TheBlackMamba Posted October 12, 2009 Posted October 12, 2009 5. I think this is what you need to know about coaching situations this morning: a. Dick Jauron would need a miracle to keep his job in Buffalo, but know this about Ralph Wilson: He has not made an in-season firing of a coach since Hank Bullough 23 years ago. Wilson kept Gregg Williams to the bitter end of a 6-10 season in 2003, Mike Mularkey to the end of a 5-11 season in 2005. This team is awful, but would Perry Fewell or Bobby April be suitable interim guys for the last couple of months? I don't see Wilson doing it, but he's got to be near despondent over how horribly wrong things have gone since a spirited opening night performance at Foxboro. Read more: http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2009/writ...l#ixzz0TkXBEzNm Get a free NFL Team Jacket and Tee with SI Subscription http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2009/writ...eek5/index.html
TheChimp Posted October 12, 2009 Posted October 12, 2009 ...and if we wanna be honest, if the Pats had just held onto all those throws in the first half, they'd have killed us.
DaBills51 Posted October 12, 2009 Posted October 12, 2009 This article is spot on...firing Dick Jauron would only be a matter of principle and would make the situation even worse. I wouldn't mind seeing a proven GM brought in to get a head start on evaluating the team though, that way it would make the offseason transition a little less daunting. Can anyone recall if this has happened before??
TheChimp Posted October 12, 2009 Posted October 12, 2009 This article is spot on...firing Dick Jauron would only be a matter of principle, and would make the situation even worse. Not possible. At all.
Endzone Animal Posted October 12, 2009 Posted October 12, 2009 Why does anyone think that firing Jauron or Brandon would make any difference? The man at the top wants cheap yes-men who will accept losing without making too much noise. Accept what you see because it is not going to change. 10 consecutive years of dismal failure is not an accident.
Guest three3 Posted October 12, 2009 Posted October 12, 2009 Why does anyone think that firing Jauron or Brandon would make any difference? The man at the top wants cheap yes-men who will accept losing without making too much noise. Accept what you see because it is not going to change. 10 consecutive years of dismal failure is not an accident. but he is the same guy who got lucky once when hiring bill polian. why can't ralph get lucky again? all we have is that hope, that somehow, ralph stumbles onto another bill polian and gives him full control. hopefully this can happen without ralph appointing any of his other daughters to lead scouting positions
YellowLinesandArmadillos Posted October 12, 2009 Posted October 12, 2009 I wish Ralph would just sell the Bills to Kelly and Co and be done with his role in them. He had his day and unless he gets aggressive and makes whole sale changes beginning with the front office and coach, I can't believe I am saying the this but Marcy Darcy looks competent compared to these smucks. :wallbash: :wallbash:
Endzone Animal Posted October 12, 2009 Posted October 12, 2009 Polian was a fluke. A cheap, in-house promotion that was supposed to keep towing the loser line following back-to-back 2-14 seasons under GM Terry Bledsoe, and Wilson ran him out of town as soon as he became too successful to boss around anymore. Don't expect that to happen again.
thewildrabbit Posted October 12, 2009 Posted October 12, 2009 I've said it before, I'll say it again... as bad as the Bills look to the fans, as long as RW keeps hearing the cha ching of the cash register and games keep selling out, merchandise keeps moving, he won't make a coaching change. Lets face it, we don't have an owner like the Bronco's Pat Bowlen who wants to win and is committed to his team making the payoffs every year or else, we have Scrooge.
The Big Cat Posted October 12, 2009 Posted October 12, 2009 ...and if we wanna be honest, if the Pats had just held onto all those throws in the first half, they'd have killed us. Soooooo true. That's one of the reasons I got so down about the loss, it's not all the time the Patriots gift-wrap so many mistake-driven opportunities.
DrFishfinder Posted October 12, 2009 Posted October 12, 2009 Not possible. At all. Sure it is. By one win so far.
bdelma Posted October 12, 2009 Posted October 12, 2009 Despondent that's how bills fans have felt for the past ten years.
tennesseeboy Posted October 12, 2009 Posted October 12, 2009 I don't see firing DJ right now as doing anything (although it would make me very happy). An interim coach wouldn't know the players the team dynamics and the season would go even further down hill. Wait til the end of the season, get a good tough coach on board, new gm and most of the front office and move on.
