This Week's Obsession: Can Hoke Save Himself? Comment Count

Seth

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What about this do you think can be saved? [Glanzman]

Ace: There's a very good chance this is moot after a beatdown this weekend, so it's now or never for this question. If you ran the athletic department, is there anything Brady Hoke could do the rest of this season that would convince you to keep him around for another year? If so, what would he have to accomplish over the rest of the year?

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BiSB: There is absolutely room for Brady Hoke to save his job. And it absolutely won't happen.

People get WAY too caught up in wins and losses. Devin Funchess was right: wins are just a statistic. Any time a coach is on the "hot seat," the offseason features constant and breathless blathering about "how many wins Coach X needs to keep his job," as if win totals by themselves tell us everything. Hoke's problem isn't that Michigan is 3-4. The problem isn't that Michigan has lost 10 of its last 15. The problem is that Michigan has been bad at football. The records are merely a symptom of being bad at football. You look at the guy trailing by 10 meters at the halfway point of a 100 meter dash, you don't say to yourself "he's going to lose because he has too much ground to make up." You say "he's going to lose because he isn't as fast as the other guys."

And that is why Brady Hoke will not keep his job. The football team he has assembled is not good, and has shown no signs of improvement over the last four years. Some people got excited last week because "a win is a win," and ignored the fact that Michigan displayed plenty of the same crippling weaknesses that have led it here. At some point, as they say, "you are who you are." The flaws with this team are not small, technical issues. They have deep, fundamental, systematic problems. They can't block. They can't get open. They flat-out can't play the coverage scheme they have been trying to play. They can't... uh... score points. Their special teams, as a whole, are bad. Michigan is just bad.

You don't throw away a coach who is moving in the right direction because he took momentary detour into Derpville. If Hoke can turn this team into the kind of team that can beat Michigan State and Ohio State and (sigh) Maryland, then sure, why not keep him. But if he could do that, we probably would have seen evidence of it by now.

[After the jump: votes of confidence?]

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Brian: There's nothing Hoke could do, because I wouldn't give him the opportunity to save his job with an OSU win.

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It would take a statue-worthy coaching job to turn this team around. [Fuller]

I mean, okay, yes, in the event that Michigan makes an unprecedented in-season turnaround, beats Michigan State without an all-time sixty-minute Sparty No facilitating it, rips through Maryland and Indiana and Northwestern and enters OSU 7-4 then he would be coaching for his job.

In a world where previous events can be used to project into the future—which I still think is the case despite the Blake Countess counterpoint—there is no scenario where he gets to the OSU game better than 6-5, and at that point I'm giving him the Earle Bruce and moving on. Unless the next few weeks radically reshape the way this team plays the narrative of his four year tenure at Michigan is luck and Denard saving his ass until he could screw it all up, and I'm not putting Michigan in a spot where an all-time luck explosion forces me to retain a guy who is in so far over his head that he needs a periscope to see hell.

Hoke's recruiting is permanently damaged after the Morris thing; you can't extend him; you can't let him coach a lame-duck season; scenarios in which retaining him is even vaguely spinnable as plausible are 1% things now. He gone.

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Seth: Speculating whether Hoke can upset a rival on the march to the inevitable is like asking what if Dave Brandon's contempt for fans hadn't made a disaster out of the concussion incident, or if Romeo and Juliet would have made a nice couple if their families weren't trying to kill each other. They are all symptoms of THE inherent flaw. Barring a string of extraordinarily fortuitous bounces, Brady isn't going to defeat Mark's or Urban's football teams, because those guys are that much better at building and coaching football teams.

(football gods PLEASE bring a string of extraordinarily fortuitous bounces anyway.)

In case 31-0 to Notre Dame, Wanking in the Rain, Playing Shane, and Mattison's Bad Game left any reasonable doubt, consider the new judge.

jehegbdc

I've yet to see it evidenced, but those who talk hot seats like to mention that a new AD is death to a coach on the fence. We don't have to look very far for examples: Brandon got rid of Rodriguez after about 350 days. Ellerbe lasted exactly a year after Martin took over. Roberson accepted Moeller's resignation a few months after assuming office. Goss fired Steve Fisher at the barest whiff of implication in the Martin scandal. Frieder couldn't even leave to take the ASU job without Bo canning him first. And Canham didn't fire Bump in 1968, but he did go down to his office to say "Do you really wanna do this still?" (Strack retired into the athletic department the same year, but certainly of his own volition).

