JohnNord Posted January 11 Posted January 11 Tom Brady definitely came out on top in the whole “who made who” talking point. Bill is still an excellent defensive coach but he is clueless and outdated when it comes to running an offense. He’s also extremely consecutive in his game day approach. In these areas it seems like the game has passed him by. The problem with any team than wants to hire him is that he will require GM/roster control. He’s operated that way for decades and has the cache to earn the right. But over the past 4 years he’s shown that he is really bad with personnel - especially offensively. Look at the draft picks and free agents he brought to the team. Almost none of them worked out successfully. These were his solutions at QB since Brady left: 2020: Cam Newton/Brian Hoyer 2021: Mac Jones 2022: Mac Jones (big regressions) 2023: Mac Jones (bigger regression)/Bailey Zappe The other red flag on Belichick is his approach to hiring coaches. He seems to be very insulated and will only hire coaches he personally knows, has worked with in the past, or even his own family. It sounded like his solution to fix the offense was bringing JMD back. Quote
damj Posted January 11 Posted January 11 1 minute ago, Limeaid said: You need to spell that with a B like Beli-CHEAT. Fixed. And apparently you can't use d-o-n-g Quote
stuvian Posted January 11 Posted January 11 wonder what his mullet-headed, runny nosed sons are going to do Quote
Governor Posted January 11 Posted January 11 1 hour ago, RobbRiddick said: He has to go somewhere else and win otherwise there will always be that question about why he couldn't win without Brady. Something tells me he doesn’t care what twitter and Reddit think about anything. 1 Quote
damj Posted January 11 Posted January 11 37 minutes ago, Shortchaz said: So, he’s available 🤔 Walmart always is looking for new greeters. His warm and charming personality would fit right in 1 Quote
Fallser Posted January 11 Posted January 11 Good riddance you #######. By the way, it was Tom Brady who got you all those rings - not because of your coaching prowess. Quote
Saxum Posted January 11 Posted January 11 Just now, damj said: Walmart always is looking for new greeters. His warm and charming personality would fit right in Perfect personality for return desk. 1 Quote
davefan66 Posted January 11 Posted January 11 10 minutes ago, Ghost_002! said: Please point to where is the aging at exactly? Their top corner who looks to be a stand out is/was a rookie Christian Barmore their D-end who came on the last few years was drafted in 21 Kevion white another D-end Was drafted in 2023 Jabril peppers 28yr Kyle Dugger strong Stafety drafted 2020(27yr) Josh Uche LB. Drafted 20. (25 yes old) Not going to go through the whole roster, that would be wild, but went through some noticeably names on defense just now. LB and Dline have some older guys. Just not a team that is on the cusp of being good/great. Personally I’d rather take a job with a team that is closer to being good. And who is the GM? Gotta be with a guy you can mesh with. Have they lined up Vrabel and someone he trusts? Who knows. After what happened in Tennessee, I’m sure he doesn’t want that again. Quote
May Day 10 Posted January 11 Posted January 11 (edited) 59 minutes ago, Matt_In_NH said: NE is a good opportunity in terms of picks and cap....there is a lot of cap available for them to build a team and a high pick for a QB. Maybe somewhere that has a QB could be thought of as better. I do agree on the shadow thing but I think Vrabel is one who maybe can handle that. This makes 6 coaches fired in the division since McDermott took over. I guess picks and cap. They have to build the entire thing, which can be faster than people think as long as the cap is clear. The Division is tough too. My favorite job if I were a coach is the Bears. Also, I think Vrabel's abilities are getting inflated right now. He got fat on a freak superlative generational RB and his eliminated team tried hard in a couple games. Awful division most of his tenure as well. High floor, low ceiling type of coach. I would be much more worried about the offensive visionary type. Edited January 11 by May Day 10 Quote
