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The thing about Lanning

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  • 46XiJCAB
    46XiJCAB Member Posts: 20,967
    Free Pub U > No Pub U
  • UW_Doog_Bot
    UW_Doog_Bot Member, Swaye's Wigwam Posts: 18,682 Founders Club
    The odds are even more so stacked he's worse than Meat is/was since he was a more or less known quantity. It's chaos and unnecessary risk for a program that was arguably trending in the right directions and in that, Doogs can rejoice.

    Still better to take a shot than settle for Wilcucks.
  • greenblood
    greenblood Member Posts: 14,573
    edited December 2021

    The odds are even more so stacked he's worse than Meat is/was since he was a more or less known quantity. It's chaos and unnecessary risk for a program that was arguably trending in the right directions and in that, Doogs can rejoice.

    Still better to take a shot than settle for Wilcucks.

    Better to hire potential than known mediocrity.

    Meat was a tremendous recruiter. Lanning will have an extremely difficult time matching what Meat did on that front. But in regards to in game coaching, Meat left an extremely low bar. It won't take much to improve on that front. As long as Lanning is 80%-90% what Meat was in recruiting, and is "competent" in game, then it's a net plus for Oregon. But nothing has been seen yet.
  • creepycoug
    creepycoug Member Posts: 24,424

    The odds are even more so stacked he's worse than Meat is/was since he was a more or less known quantity. It's chaos and unnecessary risk for a program that was arguably trending in the right directions and in that, Doogs can rejoice.

    Still better to take a shot than settle for Wilcucks.

    Always better to take a shot IMHO. All but two or three guys are a shot. This guy is either Stoops or Will Muschamp. You just never know.

    The randomness of success and the overwhelming odds in favor of failure, for everybody, is such that the market for their services is completely detached from reality. It is very clear that in Division 1 coaching, the demand side is full of irrational actors.
  • greenblood
    greenblood Member Posts: 14,573
    edited December 2021

    The odds are even more so stacked he's worse than Meat is/was since he was a more or less known quantity. It's chaos and unnecessary risk for a program that was arguably trending in the right directions and in that, Doogs can rejoice.

    Still better to take a shot than settle for Wilcucks.

    I'd take any risk on a newbie than hiring a retread. Retreads very rarely work out if ever. Kiffin being the one exception I'd make.
  • RatherBeBrewing
    RatherBeBrewing Member Posts: 1,557
    edited December 2021

    The odds are even more so stacked he's worse than Meat is/was since he was a more or less known quantity. It's chaos and unnecessary risk for a program that was arguably trending in the right directions and in that, Doogs can rejoice.

    Still better to take a shot than settle for Wilcucks.

    I'd take any risk on a newbie than hiring a retread. Retreads very rarely work out if ever. Kiffin being the one exception I'd make.
    TLDR: Wrong, as usual. Meticulous examples follow.

    I’d like to hear your definition of a retread, because in my definition they’ve won most of the national titles in the last two decades.

    Retreads or underachieving coach promotions to better programs have worked plenty of times. Gene Chizik was 5-19 at Iowa State, but let’s credit his national title to Cam Newton and Auburn’s pyramid bank scheme booster. Without mentioning Pete Carroll, here’s a few others who worked:

    Ed Orgeron was fired after 10-25 at Ole Piss.

    Meanwhile, Tommy Tuberville was 25-20 at Ole Piss and 12-20 in SEC play. At Auburn he went 85-40 (52-30 in SEC) and had a 13-0 season. But before you think it’s just Oxford and want even more Kiffin, there are others.

    Mack Brown had a 53% winning percentage before Texas. He started off 2-20 at UNC and was 19-48 in his first six seasons as a head coach. At Texas he won 77% of his games.

    For the first 12 of his 16 seasons at Texas it was at 83% wins with a national title. Mack rode four top-20 draft picks on the DL, plus multiple time All-Pros Jeff Saturday and Dre Bly, to two 10 win seasons, but before that he was average.

    Nick Saban’s first four years at Michigan State he was 25-22-1 He coached there for five seasons, going 9-2 in the last one after those 6, 6, 7, 6 win seasons. Before that 9 win season, which was aided by Herman Ho-Fumble, his best season was 7-5, before LSU hired him to replace Gerry DiNardo.

    Fun fact: DiNardo was 19-25 at Vandy before LSU hired him. His first year in 1995 LSU had their first winning record since 1988. He went 26-9-1 in his first three seasons at LSU. Shit was going so good that he opened an Italian restaurant in Baton Rouge before he was fired after two losing seasons in the midst of a third, so I’m not calling him a success but showing how a retread turned that program around. Saban’s replacement Les Miles was 16-16 in the tuff Big-12. He went 116-34 at LSU. With a title.

    Lou Holththtthz was great at Arkansas, but when Notre Dame hired him he was coming off a 10-12 tenure at Minnesota.

    Does Mike Riley count? 8-15 at Boov, shat out by the NFL, comes back and goes 85-65, which you know is a miracle.
  • greenblood
    greenblood Member Posts: 14,573
    What has Orgeron done without Burrow?

    Nick Saban actually made Michigan into a program. Michigan st isn’t where they are at now, without the foundation Saban made

    Typically fired coaches don’t work out at new programs.

  • ntxduck
    ntxduck Member Posts: 6,269

    What has Orgeron done without Burrow?

    Nick Saban actually made Michigan into a program. Michigan st isn’t where they are at now, without the foundation Saban made

    Typically fired coaches don’t work out at new programs.

    Huh? Michigan state absolutely bottomed out after Saban left…thanks to our own Bobby Williams and then John l Smith. Dantonio took over a 1 conference win team 8 years post-Saban and built that program from the ground up.
  • greenblood
    greenblood Member Posts: 14,573
    edited December 2021
    ntxduck said:

    What has Orgeron done without Burrow?

    Nick Saban actually made Michigan into a program. Michigan st isn’t where they are at now, without the foundation Saban made

    Typically fired coaches don’t work out at new programs.

    Huh? Michigan state absolutely bottomed out after Saban left…thanks to our own Bobby Williams and then John l Smith. Dantonio took over a 1 conference win team 8 years post-Saban and built that program from the ground up.
    Didn’t realize how bad they got the Lambo treatment. Because it was trending up when Saban left.
  • ntxduck
    ntxduck Member Posts: 6,269

    ntxduck said:

    What has Orgeron done without Burrow?

    Nick Saban actually made Michigan into a program. Michigan st isn’t where they are at now, without the foundation Saban made

    Typically fired coaches don’t work out at new programs.

    Huh? Michigan state absolutely bottomed out after Saban left…thanks to our own Bobby Williams and then John l Smith. Dantonio took over a 1 conference win team 8 years post-Saban and built that program from the ground up.
    Didn’t realize how bad they got the Lambo treatment. Because it was trending up when Saban left.
    Then Mario let the guy who helf’d their program run the worst special teams unit in p5 for 4 years