TheChimp Posted October 12, 2009 Posted October 12, 2009 I don't see firing DJ right now as doing anything (although it would make me very happy). An interim coach wouldn't know the players the team dynamics and the season would go even further down hill. Wait til the end of the season, get a good tough coach on board, new gm and most of the front office and move on. Nah. Get the new coach hired now, and give him the rest of this season as extra time to evaluate his assistants and players before he has to make any decisions in the offseason. Screw the whole "interim" coach nonsense.
Endzone Animal Posted October 12, 2009 Posted October 12, 2009 At some point, Ralph will be reminding you to just be happy you have a team and stop your bitching. He'll remind you that your city is bankrupt, that your population is dwindling, that your corporate money is virtually non-existent, that you're now a minor league town, and that you're only being granted the privilege of the precious gift of NFL football because of the incredible selflessness of Ralph Wilson. Don't even think about not buying his tickets and merchandise or he'll sell them off to Toronto faster than you can beg for his forgiveness. Fall in line, bow at his altar, or suffer the wrath of Ralph as he cuts you off of the pro-football drug to which you are so addicted.
BillsGuyInMalta Posted October 12, 2009 Posted October 12, 2009 At some point, Ralph will be reminding you to just be happy you have a team and stop your bitching. He'll remind you that your city is bankrupt, that your population is dwindling, that your corporate money is virtually non-existent, that you're now a minor league town, and that you're only being granted the privilege of the precious gift of NFL football because of the incredible selflessness of Ralph Wilson. Don't even think about not buying his tickets and merchandise or he'll sell them off to Toronto faster than you can beg for his forgiveness. Fall in line, bow at his altar, or suffer the wrath of Ralph as he cuts you off of the pro-football drug to which you are so addicted. So we either grovel or have no team. Great choices.
frustratedfan66 Posted October 12, 2009 Posted October 12, 2009 The problem is if they don't fire him now, they will play the season out then find "hope for next season" and an excuse to keep going with him and the status quo.
KOKBILLS Posted October 12, 2009 Posted October 12, 2009 This article is spot on...firing Dick Jauron would only be a matter of principle and would make the situation even worse. And how exactly is that possible?...I don't see how it could be anything but good...It sends a message...The Country Club is closed...If some Players tank the rest of the Season it just makes the new HC's decisions easier come 2010...
gus2378 Posted October 12, 2009 Posted October 12, 2009 At some point, Ralph will be reminding you to just be happy you have a team and stop your bitching. He'll remind you that your city is bankrupt, that your population is dwindling, that your corporate money is virtually non-existent, that you're now a minor league town, and that you're only being granted the privilege of the precious gift of NFL football because of the incredible selflessness of Ralph Wilson. Don't even think about not buying his tickets and merchandise or he'll sell them off to Toronto faster than you can beg for his forgiveness. Fall in line, bow at his altar, or suffer the wrath of Ralph as he cuts you off of the pro-football drug to which you are so addicted. This is about 90 percent right ... OK, it's 100 percent right, but in addition to all this, adding to the problem is that Ralph also has a little Al Davis in him and thinks he knows football and whom to hire ... so when he gets lucky and hires someone good, the Bills get good for a little while. When hires the wrong guys over and over, he gets defensive and sticks fans with this stuff about how we are so lucky to have a team. It all may be true, another owner certainly may have moved the team by now ... but that doesn't make it OK the way he is running the team now.
Cash Posted October 12, 2009 Posted October 12, 2009 5. I think this is what you need to know about coaching situations this morning: a. Dick Jauron would need a miracle to keep his job in Buffalo, but know this about Ralph Wilson: He has not made an in-season firing of a coach since Hank Bullough 23 years ago. Wilson kept Gregg Williams to the bitter end of a 6-10 season in 2003, Mike Mularkey to the end of a 5-11 season in 2005. This team is awful, but would Perry Fewell or Bobby April be suitable interim guys for the last couple of months? I don't see Wilson doing it, but he's got to be near despondent over how horribly wrong things have gone since a spirited opening night performance at Foxboro. Read more: http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2009/writ...l#ixzz0TkXBEzNm Get a free NFL Team Jacket and Tee with SI Subscription http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2009/writ...eek5/index.html It bothers me how people (mostly non-Bills fans at this point) keep bringing up that soul-crushing week 1 loss like it's some kind of accomplishment. Hanging your hat on a monumental choke job is about as big a loser mentality as you can get. Maybe you could get excited about moral victories in year one of a new coach's rebuilding (2008 Ravens/Falcons, 2009 Broncos/Jets say hello), but in the 4th year of a coach's tenure? There's no moral victories at that point. The only bad win is one in which a lot of guys get hurt. There are no good losses.
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