Corp000085 Posted November 30, 2004 Posted November 30, 2004 man, Mike tom foolery Mularkey must be licking his chops today! on a side note, i'm sad to see the butch davis 32 year plan come to a screeching halt.
Fan in Chicago Posted November 30, 2004 Posted November 30, 2004 man, Mike tom foolery Mularkey must be licking his chops today! 139575[/snapback] I didn't get what you mean by that
Corp000085 Posted November 30, 2004 Author Posted November 30, 2004 he uses trickery and opens the playbook up. something that inerim coaches probably have nightmares about.
jad1 Posted November 30, 2004 Posted November 30, 2004 Good point, especially since Mularkey and his staff got the better of two SB coaches the past two weeks.
Fan in Chicago Posted November 30, 2004 Posted November 30, 2004 he uses trickery and opens the playbook up. something that inerim coaches probably have nightmares about. 139580[/snapback] Okay. Sometimes I think this concept of interim coach is nonsense. Sorta like telling the shareholders of a company that the CEO resigned and someone from the local temp office will do his job till we find a real CEO. If the current coach is going to be fired, have a permanent replacement in mind first. If the coach quits, hold him to his contract till a permanent replacement is hired. I realize that most perm replacements are coaching currently. Anyway, just my worthless 2 cents.
Corp000085 Posted November 30, 2004 Author Posted November 30, 2004 here's my $0.02. For a team to have an interim head coach in the first place, means that they team is beyond sucking. That goes well for the bills.
Guest Guest Posted November 30, 2004 Posted November 30, 2004 Okay.Sometimes I think this concept of interim coach is nonsense. Sorta like telling the shareholders of a company that the CEO resigned and someone from the local temp office will do his job till we find a real CEO. If the current coach is going to be fired, have a permanent replacement in mind first. If the coach quits, hold him to his contract till a permanent replacement is hired. I realize that most perm replacements are coaching currently. Anyway, just my worthless 2 cents. 139590[/snapback] Actually when a CEO resigns in a company many times there is an interim CEO until a full replacement is named? Nice try
JinVA Posted November 30, 2004 Posted November 30, 2004 Interim coaches are not expected to win. Therefore they can afford to take risks, that most coaches would not. Mix that in with a home game against a hated divisional rival and you can expect to see Miami roll the dice on several ocassions, with or without success. Sorry but it makes me awfuly nervous.
Fan in Chicago Posted November 30, 2004 Posted November 30, 2004 Actually when a CEO resigns in a company many times there is an interim CEO until a full replacement is named? Nice try 139847[/snapback] In a rare situation maybe, but the board of directors always has a succession plan in place. example - my company's CEO gave about a 2 week notice for a personal reason and the board had the new guy report to work in that time frame. He is permanent and not interim. Nice try yourself.
Fan in Chicago Posted November 30, 2004 Posted November 30, 2004 Interim coaches are not expected to win. Therefore they can afford to take risks, that most coaches would not. Mix that in with a home game against a hated divisional rival and you can expect to see Miami roll the dice on several ocassions,with or without success. Sorry but it makes me awfuly nervous. 139876[/snapback] Yes we should always be nervous but the players should be even more so and not look beyond any opponent. Now our game plan should have shifted from proving we can win to trying for the playoffs. every game counts (cliche ofcourse).
Thailog80 Posted November 30, 2004 Posted November 30, 2004 Terry Robiskie has been named interim coach in Cleveland.
CajunBillsBacker Posted November 30, 2004 Posted November 30, 2004 Jim Haslett probably isn't far behind in the unemployment line.
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