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How many coaches does it take to have too many?

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  • How many coaches does it take to have too many?

    The average number of coaches on a team has been steadily increasing, it seems that 24 is now the most on a team. I expect other teams will soon find the "need" for that, or more.
    How soon before each player has a personal coach?

    This from NFP:

    *The Bucs’ coaching staff is up to 24 members, which is believed to be the largest in the NFL and probably is the largest in NFL history. Rick Stroud details it here. The 24 coaches give the Bucs one more than the Eagles, Seahawks and Vikings. The staff is so big, in fact, that the team is reconfiguring office space at One Buc Place to accommodate two additions. Among the Bucs’ coaches are three strength coaches, an assistant defensive coordinator and a pass rush specialist. - See more at: http://www.nationalfootballpost.com/....B9qiy0aK.dpuf
    How Wilson is changing the QB evaluation game; best intangible QBs of all-time and combine chatter.



    http://www.tampabay.com/sports/footb...-of-24/1276887

  • #2
    When the waterboys have a coach, then you've probably crossed a line somewhere.
    "Greatness is not an act... but a habit.Greatness is not an act... but a habit." -Greg Jennings

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    • #3
      The league has put a salary cap on players, but not on coaches. With teams needing to release established players due to the salary cap, perhaps they feel the need to devote more time and resources to individual player development.
      I can't run no more with that lawless crowd
      While the killers in high places say their prayers out loud
      But they've summoned, they've summoned up a thundercloud
      They're going to hear from me - Leonard Cohen

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      • #4
        Originally posted by MJZiggy View Post
        When the waterboys have a coach, then you've probably crossed a line somewhere.
        So an "Assistant Teams Coach - Long Snapping" is a worthwhile investment?

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        • #5
          How many different positions does a team really have? Is RG really different from LG? With 24 coaches they are approaching one per position.

          What is the maximum?

          22 starters (How many coaches? 1 for guards or 2? How about for tackles?)
          snapper
          punter
          kicker (or is this two, FG specialist and KO specialist coaches?)
          third down back on O
          nickel back on D
          dime back
          punt returner
          KO returner

          What else do we need?
          More coaches than players, since some players play multiple positions needing coaching?

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          • #6
            How many adults do you need to take care of a baby? Oops, sorry, wrong thread!

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            • #7
              Originally posted by hoosier View Post
              How many adults do you need to take care of a baby? Oops, sorry, wrong thread!
              All I know is we never had enough! Of course, my wife and I were very quickly outnumbered when we started our herd.

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              • #8
                Originally posted by Patler View Post
                All I know is we never had enough! Of course, my wife and I were very quickly outnumbered when we started our herd.
                I always went by the philosophy of never having more kids than arms to hold them. I wound up with one. Of course, now I get lonely when he's away, but such is life. Back on topic, I think if your long snapping sucks, then maybe you need a long snapping coach! (or perhaps a better long snapper...)
                "Greatness is not an act... but a habit.Greatness is not an act... but a habit." -Greg Jennings

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                • #9
                  Originally posted by MJZiggy View Post
                  Back on topic, I think if your long snapping sucks, then maybe you need a long snapping coach! (or perhaps a better long snapper...)
                  ..or FIRE SLOCUM ..... er ..... your ST coach!

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                  • #10
                    Buffalo has hired an advanced analytics department. Chip Kelly has hired a Sports Science guy to work not on advanced analytics, but on physical conditioning and rehab for the players. That's in addition to the Strength and Conditioning staff. There is no limit.
                    Bud Adams told me the franchise he admired the most was the Kansas City Chiefs. Then he asked for more hookers and blow.

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                    • #11
                      Originally posted by pbmax View Post
                      Buffalo has hired an advanced analytics department. Chip Kelly has hired a Sports Science guy to work not on advanced analytics, but on physical conditioning and rehab for the players. That's in addition to the Strength and Conditioning staff. There is no limit.
                      Reminds me of an article I read a while back. It was an interview with a long time assistant coach who was retiring, thinking about retiring, or something. Could have been Tom Moore, Dick LeBeau, or someone like that. Anyway, one remark that hit me was that he said when he started coaching you naturally became close to everyone on the staff, because you spent so much time with each one everyday. Now, with staffs so large and so specialized you hardly even interact with some members. A coach can be there for a year or two and you might know very little about him, or have hardly interacted with him at all.

