Chuck Landon: Candidates for Marshall job both interesting and curious
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OC is going to be the crucial hire. Hopefully someone to develop GrantI don't know Charles Huff personally, but if that is really the list, we should hire him tomorrow... His resume is beyond anyone else mentioned. Associate head coach/running backs coach for the national champions and a well regarded recruiter.
At 37 he isn't some hot shot kid, nor is he a retread old guy who has already failed somewhere else. His career is on an upward trajectory. I would be really intrigued to hear some names that he might bring with him to serve as OC and DC.
OC is going to be the crucial hire. Hopefully someone to develop Grant
I don't know Charles Huff personally, but if that is really the list, we should hire him tomorrow... His resume is beyond anyone else mentioned. Associate head coach/running backs coach for the national champions and a well regarded recruiter.
At 37 he isn't some hot shot kid, nor is he a retread old guy who has already failed somewhere else. His career is on an upward trajectory. I would be really intrigued to hear some names that he might bring with him to serve as OC and DC.
Huff mentored Saquon Barkley and Najee Harris, he must know something about the ground game.
Rumors around Ann Arbor have been that Harbaugh has been trying to get moorhead to come be his OC.Yeah, he knows to get out of the way and allow freaks to be freaks.
Harris was the #2 ranked player in the entire country. That level of pure talent and he gets to run behind an offensive line like Alabama's and he gets to run on defenses that have to focus on a lethal passing attack with two freak receivers? It's hard to fvck that up.
Barkley was the 11th ranked RB. He was on the same offense as the Big 10's leading passer (who also happened to rush for 500 yards). Again, it's hard to fvck that up.
For some reason, this board keeps forgetting to mention Mississippi State, where Huff was the running backs coach and run game coordinator at in between his stints at Penn State and Alabama.
In that one season Huff was in Starkville, Mississippi State's QB ran for 400 yards more than any running back. Now, much of that had to do with having a huge QB who couldn't throw (Nick Fitzgerald) and a head coach who is a great offensive mind who would use his QB as a battering ram as a means to get a number advantage in the box against superior talent on defense. So it's not Huff's fault his RBs didn't produce much, but let's not act like he is the running back whisperer considering what he's been handed while avoiding some of the results. If we are going to laud him for the production of players he didn't recruit, we must also hold him to the same standards for lack of production of players he didn't recruit.
Which brings me to my point- Joe Moorhead is somebody Marshall should have gone after hard. The guy is an experienced HC at the FCS level and in the SEC, he was good but not great in the hardest division in the country, he is a great offensive mind, and he has the fiery and fun personality that Marshall needs after dealing with John. Would his $900K salary be a barrier? Possibly, but I think Marshall could get somewhat close to that, especially considering we'd be able to guarantee his contract 2.5X longer than what he has now as Oregon's OC. Would he think a much bigger job is within his grasp with a strong season in Oregon next year? Possibly, but that's a big risk for him to take instead of getting to lead his own program again.
One thing I do like about Huff is what his teams have done on special teams while he was the coordinator. His first couple of years as a special teams coordinator were pretty bad. His next couple of years were great. Now, many staffs give a "special teams coordinator" title to somebody even though other coaches are actually in charge of each unit, and I imagine that was the case at PSU, as Huff really didn't have ST coordinator experience. Regardless, his name was on it, and PSU improved greatly in special teams after he got his feet wet.
Thank goodness Hamrick is simply one on the search committee. Dr Gilbert will evaluate the committee choice and present to the BOG for a contract offerIf Hamrick is smart he will look outside the campus for a coach. The majority of people in the area want that warm and fuzzy feeling in hiring a coach. Have we had any luck with the hiring of a coach associated with Marshall besides Pruett? Pruett took over a solid team left by Jim Donnan. Again, Lambert was a head coach and was not successful at Charlotte with a losing record. Cut the cord!
Sir. Please stop making sense. This HC search doesn't require such logic.Yeah, he knows to get out of the way and allow freaks to be freaks.
Harris was the #2 ranked player in the entire country. That level of pure talent and he gets to run behind an offensive line like Alabama's and he gets to run on defenses that have to focus on a lethal passing attack with two freak receivers? It's hard to fvck that up.
Barkley was the 11th ranked RB. He was on the same offense as the Big 10's leading passer (who also happened to rush for 500 yards). Again, it's hard to fvck that up.
For some reason, this board keeps forgetting to mention Mississippi State, where Huff was the running backs coach and run game coordinator at in between his stints at Penn State and Alabama.
In that one season Huff was in Starkville, Mississippi State's QB ran for 400 yards more than any running back. Now, much of that had to do with having a huge QB who couldn't throw (Nick Fitzgerald) and a head coach who is a great offensive mind who would use his QB as a battering ram as a means to get a number advantage in the box against superior talent on defense. So it's not Huff's fault his RBs didn't produce much, but let's not act like he is the running back whisperer considering what he's been handed while avoiding some of the results. If we are going to laud him for the production of players he didn't recruit, we must also hold him to the same standards for lack of production of players he didn't recruit.
Which brings me to my point- Joe Moorhead is somebody Marshall should have gone after hard. The guy is an experienced HC at the FCS level and in the SEC, he was good but not great in the hardest division in the country, he is a great offensive mind, and he has the fiery and fun personality that Marshall needs after dealing with John. Would his $900K salary be a barrier? Possibly, but I think Marshall could get somewhat close to that, especially considering we'd be able to guarantee his contract 2.5X longer than what he has now as Oregon's OC. Would he think a much bigger job is within his grasp with a strong season in Oregon next year? Possibly, but that's a big risk for him to take instead of getting to lead his own program again.
One thing I do like about Huff is what his teams have done on special teams while he was the coordinator. His first couple of years as a special teams coordinator were pretty bad. His next couple of years were great. Now, many staffs give a "special teams coordinator" title to somebody even though other coaches are actually in charge of each unit, and I imagine that was the case at PSU, as Huff really didn't have ST coordinator experience. Regardless, his name was on it, and PSU improved greatly in special teams after he got his feet wet.
Allegedly Philly's HC lost his job going to bat for Taylor.Hire Huff as head coach and Press Taylor as the OC.
Who would that be?A lot of folks still don't understand who is in charge of this process.
A lot of folks still don't understand who is in charge of this process.
So, are you implying that it's the Governor? Or implying that the chairman of the BOG is passing the buck?It’s not the President and it’s not the AD.
The search committee is in charge of the process. Mike Hamrick is heading up the committee so he is involved. The committee will make a recommendation that will have to be approved by the Board of Governors.It’s not the President and it’s not the AD.
YepAllegedly Philly's HC lost his job going to bat for Taylor.
Doug Pederson picked the wrong fight and got fired
After four years of saying yes to Howie Roseman and Jeffrey Lurie, Doug Pederson finally said no. It helped get him fired.www.inquirer.com