Ghost_002! Posted January 11 Posted January 11 Just now, davefan66 said: LB and Dline have some older guys. Just not a team that is on the cusp of being good/great. Personally I’d rather take a job with a team that is closer to being good. And who is the GM? Gotta be with a guy you can mesh with. Have they lined up Vrabel and someone he trusts? Who knows. After what happened in Tennessee, I’m sure he doesn’t want that again. Every team had aging players here and there. Obviously 53 spots to fill. But overall the pats are pretty young on defense. They got younger back 2020 in the draft. And every team is different and what every coach is looking for is different as well. Harbaugh/ BB will look for a already made roster. There are other coaches who will look for a good situations/ good ownership. And there will be coaches just happy to have a job. The Patriots are a good situation from the stand point that they have a top pick and cap space amd good ownership. That is perfect for a younger coach to come in and make it their team. Plus Varbel has already expressed interest in coaching for the Patriots. Quote
Matt_In_NH Posted January 11 Posted January 11 3 minutes ago, May Day 10 said: I guess picks and cap. They have to build the entire thing, which can be faster than people think as long as the cap is clear. The Division is tough too. My favorite job if I were a coach is the Bears. Also, I think Vrabel's abilities are getting inflated right now. He got fat on a freak superlative generational RB and his eliminated team tried hard in a couple games. Awful division most of his tenure as well. High floor, low ceiling type of coach. I would be much more worried about the offensive visionary type. And it is entirely possible Kraft will just blow it up and start fresh with a search of all candidates not just guys with ties to Bill. That was part of the problem with Bellichick. Quote
AlfaBill Posted January 11 Posted January 11 1 hour ago, Drifter said: He did a fantastic job for decades. Interested in seeing what he does next. Move to Vegas using his cheating skills in a small time poker operation. An old school casino boss catches on and lured him into the back room. Quote
Warriorspikes51 Posted January 11 Posted January 11 Do we have enough time to hire Bill as an asst coach for the playoffs? haha Quote
Heavy Kevi Posted January 11 Posted January 11 1 hour ago, Draconator said: A good friend of mine is from Boston and is a Pats fan. He wants Vrabel (likely), and the Pats to draft the only can't-miss prospect in the draft, Marvin Harrison Jr. Harrison on the Pats would annoy me for years, regardless of which noodle arm QB they have. Your friend is dumb. They need a QB. It's cool to take a safe pick, but when you get the third pick and you need a QB, you take a QB; or you really fricked it up. 1 Quote
Coffeesforclosers Posted January 11 Posted January 11 2 minutes ago, Warriorspikes51 said: Do we have enough time to hire Bill as an asst coach for the playoffs? haha I thought the exact same thing. "Special Assistant to the Head Coach for Football Research" sounds about right. Hell, tell him to mend fences with Ernie Adams, and we'll get the whole damn coven back together. Quote
Toyo321 Posted January 11 Posted January 11 Still a defensive wiz and coach. He will will always be one of the NFL's best coaches ever. That can never be taken away from him. Not to many coaches can say they won 6 Super Bowls and need to use both hands to wear all the associated rings. Quote
JakeFrommStateFarm Posted January 11 Posted January 11 I thought he was going to be promoted up to a front office job Quote
TheFunPolice Posted January 11 Posted January 11 1 hour ago, Strethor said: A lot of these coach firings look like succession plans Dan Quinn > Seattle Vrabel > NE Not sure what was going on behind the scenes but you have to wonder Agreed and if you're the owner of a team and your HC wants to be somewhere else it's better to do a "mutual parting" whereby the coach doesn't just get free $ to go but he has his freedom. I wouldn't be shocked if there was back channel pressure from the league about not trying to trade head coaches, because it sort of makes a mockery of the Rooney Rule. Quote
julian Posted January 11 Posted January 11 6 minutes ago, TheFunPolice said: Agreed and if you're the owner of a team and your HC wants to be somewhere else it's better to do a "mutual parting" whereby the coach doesn't just get free $ to go but he has his freedom. I wouldn't be shocked if there was back channel pressure from the league about not trying to trade head coaches, because it sort of makes a mockery of the Rooney Rule. F**k the Roo….errrrr… never mind Quote
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