BennyBledsoe
In the Starting Line-Up
- Joined
- Oct 17, 2008
- Messages
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Was it time to trade Mac Jones? I'd say that was definitely a move they had to make. Whether he is a good or bad player, we weren't truly going to find out here.
He had ONE year of complete NFL coaching under McDaniels. He hit the rookie wall. For those that seem to forget, the rookie wall is a crucial point in any player's career. This comes at a point where they have now played more games in a season than they did in college, and the opposition has more tape on him. That's why year two is often a crucial year for the coaching staff and the QB. You have to have a coaching staff that can help him overcome what opponents have keyed in on, and a quarterback able to respond. This is absolutely NOT the time to experiment with a defensive coordinator and special teams coordinator coaching on offense. Certainly NOT in crucial positions.
That is clown school level maneuvering we used to make fun of other teams for during the majority of Belichick's time here. If we were told the Jets had done these things, we would have laughed our asses off at them.
Great coaches don't stay constantly great. There comes a point where they no longer are the same coach. For Belichick, that came in roster and staff construction. He no longer wanted to be challenged. The coaching staff was the Friends and Family plan. The players were all guys who he enjoyed interviewing, regardless of talent.
So, we have multiple things that can be true. Mac Jones was no longer a viable QB talent in New England. He may become a better player in a different situation. Belichick was a great head coach that knew how to evaluate the roster and his coaching staff. After 24 seasons, whatever edge he had was lost. There should be NO shame in admitting that Belichick was no longer the coach he was. Especially because it happened to MANY Hall of Fame coaches, including Don Shula.
He had ONE year of complete NFL coaching under McDaniels. He hit the rookie wall. For those that seem to forget, the rookie wall is a crucial point in any player's career. This comes at a point where they have now played more games in a season than they did in college, and the opposition has more tape on him. That's why year two is often a crucial year for the coaching staff and the QB. You have to have a coaching staff that can help him overcome what opponents have keyed in on, and a quarterback able to respond. This is absolutely NOT the time to experiment with a defensive coordinator and special teams coordinator coaching on offense. Certainly NOT in crucial positions.
That is clown school level maneuvering we used to make fun of other teams for during the majority of Belichick's time here. If we were told the Jets had done these things, we would have laughed our asses off at them.
Great coaches don't stay constantly great. There comes a point where they no longer are the same coach. For Belichick, that came in roster and staff construction. He no longer wanted to be challenged. The coaching staff was the Friends and Family plan. The players were all guys who he enjoyed interviewing, regardless of talent.
So, we have multiple things that can be true. Mac Jones was no longer a viable QB talent in New England. He may become a better player in a different situation. Belichick was a great head coach that knew how to evaluate the roster and his coaching staff. After 24 seasons, whatever edge he had was lost. There should be NO shame in admitting that Belichick was no longer the coach he was. Especially because it happened to MANY Hall of Fame coaches, including Don Shula.












