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Finally, a Head Coach!

Posted on January 6, 2012 Written by The Nittany Turkey

Bill O'Brien

White smoke has finally spewed from the chimney at Old Main, the alabaster effluvia signifying an end to the deliberations over who will be the next head football coach, the successor to the sainted Pope Joseph V. Habemus papam!

The new leader of Penn State’s vaunted football program is Bill O’Brien, age 42, presently offensive coordinator for the NFL New England Patriots.

This Turkey felt that O’Brien was the best guy for the job of all the names that had been bandied about during the lengthy search, with the possible exception of Nick Saban, who turned out to be a pipe dream by a deranged fan. Although I didn’t think much of the way the search for the new  head coach was dragged out, I am completely happy with the result. The reasons for the search committee moving so slowly will be known sooner or later, but all that is moot now that we do indeed have a coach.

I have supported Bill O’Brien since his name first surfaced; as I stated in earlier columns, I liked his college coaching experience, his youth, and his passion for the job and the game. I hope that all the whining, moaning, bitching, and crying I have been seeing on Twitter will soon end and that we can all settle down to support Coach O’Brien as he moves the program forward.

“Without change, there cannot be progress — and change for this Penn State football program has been a long time in coming. Embrace it!”

Inasmuch as the New England Patriots are expected to play their way deeply into the NFL playoffs, which begin this weekend, I would bet that one of the stumbling blocks was O’Brien’s ability to make a graceful exit. Dave Joyner, acting PSU athletic director, has stated that he wants the new coach on board by January 13, when recruiting restarts. The Patriots might have wanted O’Brien to stay through the playoffs and, potentially, the Super Bowl. It will be interesting to determine what the negotiations involved.

Perhaps we’ll know on Saturday, when the official announcement is made. It was obviously impossible, though, to keep a lid on the news once the decision was made, noting that less than two hours before Chris Mortensen of ESPN told the world in no uncertain terms that O’Brien would be the new Papa Lion, Dave Joyner equivocated in a radio interview conducted at halftime of the Purdue vs Penn State basketball game. He stated the target date, but gave no indication that anyone was even close to being hired. Around 10 pm on Thursday night, the lid finally blew off the kettle.

I suspect that O’Brien isn’t presently getting much love from the Penn State Tweeps because he’s an outsider, a new face, a foreign entity. Many of them are unfairly denigrating his qualifications, if not his temperament. I think that underlying all that noise is a love for Joe Paterno and frustration over Tom Bradley not getting the job that these loyal fans feel he deserves. They’re not thinking with their brains; they’re thinking with their hearts. It is good that the search committee headed by “Bones” Joyner was reviewing the qualifications of the candidates and interviewing them instead of the aforementioned sentimentalist Tweeps. As I’ve mentioned many times over, ad nauseam, Penn State needed to clean house for several reasons, and some of them are related to the staid Paterno system that is all Tom Bradley has experienced in his time at Penn State. One doesn’t stay with a management job for that length of time while radically disagreeing with the operating philosophy. No, folks, we need someone who can lead this program far into the Twenty-first Century, not someone tied to the past.

With both college and professional experience under his belt, the youthful O’Brien is potentially that man. Actually, I wouldn’t be surprised if he were to keep Ron Vanderlinden and Larry Johnson. Everybody else presently on the staff — except Spider Caldwell — should be given his walking papers. Dick Anderson and Galen Hall will surely retire, while Jay Paterno will be doing whatever he decides to do somewhere besides at Penn State. Tom Bradley has been mentioned in connection with the Akron football program, which would seem to make sense for him in that it is close to Western Pennsylvania.

O’Brien will grow into the job. Some impatient fans will expect things to happen overnight, but it doesn’t work that way. Oh, I expect that by Year Two, some “Fire O’Brien!” websites will pop up, just because fans are impatient. The University will give him a longer leash than that, fortunately for him and for the rest of us. The screwed-up 2012 recruiting class did not happen on his watch, and he’s sure as hell not responsible for the supposed Sandusky shady shower sex situation.