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                      • #12
                        Originally posted by Patler View Post
                        Reminds me of an article I read a while back. It was an interview with a long time assistant coach who was retiring, thinking about retiring, or something. Could have been Tom Moore, Dick LeBeau, or someone like that. Anyway, one remark that hit me was that he said when he started coaching you naturally became close to everyone on the staff, because you spent so much time with each one everyday. Now, with staffs so large and so specialized you hardly even interact with some members. A coach can be there for a year or two and you might know very little about him, or have hardly interacted with him at all.
                        That seems a little sad. Not to mention detrimental to the concept of team...
                        "Greatness is not an act... but a habit.Greatness is not an act... but a habit." -Greg Jennings

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                        • #13
                          Originally posted by MJZiggy View Post
                          That seems a little sad. Not to mention detrimental to the concept of team...
                          It's interesting to me how often sports - increasingly in the form of the NFL - is a gauge of our culture. Thirty-five years or forty years ago it was teh hullabaloo over Jimmy-the-Greek's comments on blacks and athleticism; now it's that SF cornerback talking about gays in the lockerroom. These events reflect the groups that are battling for equality.

                          The NFL, also, is more and more and more about brand and marketing, and less about teh game itself. Many is the time I've compained in these pages about the announcers' lack of knowledge and concern for the game, as they focus on the storyline they've concocted. It's not about why play X blew up, it's about whether Colin Kaepernick is a "new breed" of quarterback, or whether RGII should have been pulled but wasn't because of his special relationship to his coach. Or whatever.

                          Another aspect of that mirror is the focus on specializing and minutae. More and more coaches for the same number of players. That's kind of like the field I'm in - more and more adminstrators, fewer and fewer experts in the actual field.

                          The whole NFL is an amazing mirror of our culture.
                          "The Devine era is actually worse than you remember if you go back and look at it."

                          KYPack

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                          • #14
                            Originally posted by Fritz View Post
                            It's interesting to me how often sports - increasingly in the form of the NFL - is a gauge of our culture. Thirty-five years or forty years ago it was teh hullabaloo over Jimmy-the-Greek's comments on blacks and athleticism; now it's that SF cornerback talking about gays in the lockerroom. These events reflect the groups that are battling for equality.

                            The NFL, also, is more and more and more about brand and marketing, and less about teh game itself. Many is the time I've compained in these pages about the announcers' lack of knowledge and concern for the game, as they focus on the storyline they've concocted. It's not about why play X blew up, it's about whether Colin Kaepernick is a "new breed" of quarterback, or whether RGII should have been pulled but wasn't because of his special relationship to his coach. Or whatever.

                            Another aspect of that mirror is the focus on specializing and minutae. More and more coaches for the same number of players. That's kind of like the field I'm in - more and more adminstrators, fewer and fewer experts in the actual field.

                            The whole NFL is an amazing mirror of our culture.
                            I agree with most of this (except that women have been fighting for equality this whole time and the NFL is as much of a boys club as it always has been. Women might not be as physically strong, but we can strategize just as well as men). But you're right. The mirror is there. I also think the branding is a very simple reflection of the gross amounts of money tossed around in the game. It used to be you could afford to go to the game, but scalpers found out how much money there was to be made and that ended that. Concessionaires discovered they have a captive customer base and suddenly a 20 cent hot dog costs $4. While the NFL doesn't invite women into the game, it sure invites us into the stands and that is where your annoying stories come from. They think (wrongly) that women don't care what is going on on the field, so they have to invent a lot of cute stories about the players in order to keep us interested and that the hard core people will just appreciate the backstory. They could do that a lot better than how they do it. It doesn't help that half the time they are wrong about what the rules say (don't get me started on the rules).
                            "Greatness is not an act... but a habit.Greatness is not an act... but a habit." -Greg Jennings

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                            • #15
                              Originally posted by MJZiggy View Post
                              I agree with most of this (except that women have been fighting for equality this whole time and the NFL is as much of a boys club as it always has been. Women might not be as physically strong, but we can strategize just as well as men). But you're right. The mirror is there..
                              Or kick:

                              http://www.nationalfootballpost.com/...l-combine.html

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