.
  19. You think they made up the quotes from Brown?
  20. Thomas Brown has had just more than seven weeks since he agreed to terms to become the Panthers' new offensive coordinator to work on building a new playbook from the ground up. ... But the new playbook is ready for players on Monday, the first day they'll officially return for the offseason program. It'll likely feel similar to the first day of school, as Brown will get to teaching immediately. He said that process comes naturally to him, as the son of a teacher and a pastor. Brown's experiences – especially his past with the Rams – color the Panthers' new playbook. Input from head coach Frank Reich and position coaches, along with their roster evaluations, have also played vital roles. And yes, the playbook was built from the ground up. ... "The beginning for myself and the rest of the staff was really breaking everything down to build it back up," Brown said. "So building a brand-new offense from ground zero essentially based on what we've done before, both myself in my previous experiences from the Rams, but also in college as well. Then kind of blending together with what Frank has done, and guys in the room as well." Thomas Brown dives into the work behind creating an all new playbook
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