Thank heavens that those who O’Brien will actually report to will not be looking for instant results. Remember, everyone’s got to start somewhere. Joe Paterno did not know shit from Shinola when he decided to eschew law school in favor of becoming Rip Engle’s assistant at Penn State. Once he took over the top job, he made his share of mistakes, for which an earlier generation of impatient fans (myself included) held him responsible, some calling for his head on a platter. However, he did grow into the job as we all well know, and in his forced retirement he is generally revered as an elder statesman.

Without change, there cannot be progress — and change for this Penn State football program has been a long time in coming. Embrace it. You have no choice.

Some good fans have complained to me about O’Brien’s fiery behavior on the sidelines. Why? Don’t you think the Nittany Lions, as flat as they’ve looked for the past few years, could use a little passion? Old Joe had been incapable of generating much enthusiasm in the last decade or so, and Tom “Scrap” Bradley is a laid back nice guy. In the words of the late, intense Brooklyn Dodgers manager Leo Durocher, “Nice guys don’t win ball games.” While O’Brien is a somewhat more risky hire than Bradley, his upside potential is significantly greater. Anyone who thought Bradley would change his demeanor and change the system on the field from what he has been comfortable with for so many years is kidding himself.

O’Brien does indeed yell at players. He even yells at the Great Bill Belichick. So, what? Paterno yelled when he felt like yelling, too. O’Brien doesn’t throw tantrums because he wants attention. He gets angry and motivates players. Most of you have witnessed this with the Patriots, as I have, and perhaps you, too, have seen the positive results.

You don’t have to “like” the guy. Most of you didn’t like Bob Knight, Bobby Bowden, Steve Spurrier, or their antics. But that didn’t mean they couldn’t coach.

Another of the naysayers’ outcries is that Tom Brady is so good that he doesn’t need to be coached; therefore, coordinating such a wonderful, prolific offense as that of the Patriots is a job any idiot could do. Besides, we all know that Belichick calls the shots there, right? Sorry, Mr. Rationalizer. Until you’ve attended Patriot team meetings and can report that crap factually instead of pulling it straight out of your ass, you will not convince many people. I’ve seen O’Brien yell at Brady one-on-one on the sideline and I’ve seen Brady respond positively on the field. I’ve also seen O’Brien go at it with Bellicheck. This is a man’s man who will look anyone in the eye and tell them what he thinks. Would you rather have a brooding, insecure pussy running the program?

How do I sum this up, other than to say that I think Joyner’s committee made the right choice? I suppose that I’ll once again cajole you to please give Bill O’Brien a chance. You can go on bitching if it makes you feel good, but eventually, no one will be paying any attention to you. No one knows how this hire will eventually turn out, and we won’t have a clue for at least a couple of years. So, save yourself the heartburn and if you can’t bring yourself to support the guy, at least stop putting him down just because you think you know better than those who hired him. I’m behind O’Brien and I’m looking forward with bated anticipation to the changes he’ll implement to finally get this program moving forward.

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Filed Under: Penn State Football Tagged With: Bill O'Brien, head coach, head coaching search, New England Patriots, NFL, Penn State Football

More Interviews and Bobby F

Posted on January 5, 2012 Written by The Nittany Turkey

The “If You Can’t Beat ‘Er, Joyner” Memorial Search Committee plods on less than a month before letter of commitment day, with two notable interviews today: Greg Roman, offensive coordinator of the San Francisco 49ers, and offensive coordinator Bill O’Brien of the New England Patriots. Both men have solid college credentials, along with NFL accomplishments. I’m not going to make the mistake of declaring either one of these fine coaches as a “leading candidate,” as some of our press colleagues tend to do.

Bob Flounders of the Patriot-News infers that Joyner & Co. will make a serious run at Mike Munchak, now that the Titans’ season has ended. This is one that I cannot understand. Munchak has absolutely no college coaching experience — which as I’ve brought out here in other posts is quite a different animal than coaching in the NFL — and this is in my opinion a severe handicap. I’ve beaten that horse in earlier posts, so I won’t bore you with more of the same here. Yeah, the “Penn State Ties” issue keeps coming up. Munch has his four years as an offensive lineman — a damn good one — but that was 30 years ago. Certainly, Munchak is a Penn Stater through and through, but if you boil the sentimentality out of the equation, Munchak is barely adequate.

