Luxorreb
08-08-2007, 05:28 AM
They're all at Redskins Park now. Let's keep this thread on topic. More about Gibbs coaching tree...
Joe Gibbs coaching tree?Luxorreb 08-08-2007, 05:28 AM They're all at Redskins Park now. Let's keep this thread on topic. More about Gibbs coaching tree... firstdown 08-08-2007, 10:55 AM Last week on the Riggo show he was talking about Walsh and how people call him a master mind of the game (I think that was the term or something like that) and how they just call Gribbs a great coach. He then started given out stats of the two coaches careers and how Gibbs numbers are better in just about every category. He was not knocking Walshes great career but only asking why Gibbs is only considered great and Walsh a master mind. SC Skins Fan 08-08-2007, 12:59 PM Last week on the Riggo show he was talking about Walsh and how people call him a master mind of the game (I think that was the term or something like that) and how they just call Gribbs a great coach. He then started given out stats of the two coaches careers and how Gibbs numbers are better in just about every category. He was not knocking Walshes great career but only asking why Gibbs is only considered great and Walsh a master mind. It is because of the "West Coast Offense" that is discussed ad nausem, the iconic teams, and even more because of the iconic players (esp. Montana and Rice), which Gibbs teams did not have. I will point out, however, that Gibbs is in the Hall of Fame so I'm not sure he is slighted too much. His lustered is tarnished most, I'd say, by the 21-27 record he has since coming back. Hopefully the team can help rectify that this season. SmootSmack 08-08-2007, 01:23 PM Scout.com: Chalk Talk: West Coast Offense Part I (http://bears.scout.com/2/638740.html) "Most NFL fans associate the West Coast Offense with Bill Walsh’s 49ers teams of the 1980s. But the seeds of Walsh’s system in San Francisco were planted 20 years earlier by Gillman and in a much different form. Any team that presently runs an offense that is predicated on short timing patterns is tagged with the West Coast label. But unlike Walsh, Gillman had no use for short passes. His philosophy involved a more vertical attack, similar to Mike Martz’s 'Greatest Show on Turf' offense while with the St. Louis Rams. It was during Gillman’s days with the Chargers that San Diego State head football coach Don Coryell began frequenting the Bolts’ preseason camps with his two young assistant coaches, Joe Gibbs and Ernie Zampese. They loved what they saw of the offense and began developing it further for their Aztec teams. Coryell began adding his own innovations and building on what Gillman had started. By the time Coryell took the head coaching position for the Chargers in 1978, his scheme had become known as ‘Air Coryell.’ In nine years with the Chargers, Coryell’s offense led the NFL in passing yardage seven times. Joe Gibbs then took the offense with him to the Washington Redskins in 1981. His tinkering with the system involved adding the bunch formation – three wide receivers lined up together, each darting off in confusing patterns – and the two- and three-tight end alignments, resulting in three Super Bowl championships." (Here's Part II of the article: Scout.com: Chalk Talk: West Coast Offense Part II (http://bears.scout.com/2/641292.html)) Beemnseven 08-08-2007, 05:49 PM Most NFL fans associate the West Coast Offense with Bill Walsh’s 49ers teams of the 1980s. But the seeds of Walsh’s system in San Francisco were planted 20 years earlier by Gillman and in a much different form. I always thought Bill Walsh was a student of Paul Brown, who was the original pioneer of what we know as the "West Coast" short passing attack. The Sid Gillman/Don Coryell philosophy never actually crossed paths with Bill Walsh. SmootSmack 08-08-2007, 05:57 PM I always thought Bill Walsh was a student of Paul Brown, who was the original pioneer of what we know as the "West Coast" short passing attack. The Sid Gillman/Don Coryell philosophy never actually crossed paths with Bill Walsh. I think you're right about the Walsh/Brown connection. But Walsh still used parts of Gillman's philosophy to craft his own offensive vision. Former 49ers coach Bill Walsh dead at 75 - Yahoo! News (http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20070730/ap_on_sp_fo_ne/fbn_obit_walsh) After Cal, he did a stint at Stanford before beginning his pro coaching career as an assistant with the AFL's Oakland Raiders in 1966, forging a friendship with Al Davis that endured through decades of rivalry. Walsh joined the Cincinnati Bengals in 1968 to work for legendary coach Paul Brown, who gradually gave complete control of the Bengals' offense to his assistant. Walsh built a scheme based on the teachings of Davis, Brown and Sid Gillman — and Walsh's own innovations, which included everything from short dropbacks and novel receiving routes to constant repetition of every play in practice. Though it originated in Cincinnati, it became known many years later as the West Coast offense — a name Walsh never liked or repeated... CHIEF CHUCKING MY SPEAR 08-08-2007, 10:20 PM yes gibbs record since he came back has hurt him. That what i feared most when gibbs was hired. If gibbs fails here what the hell going to happen here? MTK 08-08-2007, 10:57 PM I think if Gibbs 2.0 turns out to be a complete failure, his career will be looked at in 2 parts. The first part being a 3-time SB winner, and the 2nd part as a coach who couldn't translate his earlier success to a different era. Whatever happens in Gibbs 2.0, nobody can take away his 3 SB rings and his significant career accomplishments from 1981 - 1992. CHIEF CHUCKING MY SPEAR 08-08-2007, 11:15 PM your right you cant take away what happen in the first term. What scary if gibbs cant pull this off who can? GW or AS i dont think so. SpeedyDuncan 08-09-2007, 12:11 AM Petitbon played for George Allen. I think he was a holdover from Pardee's coaching staff. He played for the Bears, Rams and Skins. Maybe he comes from the Halas tree. I'm not sure Joe Gibbs has a coaching tree. He got his start fairly young and retired before many of his former players could have become coaches under him. I would not consider any defensive coaches to fall in this category. As for offensive assistants, most have been colleagues who already shared the same philosophy. The only guy that I can think of who became a head coach was Joe Bugel. I think he comes from the same tree that Joe Gibbs comes from. I think before you have a tree, you need some branches. Russ Grimm and Earnest Byner are guys who may fit this description, if they become head coaches. Dan Henning, Don Breaux, Rennie Simmons and Wayne Sevier (RIP) etc. are all like thinkers and contemporaries of Joe Gibbs. They are / were part of the mastery. |
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