Who's Your Choice For The New OC?
#1
Posted 14 January 2014 - 08:10 PM
Brad Childress
Norv Turner He was a bad head coach but he's been a great offensive coordinator. I believe Turner makes the most sense because he can make the biggest impact on Joe Flacco.
Mike Sullivan
Kyle Shanahan
Ben McAdoo
Bill Lazor
Rob Chudzinski he wasn't lauded as an offensive guru in his final season as the Carolina Panthers' offensive coordinator. Cam Newton regressed in his second season under Chudzinski, and running back DeAngelo Williams was highly critical of Chudzinski after he was hired by the Browns.
With some help from ESPN insider
#2
Posted 14 January 2014 - 08:14 PM
"@RavensInsider: Giants hire Ben McAdoo as offensive coordinator: Packers quarterbacks coach heading to New York bit.ly/K02HOn @FootballPost #NFL"
#3
Posted 14 January 2014 - 08:15 PM
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#4
Posted 14 January 2014 - 08:27 PM
If they let Harbaugh call the plays, does that mean another coach would be in charge of calling time outs and replay challenges? I'd be down with that.
But seriously, as long as the name comes from outside the organization, I'll likely be okay with it as long as it isn't Brad Childress. Plenty of positive things to take away from Chud, Turner, and Kubiak. A young gun from college would be exciting in a way.
#5
Posted 14 January 2014 - 08:31 PM
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#6
Posted 14 January 2014 - 08:39 PM
#7
Posted 14 January 2014 - 08:45 PM
Hands down Norv Turner!
Listen to our interview with FO writer Rivers McCown tonight.
I think he made an excellent point about why you don't go after Turner.
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#8
Posted 14 January 2014 - 09:24 PM
Since Castillo is being kept around, maybe we stick with zone blocking. Kubiak would be a great asset in that case.
#9
Posted 14 January 2014 - 09:51 PM
I have no interest in Kubiak. During their long losing streak, among the talk in Houston was about how their offense was predictable - thus the reason for the pick sixes, week after week after week. Sure, he'll improve the running game, but today's league is built around the passing game. Norv has had plenty of good running teams, but he has shown to be an elite OC from a passing game perspective. I don't feel like watching Joe bootleg every other play under Kubiak, sorry.
#10
Posted 14 January 2014 - 11:50 PM
#11
Posted 15 January 2014 - 07:11 AM
I think Kubiak is my top choice at the moment.
Since Castillo is being kept around, maybe we stick with zone blocking. Kubiak would be a great asset in that case.
Really good point.
I would prefer we go away from the zone blocking scheme but if we are going to keep Castillo, then get a coordinator fluent in how to use it.
They are a lot of good options out there.
Kubiak, Chud, Turner etc.
I am concerned that Harbs will stay inside with Hostler.
#12
Posted 15 January 2014 - 08:22 AM
#13
Posted 15 January 2014 - 09:24 AM
According to the twitter, Gary Kubiak and Mike Martz were spotted in town yesterday. Martz at BWI, and Kubiak https://twitter.com/...307661682413568
@fuzydunlop
#14
Posted 15 January 2014 - 09:27 AM
Ugh please no Mike Martz
#15
Posted 15 January 2014 - 09:30 AM
Rounded up some of the usual suspects.
BSL: Who should the Ravens hire to replace Jim Caldwell?
http://baltimorespor...e-jim-caldwell/
I'm hoping they go outside to find Caldwell's replacement.
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#16
Posted 15 January 2014 - 09:32 AM
Rice and Faulk carry similar skill sets and traits. If we want to go spread, Martz wouldn't be awful, but seeing someone at BWI or in Baltimore doesn't mean much.
Kubiak or Shanahan are guys I'd be interested in. They can make OL's work with inferior talent. They get guys to run the ball well. And they scheme guys open. Pitta is a perfect fit for the scheme and a big body to go with Smith, would be the perfect personnel for those guys. They'd bring a game plan in on what they wanted to do and how they wanted to improve the scheme.
I'd be a fan, both are also accomplished and respected, so I can see Harbs being OK going outside the org to bring them in.
#17
Posted 15 January 2014 - 09:34 AM
Listen to our interview with FO writer Rivers McCown tonight.
I think he made an excellent point about why you don't go after Turner.
I'm pretty sure I don't agree with Rivers about the Air Coryell system. He says that a deep passing game can't hold up in today's NFL and that you pretty much have to adopt a short passing game to succeed.
I agree that it didn't work for the Ravens this year, but I don't believe that it's the system itself that made our offense so bad. Caldwell's play calling and the reads he was giving Flacco were awful. He called the same four or five concepts over and over again. And, as we all know, the line was awful and the running game fell off a cliff.
I am confident, personally, that the system can work with the right play caller. Can it be the exact same system that Turner used with the Cowboys in 1993? No. It needs more creativity and it needs to incorporate some aspects of other, modern passing attacks. The running game needs to be much more consistent and productive. But I think it can work.
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#18
Posted 15 January 2014 - 09:52 AM
Just to add to my point above, I decided to look up Emmitt Smith's rushing numbers from 1992 and 1993, the years Norv Turner won back-to-back Super Bowls as the Cowboys offensive coordinator.
In those two years, Emmitt had 3,948 (!!) combined yards from scrimmage and scored 29 total touchdowns. In fact, 1992 was the second best statistical year of his career.
Hard to say what's the chicken and what's the egg here, but two things are clear: the system doesn't work without an effective running game ('13 Ravens) and the system can produce extremely productive backs ('92 and '93 Cowboys).
With that said, I think a lot hinges on the line play. But if they can get Rice and Pierce going and improve the play calling, I do think we can have a productive offense under Norv.
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#19
Posted 15 January 2014 - 09:55 AM
Caldwell doesn't have an Air Coryell backround either. So the question is why didn't they let him change the system llast year.
Was it because they felt it was likely he would only be here for 1 year, or again, do they realize this system works best for Flacco?? I think its the combination of both, but mostly they don't believe Flacco can be overly efficient running the popular offenses of today.
What did Harbaugh say at the SOTR and since. The Ravens consider themselves a power, physical offense and want to get back to it. People need to deal with the fact that no matter who we bring in as OC that the basic identity is going to stay the same. We can absolutely find someone to scheme better in the passing game, but the philosophy is going to stay the same.
#20
Posted 15 January 2014 - 09:56 AM
Kubiak is a really interesting option. He took a lot of heat for fielding a "predictable" offense this season, but I've also heard him praised for always finding ways to get Andre Johnson wiiiiiide open despite being the fact that he's priority number one for most defenses. I wonder if he would find innovative ways to get Torrey by himself down the field.
Plus, for all the criticism of Kubiak's system from this past year, Flacco is a hell of a lot more physically gifted than Schaub. He's aggressive enough to want to throw the ball deep and talented enough to do it. I wonder if some of the predictability this past season in HOU came from Schaub's limitations and tendency to look for the short option.
And, like others have said, just look at what he's done with Arian Foster over the past five years or so. That has been a really, really consistently good and balanced offense for a while now.
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