So, where are we? Same place we were yesterday, only more so.

“Soft zones don’t cut it against quality QBs and wideouts.” —Bob Flounders, Patriot-News

Flounders goes on in that same blog saying that whoever the incoming head coach might be, he faces an epic rebuilding process. And here, my good readers, is where I completely agree with Bob Flounders, something I thought was a lifelong impossibility. Unlike the typical fan who seems to think that Penn State lacks a couple of small pieces that when installed will make Penn State a consistent top ten program again, both Flounders and I feel that this team has been way off the track for a long time. Welcome to Paternoville.

Most of us now, having been beaten down by a couple of seasons of quarterback controversy and offensive line “rebuilding”, will concede that the offense would benefit by being imploded and rebuilt from scratch. But few of us have expressed similar concerns about the defense. I have harped on the defensive secondary’s inadequacy in college football’s modern world — for a long, long time. Flounders has now jumped on that train.

While I had long decried the soft zone played most of the time by Penn State as having been a Sandusky invention, Flounders believes that it was a Paterno implementation. Nevertheless, we agree on the notion that the Cover Two BBDB defense has outlived its usefulness. Hanging back ten yards off of speedy receivers is a recipe for getting consistently burned. This deficiency isn’t regularly revealed in the Big Ten with its antiquated run oriented offenses, but when a good passing team is the opponent, the purported number five pass defense in the country is exposed as a fraud. This defense is effective in stopping the run and containing the pass to an extent, but it breaks down when it is subjected to an aggressive aerial attack (e.g., Wisconsin and Houston).

The Cover Two is used with success in the NFL, but it succeeds only because of the speed of the defensive backs recruited to perform in it. Clearly, Drew Astorino is no Troy Polamalu. Instead of shooting its wad on linebackers and defensive linemen, the recruiting needs to find cream of the crop defensive backs in order to be competitive in the Twenty-first Century. I’ve been bitching about that for twenty years. Now, the situation is dire.

If anything is an argument against Bradley becoming the next head coach, this is. This defense has been played for his entire coaching career, including his most recent stint (1996-2011) as defensive coordinator. Is there any reason to believe that he would drastically change the defensive scheme.

Read Flounders’ blog and tell me whether you agree with him and me.

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Filed Under: Penn State Football

Schiano In Coach Search (for now)

Posted on January 4, 2012 Written by The Nittany Turkey

The latest actual known name with an alleged hat in the PSU coaching ring is Greg Schiano, presently of Rutgers.

I’m getting a little tired of writing about the latest flash in the pan (LFITP) one minute and receiving news that LFITP has been awarded a lucrative new contract at his present venue.

Chris Peterson of Boise State was the most recent LFITP to have negotiated a contract extension to stay where he is. Nicely done, Peterson.

I have a strong feeling that some, if not all, of these NFL guys we’ve seen entering the fray have been using the Penn State job as a lever with their team’s front office.

The machinations and “leaks” have reached Favresque soap opera proportions. They’ll stop only when Joyner sexts a lewd photo of himself to Joan Rivers.

One rumor suggested that Tom Bradley was interviewed twice. Perhaps this is because with all the farting around waiting for some kind of results, Bradley will be the only viable candidate left by the time Joyner gets off the pot.

Has the committee started scouring the playgrounds for talented Pop Warner coaches yet? If they hurry up, they might be able to grab someone before cookies and milk!

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Filed Under: Penn State Football Tagged With: coaching search, delay, head coach, Penn State Football

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The Nittany Turkey is a retired techno-geek who thinks he knows something about Penn State football and everything else in the world. If there's a topic, we have an opinion on it, and you know what "they" say about opinions! Most of what is posted here involves a heavy dose of hip-shooting conjecture, but unlike some other blogs, we don't represent it as fact. Read More…

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