In counter-examples, Bo Pelini survived a new boss after last year, though his hot seat was always overblown. Kyle Flood still has a job (and GOT EXTENDED!) despite not being a Herman hire, but all Rutgers precedent should be considered inadmissible on grounds that we'd rather keep Dave than be Rutgers.

I am wary that the things we see in our little bloggersphere are not the things people in charge see. What I see: in four years with the guy, Hoke's most innovative use of Devin Gardner was to leave him in during blowouts to create the appearance that Michigan wasn't giving up on games they'd given up on. Hoke was granted that fourth-year-with-a-new-coordinator that Rodriguez was begging for, and then the whole team got worse. This year's Minnesota game was the 2010 Penn State moment of the Hoke regime, except instead of launching a parade of tight ends at Ray Vinopal's head, the panic move was to let irresponsible Minnesota DEs run at Shane Morris's. These are all pretty specific things that not everybody noticed or talked about. Most people talk about how they can't run the ball or "do anything right."

But then most people want him gone. Hoke's biggest supporters aren't on the team; they're the guys who saw him coach DL in the late 1990s and early 'aughts, when Michigan's roster actually was experienced and talented enough to win by doing hard things better than their opponents could do easier things. That faction reached the zenith of its influence when Michigan hired Hoke; since then it hasn't grown its ranks or furthered its cause. You'll note that Hagerup's 'When the fall is all that is, it matters' letter to his teammates said nothing about their coaches. The Hoke people got their wish and it didn't work out for exactly the reasons the rest of us feared it wouldn't. Hearing the States' evidence now is just asking for more pain.

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Can you spot all the things wrong with this picture? [Fuller]

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Adam: I'm still giving Hoke the opportunity to coach for his job. The problem for him is that seeing what I would need to for him to be around next fall is about as likely as Michigan getting a defensive touchdown with three seconds left in the first half against Penn State. In other words, things aren't looking very good.

At this point winning is necessary but not sufficient. Michigan has to beat at least Michigan State or Ohio State and run the table otherwise. Beyond that, though, they have to show some kind of progress in their in-game strategy. That means no more sloppy mistakes (e.g. 10 men on the field for special teams situations) and no more poor decision-making from on high (e.g. the kind of timeout management you'd expect if Chris Webber was the head coach).

I like Brady Hoke as a person. When he's not in front of the camera he drops his deer-in-the-headlights act and he's charismatic. I can see why his former players are so supportive of him, but being a nice person or a "Michigan Man" won't save him anymore. Michigan's general disorganization and game theory blunders fall on Hoke, and they can't continue. The obvious problem is that there's no evidence that would lead me to believe they won't.

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A lame duck situation only freezes that program in place while its rivals continue to build. [Fuller]

If this thing gets turned around mid-season and Michigan suddenly looks competent then I'll happily deploy the "Brady Hoke poops magic" tag in my posts that probably hasn't been used since 2011. Right now, though, it's almost certain I'll be using the "coaching changes" tag.

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Ace: Since everyone else has covered the "no realistic way in hell" aspect of this, I'll approach it from a recruiting perspective. If Michigan decided to keep Hoke on for another year, it'd be disastrous in that regard. Michigan is already hemorrhaging commits as ugly play reigns on the field and uncertainty off it.

In this 2015 class, at least, M has few enough spots that a reasonably timed coaching change should allow the program to piece together a serviceable group of incoming freshmen—and depending on the hire, potentially a very good one. Keep Hoke around, though, and it's tough to see how his staff even goes about recruiting; these prospects—as well as their families and their coaches—know the situation, and at this point few could take Hoke seriously when he says he expects to remain the coach here. That's going to make it extremely tough to retain enough pieces of the current class while finding interested players with Michigan-level talent.

