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His biggest mistake is not knowing his team. He built it, he is with them daily, but they are strangers to him. Anybody with half a brain cell and any experience with sports and young athletes can see that they are fragile mentally. They take negative instances inside the game and let that affect them greatly. I would even go so far as to say that the positive things that they accomplish in the games are nowhere near as influential in a positive way as the how influential the negative instances are in a negative way.
Basically our guys don't get much of a boost from the big plays we make, but absolutely crater with any negative one. The problem is that we all recognize this but the god damned head coach doesn't.
The main example is the onside kick. We stuffed their first drive of the second half got the ball and scored. Then we caused a fumble, got the ball back and hit them with a big run play. We had all the momentum and Scott should have protected it. He should know that his team is fragile and that by failing with this trick play he will cut our juice and hand NW a lifeline they didn't earn. From that exact moment he let the idea of failure enter their minds. And it's something you have to know that the guys on this team just can't handle. There is just too much evidence of it to be oblivious.
It's unforgivable to me at this point that he is unaware of the "sports traumatized" team he has. It shows he isn't cut out for the job. Bill Callahan made this same kind of mistake of not knowing what kind of team he had in his first year. He tried to go west coast offense with a team and QB not built for it. We all know how that turned out.
Basically our guys don't get much of a boost from the big plays we make, but absolutely crater with any negative one. The problem is that we all recognize this but the god damned head coach doesn't.
The main example is the onside kick. We stuffed their first drive of the second half got the ball and scored. Then we caused a fumble, got the ball back and hit them with a big run play. We had all the momentum and Scott should have protected it. He should know that his team is fragile and that by failing with this trick play he will cut our juice and hand NW a lifeline they didn't earn. From that exact moment he let the idea of failure enter their minds. And it's something you have to know that the guys on this team just can't handle. There is just too much evidence of it to be oblivious.
It's unforgivable to me at this point that he is unaware of the "sports traumatized" team he has. It shows he isn't cut out for the job. Bill Callahan made this same kind of mistake of not knowing what kind of team he had in his first year. He tried to go west coast offense with a team and QB not built for it. We all know how that turned out.