Quote About Previous Coaching Staff From Jake Rudock Interview - 08/28/2015

Submitted by Schmozerine on

As the season grows closer and closer my obsessive need for content has increased exponentially.  I came across this interview from Jake Rudock and found it very interesting and very sad.  It is just another example at the ineptitude of the previous coaching staff.  

At the 0:55 second mark, he was asked about how he's been in 3 or 4 different offense's in 4 years and he interjects with this gem,

"That's Shane.  He's learned like 5, or 6, or 10, or 20."

 All of the interviewers laugh and I even let out a chuckle but as I thought about it further, my heart just started to ache.

My heart aches because 1) I think I may have either stable angina or psychogenic chest pain secondary to the panic attacks and hyperventilating from watching the past several years.  Either one sucks.  2) I feel so terrible for these young men.  They commit to a program and sacrifice so much day in and day out for the team, all while trying to earn a degree on top of it.  I played college football in AZ so I know what it is like to go through that.  

I know these players are now getting the teaching and coaching that they truly need and deserve.  I feel terrible for those that never got the chance to be coached by actual competent coaches in the past 7 years and even more props to those that stayed through all of the garbage. 

Here’s to a bright season and even brighter future of Michigan Football.  Cheers!

 

https://youtu.be/A_BrIpSSWVA

Edited: to make the title less alarming

 

Perkis-Size Me

August 30th, 2015 at 12:10 AM ^

Ehh he was a disaster here. There's nothing disputing that.

Getting out scored by a Jim Tressel offense, a JIM TRESSEL COACHED OFFENSE, 100-24 over 3 years, is an unmitigated disaster. He lost to Toledo, never beat MSU or OSU, and couldn't field even a mediocre defense. His offenses, even when they found their footing, beat up on MAC teams, and got easily shut down by any team with any kind of defensive pulse.

Maybe Michigan simply wasn't the right place for him, and sure, he didn't get any favors from the alums, but everyone would've shut up and bought in had he won football games. What happened on the field those three years is squarely on his shoulders.

He was a disaster here. An absolute disaster, and after the Groban incident, a PR nightmare. He was stubborn and didn't adapt his system to the players he had. He asked a defensive coordinator who knew nothing about the 3-3-5 to teach the 3-3-5. The man deserved to be fired, and while I'm glad to see him doing well elsewhere, I couldn't be happier that he's gone.



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McSomething

August 30th, 2015 at 11:04 AM ^

I am so sick of the "didn't adapt his system to the players he had" bs. What fucking system was he supposed to run with the players he had in 08? And don't give me any bullshit about Mallet. He was gone before RR was ever hired. We all knew it before the OSU game, yet now people want to retroactively lay it at RichRod's feet. And no, he wasn't "forcing" the 3-3-5. In his first two seasons I'm pretty sure it was used all of twice. Mainly because he didn't have the personnel to run it. I want the RichRod arguments to end as much as anyone. People that supported him do need to move on from bringing him up at, seemingly, every opportunity. However, those that still argue against him need to stop bringing up these bullshit points that have been proven as half-truths or outright wrong. Stop it. If you want the topic to go away, try ignoring it for a change. Neg and move on if you must.

ghostofhoke

August 29th, 2015 at 11:47 PM ^

Let's keep things in perspective. If you're gonna be a football player you're likely gonna need to be able to learn and adapt to multiple systems over the course of your career. I don't think that's something hey should throw a pity party for. Guys move around the NFL on a regular basis, even the good/great guys. To be effective this is a skill you need to develop. At the end of the day, it's not like they're being forced to dig ditches in the summer sun, they're playing a game and expressing themselves through athletics with 1something other brothers going through the same thing to help them through it.



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jmblue

August 29th, 2015 at 11:58 PM ^

From this headline I was expecting something genuinely terrible, like a death in the family.

Shane got to swap Doug Nussmeier for Jim Harbaugh.  I think he's okay with that.

 

 

DonAZ

August 30th, 2015 at 8:38 AM ^

He's worse than Harbaugh

To reinforce your point ... Harbaugh and Drevno.

(I have a major man crush for Drevno.  Ever since his introductory video interviews, the guy has struck me as someone I'd follow to hell and back.  I've said before: he's Harbaugh's X-factor here.  We're going to see good things out of this offense.)

DonAZ

August 30th, 2015 at 8:33 AM ^

Even Mattison got demoted

Another reading of this -- Mattison willingly stepped back to (a) provide Durkin the role, (b) provide continuity for the staff, and (c) assume a role that is his first love in coaching ... the DL.

At 65 years old it's possible -- even likely -- he no longer wants DC role, but very much wants to remain involved with the DL and coaching the young men who play there.  I applaud him.

LSAClassOf2000

August 30th, 2015 at 12:07 AM ^

So there is context, here's the embed - it was a joke essentially, of course, one that most of us have probably thought to ourselves. Of course, it is true that the relative lack of stability really has only served to undermine the progress of, well, a lot of people. 

johnthesavage

August 30th, 2015 at 12:15 AM ^

Saying Rich Rodriguez is not a "competent" coach, especially of offensive players, is pure foolishness. And I can only imagine how terrible you feel for the 99+% of college football players who are not being coached by Harbaugh and company.

UMForLife

August 30th, 2015 at 8:16 AM ^

He is a confident guy. He has the aura of knowing that he is the starting QB, even though he didn't answer the question. The way he answered the question about Shane, I felt that he has had this conversation with Shane. It sounds like they have joked around. Jake: "I am winning this job. I have more experience than you. Watch me, junior" Shane: "I am winning this job. Your experience means nothing. I know this team. I had too many OCs. If not for that, I would have demolished you at the practice." Jake: "Seriously Shane. I played for Ferentz. Talk about not knowing offense." Shane: "You got me there." Joking aside, the point is it sounds like he has a good relationship with Shane and that is an excellent leadership job by Harbaugh.

Der Alte

August 30th, 2015 at 11:19 AM ^

During the last 8 years or so my feelings about the M football program have gone from dejection to despair to depression. The conference "big two" are now Ohio State and Michigan State fergodssakes. And M hasn't beaten either of them in more years than we all care to remember.

During these last 8 years the desperate (RR) and feckless (Hoke) attempts to find a head coach have resulted in several fundamental changes in offense, defense, even special teams. A five-star recruit such as Shane Morris might well have had his career affected by all the scheme changes and questionable coaching.  Hypothetical question: if Shane had ended up at East Lansing rather than AA, had truly redshirted his freshman year and had been brought along slowly and carefully in a stable, predictable coaching environment, would Connor Cook now be in a competition for his starting job? I'd like to think yes.  

Anyway, kudos to Shane for sticking it out and let's hope if not this year, maybe next year is when we see realized all the potential so many believe he possesses. Good coaching should provide the impetus toward that goal.

So you're our last hope, Obi Jim. Let's all hope the Force is with you and the team. Go Blue.