If Hoke is then allowed to assemble the 2016 class, Michigan could face the type of gap in depth/talent we pointed to when his offensive line stopped functioning. Hoke has made his recruiting hay early in the cycle, for the most part, but in a hypothetical '16 class that'd be the time when he'd be considered the coach on the hottest seat in the country—not exactly an ideal recruiting environment. Then the athletic department would have to trust that Hoke would win enough games during the season to lift any uncertainty and make up for lost time on the recruiting trail. That doesn't sound like a setup for success.

Recruiting is one of the last reasons Hoke should be let go, of course, but with how far the program has fallen he's managed to take a once-unassailable strength and turn it into a potential weakness.

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Mathlete: To Ace's point, the recruiting stakes will be very high. The 2015 class is one of the smallest in available spots possible under current scholarship rules. With only 13-15 spots possible to be filled, taking a hit this year is going to have far less downside than going into 2015 with a coach on a hot seat and probably 20+ spots to fill. A start to next year with Hoke at the helm that in any way resembles the start to this year, will potentially leave the 2016 class barren. The current struggles have already slowed the start to the 2016 class.

As to what it would take on the field, to echo everyone above, it's not just wins and losses, the narrative has to change. Michigan doesn't look anywhere near the level of the top of the Big 10. What could we see that would make this team look like they deserved to be in the same conversation as OSU and MSU? There haven't been the impression that this team was potentially elite since last year's Notre Dame game.

The other piece that concerns me is that 2015 will feature a new, unproven quarterback. It's hard to look at an offense that hasn't seemed to be on the cusp of greatness and add in a raw QB and expect things to take a big step forward. 2015 will be a critical year with recruiting momentum stalled and hopes pinned on a new quarterback. Any AD that would stake his name by Brady Hoke has either seen something we haven't on the field, will see something in the coming weeks that has defied the prior 3+ years or is just seeing things.

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BiSB: So... no? I feel like we're going with "no" here.

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All: No.

Comments

sj

October 22nd, 2014 at 10:52 AM ^

If you're driving a car with a popped tire, the question isn't "do I change it?" The question is "how can I get it changed." If you're way out in the backcountry, it may not be easy.

Of course Hoke should be gone. But as much as Hoke being clearly undead and unsuccessful will hurt player recruiting, Brandon's identical status will limit coach recruiting. Hiring and AD isn't easy. Good people will want detailed understanding of expectations and limitations before interviewing.  Can Schlissel and the Regents agree on those expectations, do a good search, and hire someone who's willing to leave their current job on minimal notice all in time to get a good head coach? It's a lot to ask of a president who didn't know anything about sports and who's probably really busy running a university. I bet it happens, but there are a lot of ways it could go wrong.

alum96

October 22nd, 2014 at 10:56 AM ^

BiSB hits the home run here.  Just will cut and paste it whenever I see the last few Hoke defenders.  The record is just a scorecard of the underlying foul stench.  This team does very few things well.  That is 4 years into a regime. 

To add to what BiSB said my simple questions are

  • If fired this year and he wanted to coach elsewhere what is the BEST position in the NCAA Hoke would get offered?  If you tell me a Power 5 conference HC job I have some nice oceanfront property in FL on the cheap. 
  • If you tell me a coordinator job or a HC in a non Power 5 conference, I ask you why is a guy not one Power 5 team in the country willing to hire good enough for UM? 

WindyCityBlue

October 22nd, 2014 at 12:30 PM ^

I've had this discussion with lots of people lately, and since its pretty much a forgone conclusion that Hoke is done, these discussions have been meaningful lately.  

It is my belief, a good method to gauge the abilities of a coach-in-termoil is to see where he goes next.  Great coaches do a bad job from time to time, and hence may have a bad head coaching stop somewhere (i.e. RR at UM).  Over the years, coaches gain an indentity amongst the football luminaries that is more or less like a tattoo.  

With that said, I don't think Hoke ends up in a power five head coaching position ever again.  Simply put, he's not built for it.  I think he goes back to the MAC.  Maybe a DC in a power conference.  

