tryfuhl
01-19-2010, 03:48 PM
I had forgotten that that was about Jackson.
Coaching Staff updatePages :
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
[42]
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
tryfuhl 01-19-2010, 03:48 PM I had forgotten that that was about Jackson. mlmpetert 01-19-2010, 03:53 PM Im wondering if we cant blame some of Laron's bad play on him? EEich 01-19-2010, 03:57 PM Hired Jacob Burney as DL coach. SFREDSKIN 01-19-2010, 04:00 PM Hired Jacob Burney as DL coach. Now they can have weekend at Burney's :) diehardskin2982 01-19-2010, 05:32 PM Burney IDK?... 1994 he joined the Cleveland Browns to become their defensive line coach; he stayed there until 1998. In 1999 he joined the Carolina Panthers to be their defensive line coach and coached there until 2001. In 2002 he was hired for the same position by the Denver Broncos LandrySlice 01-19-2010, 06:12 PM Are we just gonna totally ignore the Offensive Line coach? I would have guessed this would have been one of the top 3 priorties. Patiently waiting! jsnyder03 01-19-2010, 08:23 PM From John Clayton: Important hire upcoming for Shanahan Tuesday, January 19, 2010 | Print Entry Redskins coach Mike Shanahan continues to fill out his staff, and don't be surprised if he ends up getting Mike Solari as his offensive line coach. According to a source, Solari, who lost his job in Seattle after Pete Carroll was hired to replace Jim Mora, was at the Redskins' facility early in the week for an interview. The offensive line hire is one of the most important for Shanahan because of his zone-blocking scheme. Solari is one of the better zone-blocking coaches.rties. Patiently waiting![/QUOTE] 53Fan 01-19-2010, 08:49 PM From John Clayton: Important hire upcoming for Shanahan Tuesday, January 19, 2010 | Print Entry Redskins coach Mike Shanahan continues to fill out his staff, and don't be surprised if he ends up getting Mike Solari as his offensive line coach. According to a source, Solari, who lost his job in Seattle after Pete Carroll was hired to replace Jim Mora, was at the Redskins' facility early in the week for an interview. The offensive line hire is one of the most important for Shanahan because of his zone-blocking scheme. Solari is one of the better zone-blocking coaches.rties. Patiently waiting![/QUOTE] I didn't know much about him so I found this. Solari addition pivotal for Seahawks - NFL - ESPN (http://sports.espn.go.com/nfl/columns/story?columnist=sando_mike&id=3301266) skinsnut 01-19-2010, 09:00 PM I am sadden to see Jackson still on this staff. I feel he stunted the growth of both Sean Taylor and Laron Landry. Please correct me if I am wrong about this. Only Landry has regressed at the safety position, however, every CB has gotten worse and our rookie CB didn't even play. I'd be more concerned about CB coaching than Safety...everyone other than Landry has been performing at or above their potential. skinsnut 01-19-2010, 09:08 PM So it looks like Steve Jackson our secondary coach has been retained by Shanny. He along with Danny Smith where 2 I wanted gone. I wanted Smith gone due to keeping ARE in as punt returner for the last 2 years. Even if he had been making a case for using another player for punt returns he never got his way against Zorn so my thought is he will never be able to persuade a established coach like Shanny. My thought is that he is at best a pushover, or even worse a really bad special teams coach. Ive been skeptical of Steve Jackson ever since reading the Tom Friend article a few years ago (Damn 2006!). Minus Gregg William’s ego he was the other coach that was “blamed” for the poor defense. I honestly think that when this article was written it was dead on about the Gregg Williams “its not the players its my genius scheme” attitude. I think he has changed his tune a little bit, but back then I think there was truth to it. I really wanted Danny Smith and Steve Jackson gone this season. I also really wanted to keep Jerry Gray (who knows if he would have stayed if not for the “attempt” to satisfy the Rooney Rule) What do you guys think? Did anyone want to retain either of these guys? Remember these words: "A lot of Taylor's woes can be traced a lot to the hiring of Steve Jackson as Redskins safety coach. Jackson came with Williams from Buffalo, where he was a lower-level defensive coach, and Jackson supposedly was hurt when Williams chose DeWayne Walker as his main secondary coach in 2003 and 2004. He wanted the job himself, and when Walker left after the 2005 season, he assumed he'd get it. But Williams' old defensive coordinator in Buffalo, Jerry Gray, had just become available, and Williams hired him. Jackson was ticked. So Williams threw him a bone, a bone which has literally torn up the secondary. He made Jackson safeties coach and Gray cornerbacks coach and allowed Jackson to run his own meetings. That means that the Redskins' safeties and corners do not meet together, which is practically unheard of. "Talk to any coach in the league, and ask them, 'Have you ever heard of corners and safeties not meeting together?'" the Redskins player says. "They'd say, 'What are you talking about?' That's crazy. But ever since minicamps, OTAs, training camp, we hadn't met as a secondary. On the field, the corners will start making a call or doing something, and the safeties will be, 'What are you talking about? We didn't go over that.' So now the corners are expecting help in certain situations, and the safeties aren't getting there in time. And people got beat in the secondary. "Everybody was saying they had to start meeting together. So the last three weeks they have. But 40 percent of the time Steven Jackson's not in the meeting. Because he pouts, because Jerry's running the meeting." On the field, Jackson's (and presumably Williams') techniques aren't working, either. The innovators of Cover 2, such as Monte Kiffin and Tony Dungy, want their safeties staying deep, 2 yards inside the numbers and staying squared up. They want them reading the quarterback and breaking downhill on everything. But Jackson began teaching Taylor and Co. not to read the quarterback, but to read the receivers' breaks and releases and react accordingly. He wanted them to be aggressive out of Cover 2, to help on the run, even though Cover 2 is not known to be a run-stopping defense. Williams wants to call it a lot because, ideally, if you can stop the run with a Cover 2, you have the best of both worlds, because it's specifically designed to prevent the deep ball. But Jackson kept exhorting Taylor and his early-season safety mate, Adam Archuleta, to be aggressive playing the run out of the Cover 2, and they began to get beat on the play-action pass repeatedly. According to the Redskins player, Jackson then began berating his players profanely -- although he tends to go lighter on Taylor -- and they reached bottom in Philadelphia, when Donte' Stallworth beat Taylor deep for an 84-yard touchdown. Witnesses say that at that point, the other defensive coaches became officially peeved at Jackson for making Taylor "play like a robot," and for turning him into a confused, regressing player who now tunes out coaches and teammates. "And then Steve Jackson began pouting at practice," the player said. "He pouts at practice. He'll stand by himself and won't coach anybody. This last game in Tampa, we had a player at halftime go up to him and say, 'Are you going to just sit there and pout, or are you gonna f------ coach your guys up?'" " Whoa...is this for real? I sure hope not |
|
EZ Archive Ads Plugin for vBulletin Copyright 2006 Computer Help Forum