Williams rules!

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Davnpurt
08-04-2005, 03:49 PM
If a succession were to take place I would take a defensive guru, such as Williams, over an offensive guru. Notwithstanding the football cliché that "defense wins championships..." I believe his moxie for developing underrated defensive players would supercede a need to hire an offensive whiz. I mean thinking pragmatically, Joey G won't be around forever and to replace him with Williams would certainly be boon to the Skins viability down the road.

That Guy
08-04-2005, 04:39 PM
maybe he can reimplement george allen's run and punt offense ;)

jbcjr14
08-04-2005, 04:59 PM
Gotta love this guy...running up and down the sidelines, hugging his guys, slapping high fives....loves the game and his players know it and perform.

SmootSmack
08-04-2005, 05:42 PM
I'm about to drop some Curmudgeon on y'all, so bear with me

I love having Gregg Williams here as our assistant head coach-defense but that doesn't automatically imply he'll be a great head coach. It's possible that he's learned from his first foray into head coaching and that he's learning from Gibbs and he'll do much better his second time around. But we probably shouldn't discount the possibility that maybe he's just not cut out to be a head coach. Some people (Turner, Rhodes come to mind) are great coordinators or assistant coaches but they miss that certain something that makes them great head coaches.

I'm not saying don't consider GW just to consider other as well. Such as Greg Blache-who should have gotten that San Fran job before they gave it to Erickson-or all-time Redskin great Russ Grimm.

Hopefully though, this is a question we won't really have to address for at least 4 more years

TheMalcolmConnection
08-04-2005, 06:10 PM
I'm going to agree with that. It's not be curmudgenoish it's beeing realistic. He would probably still have one of ht best defesnes in the league, but just maybe not have the rest of what it takes.

offiss
08-04-2005, 06:44 PM
I'm about to drop some Curmudgeon on y'all, so bear with me

I love having Gregg Williams here as our assistant head coach-defense but that doesn't automatically imply he'll be a great head coach. It's possible that he's learned from his first foray into head coaching and that he's learning from Gibbs and he'll do much better his second time around. But we probably shouldn't discount <a href='http://67.15.154.58/cmapp/zx-hclick.php?hid=2' target='_blank'>the</a> possibility that maybe he's just not cut out to be a head coach. Some people (Turner, Rhodes come to mind) are great coordinators or assistant coaches but they miss that certain something that makes them great head coaches.

I'm not saying don't consider GW just to consider other as well. Such as Greg Blache-who should have gotten that San Fran job before they gave it to Erickson-or all-time Redskin great Russ Grimm.

Hopefully though, this is a question we won't really have to address for at least 4 more years


Another assistant comes to mind as well Bill Belickik, and Williams is probably following more so in his footsteps than the other 2, bottom line Williams is a far better assistant than either Norv or Rhodes, the fact that he's taken a step back to learn offense as well as organizational skills say's a lot, Williams doesn't strike me as a one dimensional coach, IMO he's very smart and just need's to learn the offensive side of the ball which I am sure he's taking notes as we speak.

GoSkins!
08-04-2005, 07:15 PM
Maybe Gibbs grooms Musgrave for o-coordinator, Blanche for d-coordinator Assistant Head Coach, and Williams for Head Coach. Probably a pipe dream, but I can wish...

Kevikazi
08-04-2005, 07:24 PM
When Gregg Williams became a head coach for Buffalo, he made a mistake of hiring assistants with little or no NFL experience. After learning some coaching skills from Gibbs, and surrouding himself with experienced assistants such as Greg Blache, Dale Lindsey, Joe Bugel (maybe), GW may just be successful second time around.

manicd
08-04-2005, 08:09 PM
Another assistant comes to mind as well Bill Belickik, and Williams is probably following more so in his footsteps than the other 2, bottom line Williams is a far better assistant than either Norv or Rhodes, the fact that he's taken a step back to learn offense as well as organizational skills say's a lot, Williams doesn't strike me as a one dimensional coach, IMO he's very smart and just need's to learn the offensive side of the ball which I am sure he's taking notes as we speak.

Man, I don't know how guys get so motivated under Bill Belichick. He seems like the most boring guy on the face of the planet. I barely ever see his emotion change much. That would drive me crazy. Then again, I've only seen him in interviews, maybe's he different in practice and game time.

offiss
08-04-2005, 09:23 PM
Man, I don't know how guys get so motivated under Bill Belichick. He seems like <a href='http://67.15.154.58/cmapp/zx-hclick.php?hid=2' target='_blank'>the</a> most boring guy on <a href='http://67.15.154.58/cmapp/zx-hclick.php?hid=2' target='_blank'>the</a> face of <a href='http://67.15.154.58/cmapp/zx-hclick.php?hid=2' target='_blank'>the</a> planet. I barely ever see his emotion change much. That would drive me crazy. Then again, I've only seen him in interviews, maybe's he different in practice and game time.


You have to deciede, do you want a cheerleader for a coach, and lose, or do you want a coach who is all buisness because he knows exactly what he's doing and win?

Fairly easy to get motivated with a guy like Belichik!

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