MI Expat NY

October 22nd, 2014 at 10:59 AM ^

Considering the hypothetical of us winning 4 of 5 or 5 of 5 and giving Hoke another year has me wondering: has any college coach ever been this close to being fired and gone on to have a successful career at his school?  I know of guys that have hung on, but never really had great success before ultimately being canned (Tommy Bowden, Mack Brown, etc.) and guys who have hung on only to completely crater soon thereafter (Will Muschamp).  However, I'm not sure any of those guy were ever as close to getting fired as Hoke is.  And I can't think of one college football coach whose hot seat was this hot who survived and then went on to continued success.  

I guess what I'm saying is that I'm siding with Brian.  Giving Hoke the chance to save his job is only going to maintain mediocrity or worse.  He should be gone no matter what, though I realize that is unlikely if we manage tow in out.  And for the record, I will be rooting for the latter because I can't root for a loss, even if in the end more losses are the only real way forward.

funkywolve

October 22nd, 2014 at 11:37 AM ^

A lot of Buckeye fans wanted him gone and people laughed when he got an extension before OSU tied UM in the 1992 season.  However, his 6 year run from '93 - '98 was pretty darn good.  3 Big Ten titles, a Rose Bowl win, a Sugar Bowl win, 3 or 4 Top Ten finishes depending on which poll you look at with 2 of those years OSU finishing 2nd in both polls.

MI Expat NY

October 22nd, 2014 at 1:48 PM ^

But he wasn't in a "that guy is so fired state."  He was in a "next year better be good or we're moving on state."  I'm sure there are plenty of coaches that have made that leap to something good to great when it was time to put up or shut up.  I'm talking about a guy that needed a miracle to save his job (like Hoke this year), gets it and goes on to some success at the school.  

westwardwolverine

October 22nd, 2014 at 10:59 AM ^

Hagerup's letter reminds me why I want these guys to win, despite the fact that losing now would be better in the long run. 

Here's to hoping they run the table, Jim Harbaugh wants the job and Dave Brandon gets fired. Everyone wins. 

Beat State. 

maize-blue

October 22nd, 2014 at 11:00 AM ^

A win this weekend buys Hoke more time. A blowout loss finalizes what everyone is thinking and expecting. I think if Hoke has any chance of returning next season they have to become bowl eligilbe and win that game, so 7-6 at least. I can't say with any confidence that I see this happening. I believe Hoke is too soft for big time D-1 ball.

Njia

October 22nd, 2014 at 11:02 AM ^

You've all circled the issue, but the bottom line is that this coach (and perhaps the whole staff) is incompetent.

When an individual is "doing the right things" but the evidence has yet to present itself (usually because of a streak of bad luck) a good manager is typically willing to let the fruits of the employee's labor be harvested by him or her.

Sometimes, an employee - usually through pure, dumb luck - will get good results without sound fundamentals. After a while, the luck runs out and the deficiencies are apparent to everyone.

The luck that brought 11-2 has run its course. Time for this staff to move on.

JTrain

October 22nd, 2014 at 11:16 AM ^

Right

There is just no hiding that we are a bad football team right now. My only silver lining is that we have a lot of potential talent that is quite young. QB scares me a little for next year...but, if we can just shore up the D and show some power in the running game...it could open up our passing game for an inexperienced QB.
Granted, I've been saying the previous sentence for three years now..but, c'mon man, we're due aren't we????


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westwardwolverine

October 22nd, 2014 at 11:21 AM ^

I feel like this is the right time for a transition. 2007-08 was all wrong, especially going from Carr to Rodriguez. Going to an offensive specialty guy with no one coming back on offense and a bunch of guys who could have made the team better having no reason to come back sunk that season and set in motion three years of failure. 

Brandon firing Rodriguez when he did probably helped the team in the short run (ensured that Rodriguez couldn't get a job so that Denard wouldn't transfer), but it destroyed that recruiting class, which has left a big hole on the last two teams (though not to the extent where Michigan should be looking at back to back 7-6 seasons at a maximum). 

But now? Its a fairly young team that returns a lot of guys next year. The recruiting class is small, so if we lose some its not nearly the same effect as its been the last couple times around. And if we do get a big ticket guy who has time to pull in his own guys and solidify the class, next year could be the start of something great that doesn't have the gaping personnel holes of the last two transitions. 

