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blindexhibitionist t1_j3n4b84 wrote

Watching Hard Knocks he’s definitely cringe. From his four agreements poster, to his speeches to the players, it just seemed like such canned motivational rah rah without being genuine. I don’t doubt he knows football but seeing the difference between him and Dan Campbell is just night and day.

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grynch43 t1_j3nybx2 wrote

It’s the Hard Knocks curse. Frank Reich was featured on Hard Knocks last year and didn’t even make through this whole season.

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BigTomBombadil t1_j3p87zx wrote

But then Dan Campbell was on and took the lions to a winning record while becoming even more loved and respected.

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Available-Camera8691 t1_j3oe26q wrote

Dan Campbell is such a great coach. Last nights game was the most entertaining game of the season for me. I'm stoked for Lions fans, even though they didn't make the playoffs. They have a lot to look forward to in the future.

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Ardan66 t1_j3ozwg0 wrote

I think we(they) are better off for missing. The season couldn't have ended better except for the Super Bowl. He said it in his 2nd quarter interview, "We don't want them to go."

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lipp79 t1_j3xuva8 wrote

I think all the NFC playoff teams are glad they didn't make it. Yes, the Niners are good but with the momentum Detroit had, especially if Seattle had lost, beating GB would have been an unbelievable boost and they were going to be very dangerous.

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Mcjoshin t1_j3o7dtr wrote

Yup, watching Hard Knocks Detroit vs Arizona, it was clear within in 5 minutes Kliff is one of their biggest problems. He’s more interested in being liked than winning. He holds no one accountable and it’s always just “good try guys, just keep doing what you’re doing”. Great attitude for little league participation trophies. Not great for a NFL coach trying to win.

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B33Man88 t1_j3needt wrote

I doubt he knows football either.

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blindexhibitionist t1_j3nh2i3 wrote

You don’t become an NFL head coach without knowing football. Now, his ability to hire other good coaches to his staff, be a good leader are all definitely up for discussion. I like to think of it like Brian Scalabrini. People would think he’s a scrub but dude was one of the best 400ish hundred basketball players in the world. Same with NFL head coaches. And the fact he was a qb before hand.

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jdbolick t1_j3njwh0 wrote

Remember that Kingsbury had a losing record as a collegiate head coach. His appointment by the Cardinals was widely scorned.

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grifttu t1_j3nl4ut wrote

As a Red Raider, I never understood how he leveraged a losing record at Tech into a head coaching job in the NFL.

I was even in the camp that if he had one more season, and no QB injuries, he was on the cusp of finally turning it around. But he didn't do anything to make me think "oh yea, totally NFL HC material"

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517UATION t1_j3normu wrote

Probably because he coached Mahomes in college. That probably gave him way more credit than he deserved.

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DiscombobulatedWavy t1_j3nowke wrote

Hi fellow Red Raider. Aside from leveraging the Tech job into an NFL job,he also burned USC before taking the Cardinals gig. By no means am I a USC lover, but they don’t fuck around when it comes to the reputation of their football program. Or at least I thought they didn’t, until they went around chasing this guy.

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tsx_1430 t1_j3oy5vm wrote

This is so dumb. If you get a shot in the NFL you take it. Especially as a head coach.

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DiscombobulatedWavy t1_j3oyq95 wrote

No one’s saying it wasn’t a smart move. But he did screw USC by accepting then taking the cardinals gig. And the comment wasn’t whether or not it was a smart move. It was to the fact that he seemed like a better coach than he was and is.

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bjams t1_j3o3ooe wrote

> I was even in the camp that if he had one more season, and no QB injuries, he was on the cusp of finally turning it around. But he didn't do anything to make me think "oh yea, totally NFL HC material"

Agreed. All for the best though, McGuire, Kittley and DeRuyter seem to be building something pretty solid.

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njm1314 t1_j3nl6rg wrote

Shocking that the guy who was a failure at the college level wasn't a success at the professional level. I mean who saw that coming?

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blindexhibitionist t1_j3pdc2b wrote

At the same time Saban and Meyer failed as well. I hear what you’re saying but I don’t know if there’s a correlation there. I think at the time part of the idea was that he had experience running the type of offense the nfl was trying to switch too and he had experience with qbs who went on to be successful in the nfl. I do remember at the time there was questions about the hiring. I don’t know enough about football to fully understand it. But I don’t think his college winning percentage is necessarily one of those factors. I’m trying to think of other college coaches who had success in the nfl. Erickson did decent. Jimmy Johnson did really well. Belichick was an assistant in college. Schiano was shit. Louisville guy was a trash human. Was Mora college first? Anywho it’s an interesting thought experiment about what makes a college coach do well in the pros.

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njm1314 t1_j3q0wn6 wrote

Well that's the kicker though. Even guys who had massive success in college fail sometimes in the NFL. Nobody to my knowledge who was a clear failure in college however was a success in the pros, at least not in half a century.

Almost every coach has spent some time at the college level.

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Uffda01 t1_j3rrvhr wrote

no - the kicker is the guy who tries to put the ball through the goalposts.

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blindexhibitionist t1_j3nkxqj wrote

I’m not saying he’s good coach. But saying he doesn’t know football seems a bit hyperbolic

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cbreezy456 t1_j3nyuk7 wrote

Yes you do. The NFL and College is fuckin rife with nepotism

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B33Man88 t1_j3ojaa6 wrote

I’m not saying he’s unfamiliar with the game, but if Kyle Shanahan is on one end of the strategic spectrum Kliff is somewhere closer to the other end.

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blindexhibitionist t1_j3oo5op wrote

Totally agree. I don’t think he is a good coach at all. And by coach I mean someone who has all the pieces (football knowledge, flexibility, leadership). I was just commenting about his football knowledge. He probably has forgotten more than any fan will know.

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TheRealGeitro t1_j3no6r8 wrote

It can happen. Steve Nash is a good example, he had no business becoming a head coach. With Lampard at Chelsea too

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blindexhibitionist t1_j3oon9g wrote

Oh I don’t argue that knowledge equates to success. My point was just that the statement “he doesn’t know x” is hyperbolic and isn’t true. Coaching is a lot more than x’s and o’s

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