I just wish Dave Brandon would get his ass canned so this whole process could start now. 

west2

October 22nd, 2014 at 11:25 AM ^

What if by total calamity Michigan ran the table but continued to be inept (which is the only way this scenario would happen)?  Thats the telling thing here, the team's continuing poor play.  The other consideration would be timing and that seems to favor making a move after the OSU game for all the reasons mentioned above.  Availablity of a preferred coach might play into it such as if Harbagh took the 49ers to the playoffs and wanted that time to prepare his team without the distraction of being named Michigan's new coach.  Other than that possibility I simply cannot see Hoke lasting beyond December.  I would ask his supporters: are there any objective advantageous reasons why he should be retained following the completion of Michigan's final game other than political reasons?

wbpbrian

October 22nd, 2014 at 11:27 AM ^

of the regular season. He might be able to stay if he goes 7-5 and beats one the two MSU or Ohio. I have a feeling they would also keep DB too. To be honest I wouldn't care if Hoke was given another year as long as Brandon was fired. I see Brandon as the biggest problem we have and I would rather keep Hoke one more year than to have Brandon one more year.

maizenbluenc

October 22nd, 2014 at 11:50 AM ^

and many things he's done: if he earnestly listens and changes, whatever. Don't like that outcome, but I'd live with it.

Our football team plays very bad football consistently. Bottom of the Big Tehhhhnnnnn bad. They need to start playing very good football now, or Hoke has to go. I can't see that happening - so Hoke has to go.

bighouse22

October 22nd, 2014 at 12:30 PM ^

The coaching change is more important than the AD change.  If Hoke remains, we will all see an extended slide beyond what we are currently looking at because of the recruiting dip.  If you thought the cupboard was bare before, imagine how bad it will be with a lame duck coach next year.  

We will have two straight poor classes with 2015 and 2016.  At that point you get a new coach with a new system and it may or may not fit the personnel.

Keeping Hoke beyond this year would be a disaster unless he miraculously turns into a championship caliber coach!

Waves

October 22nd, 2014 at 11:28 AM ^

I often wonder what Hoke's internal thought processes are, what he tells himself or tells his wife at the end of the day. Is it, "OMG, I have taken the thing I love most and absolutely torpedoed it" or "I'm so close. I know I can turn this thing around with a few breaks here and there." My own personality would be to default to the former, but knowing what I know about sports coaches, I'm sure it's the latter.

Tater

October 22nd, 2014 at 11:28 AM ^

All he has to do is run the table.  I am thinking I have a bigger chance of winning Powerball than Hoke does of running the table.

My guess: if David Brandon still has a job, he will fire Hoke to save his.  If a new AD is hired, he will fire Hoke to bring in his own people.  Hoke goes either way.  I just hope Brandon goes first.

Tater

October 22nd, 2014 at 11:28 AM ^

All he has to do is run the table.  I am thinking I have a bigger chance of winning Powerball than Hoke does of running the table.

My guess: if David Brandon still has a job, he will fire Hoke to save his.  If a new AD is hired, he will fire Hoke to bring in his own people.  Hoke goes either way.  I just hope Brandon goes first.

Reader71

October 22nd, 2014 at 11:28 AM ^

BiSB wins. Of course he can save his job by winning out. The record would be 8-4, which usually doesn't get one fired. It would include huge wins over MSU and OSU. It would be, in fact, a great coaching performance -- we would see the in-season improvement we are always looking for, we would know we got the OC hire right after some early struggles, we would be confident in our OL for the first time in years, and the defense would have to have played very well. It ain't happening, though. But if it did, it would also solve the other issues discussed.

michgoblue

October 22nd, 2014 at 12:32 PM ^

If Hoke ends up at 8-4 with wins against our two main rivals (both of whom will be top 10 at the time we play them), there is almost no chance that he is fired.  Hell, he could get extended.  End 8-4 would mean that he finished the season on a 6 game winning stream, showed significant improvement, and likely would have secured a place in a New Years day bowl.  The narrative would go from one of a hot seat to one of a huge turn-around story.  Combine that with Hoke's general support from the formet players, and he would almost certainly be back.

I am hoping for this outcome, by the way, as it would mean that the team is actually improving.  What I am expecting, however, is Hoke to beat one of our two rivals, and win two of three against the remainder of our schedule.  Likely = goodbye Hoke.

michgoblue

October 22nd, 2014 at 1:02 PM ^

I would peg his chances of winning each at well under 50%.  But, I think that there is a chance for both.  Here's why: 

1.  MSU:

-I think that MSU is way overrated this year

-just on pure talent, I would argue that they have no advantage

-our OL has shown some modest improvement over the past two games.  Minimal, but some improvement, nonetheless.

-MSU's defense is not what it was last year.  Decent to good, sure, but not worldbeaters.  By contrast, our offense has been bad, but with the Devins, Fleet, Darboh and Butt (getting healthier every week), we have the potential to be better than we have shown.

-bye week for us

2.  OSU

-despite playing well, they still have a young, inexperienced QB

-they have beaten nobody great this season, so we don't know how good they really are - they did lose a lot from the prior year

-Hoke's teams have played them well, generally

-everyone knows that this game could be Hoke's last - odd things tend to happen in such situations, especially in rivalry games

Again, I am not saying that we will win both - or either - but I do think that we have a decent chance of taking one of the two.

Michigan Arrogance

October 22nd, 2014 at 5:22 PM ^

8-4 would be a hell of a turnaround and a lot of people like throwing out other turnarounds that are similar from a 10,000ft (read: record only) perspective. 8-4 is a Lloyd-like record some would argue and infact this kind of turnaround is what Lloyd is kind of known for (2003, 1998, 2007). But these kinds of teams were, you know, good at football. They lost tough road games, or had a bad turnover day (not a consistent 3 TOs every game). Lost to good teams, if not great teams. They didn't lose to Rutgers AND minn AND Utah AND get the worst beating I've ever seen vs ND, AND they didn't struggle to beat out a horrible PSU team at home. This isn't a good team losing to and/or squeeking by 3-5 teams they are slightly better than. This is a bad team losing/squeeking by other bad teams NOT TO MENTION this goes back to last year.

M is 5-10 in the last 15 games with wins over MiamiOH, AppSt, IU, NW and PSU.

Jesus Christ on the the cross, if Hoke were any fucking good AT ALL, he'd be at least 7-8 or 8-7 over that stretch. I literally can't fathom how much WORSE this team would have to be to actually result in a record WORSE THAN WHAT HOKE AS PRODUCED in games, what, 35-49 of his M career!

 

/rant

CompleteLunacy

October 22nd, 2014 at 11:29 AM ^

And that theoretical chance is as Brian said in the realm of 1%. 

The problem is by all accounts, Hoke isn't changing anything, but rather doubling down on a strategy that has led to the disastrous results so far this year. "We need to reestablish our team identity of running the football". That was basically a "stay the course" comment. Unless he was just lying to the media to throw MSU off, or he plans on unleashing a more spread-based  "run Devin" offense that actually, you know, focuses on Devin's main assets...yeah, it does not bode well. 

The only way Michigan wins is if the defense has a heroic outing. I don't see any way our offense can get to 20 points, and I sincerely doubt our defense can hold Cook et al to under 20. I'm thinking the game might look close on the scoreboard but never actually feel close, until MSU inevitably gets a late touchdown to seal it...something like 28-13 (so, yay, we score a touchdown. Silver linings, people.)

 

dragonchild

October 22nd, 2014 at 11:50 AM ^

I think MGoBlog is erroneously sticking to a narrative, or at least missing the point by a smidge.  The "doubling down" isn't the issue, per se.  Nuss is calling the sorts of plays MGoBlog advocated -- constraints built around an identity.  The team can't execute them consistently, which makes the opposing D's job easy.  If you look at the bye week in a bubble, getting the offense more reps of the base play considering they're not good at it yet makes perfect sense.

But a preference or identity is only acceptable as far as one can make it work.  The offensive system is new, OK, but the coaches have made downright disastrous personnel decisions that are indefensible at any level.  We're also getting gashed because they're asking a zone merchant to do press man.  We're turning the ball over like crazy.  We can't even count to 11.  The whole "back to our identity" thing may just be coachspeak so I don't put stock in it, but inside zone isn't the real problem, anyway.