RaphaelAglietti;430821 said:
In general make the process more interactive :rant
That's the area where the Big10(11-12) and SEC is beating us in spades.
RaphaelAglietti;430821 said:
In general make the process more interactive :rant
Son-of-California;430772 said:
Correct...I played on those teams. Maybe I worded it poorly. The ultimate success of the 2-9 team and the R-n-S offense would have been significantly different had Gilbert not gone down with a blown knee. We were beating aTm quite handily...in the 1st half. That O was ahead of the time. After a 3-8 1980 season Theder needed to make several changes to save his job. He fired several asst. coaches and brought in Mouse Davis to change the O. It ultimately failed and the O was switched back mid-season. Theder was fired after we went 2-9 and lost the Big Game. JK had little or nothing to do with the quick turn around. It was the talent he inherited that stepped up. He bumbled his way in, got credit for The Play, bumbled and 'unzipped' himself on the way out...Ron was a friend and teammate of mine. I have nothing against him. My point being, a former player with little or no coaching experience (head or college) has no business stepping in at this level.
RaphaelAglietti;430821 said:
Any move or non-move for that matter is a risk.
Part of taking that risk is understanding that by not undertaking the risk of make a change you risk that a coach will lost his team and sink the team to medicore/bad levels thus forcing a change.
That's why it's silly to say well if we get rid of A then we wcould end-up with another Holmoe, Gilbertson, Theder, etc. The difference is that those hires were made under different leadership and with an entirely different empahsis. It is possible to make a bad hire, but I those prior hires were made under the guise that Cal wasn't serious about football (i.e no commitent to new facilities and certainly not paying a coach anywhere near market value)
Whether people like it or not Cal is now a school that takes football seriously, because they have to in order to keep the athletic department afloat and clearly as Cal is already losing sports the Athletic Department cannot afford to take a 10K hit in attendance in football.
Fans is the Bay Area are not very tolerant for losing teams (except for the Warriors) and they're even less tolerant for losing college teams which are already marginalized by the surround professional sports.
Cal can ill afford to lapse back to the Holmoe era in term of attendance (~30,000k)
Fan bases are as rabid as the tradition that follows the team. Cal football is the oldest team in the Bay Area. The team needs to build a tradition and part of that is winning a pac-10 title or a national championship.
The other part is creating a "religious" type experience at a Cal game. I think the lack of tailgating space has always hurt Cal.
Tedford tried to insitute tradition when he first came to Cal with the Cal walk etc, but like anything in life the people dictate the tradition. I think the Athetic Department needs to be way more active in promoting Cal football. There needs to be a call in show. There needs to be broadcasts from Cal hotspots. There needs to be giveaways. Charge more for a jersey day and give kids little bear hats (I assuming there's no NCAA violation here, but if so that scratch the idea). Have public pep rallies in the same place. Rallies for the general public to meet and listen to the players/coaches during the week.
In general make the process more interactive :rant
TorBear;430960 said:
Did you also play on the 1982 team?
Son-of-California;430978 said:
Yes.
SonOfBlueBallsBear;430969 said:
I realize there is no open position right now, but . . .
No one is mentioning the loyalty factor. If the next coach is successful, he will be targeted by other programs. Most coaches would be tempted to leave for more money, and we cannot afford to pay what some other programs can. Everyone was very nervous (rightfully so) that Tedford would leave. A coach who is an alumnus, on the other hand, would be more loyal and less likely to leave us over financial compensation issues.
I have met RR, and have played basketball with him, and he comes across as a very impressive guy. No hire is a sure thing, but I believe he would be a great fit at Cal.
Whether Joe Kapp was a good head coach has nothing to do with whether RR would be.
son-of-california;431353 said:
yes.
Jeff82;431423 said:
That's actually the first argument in his favor that I actually find somewhat convincing. It fits in well with my general feeling that in the long run, Cal can't compete in the FB arms race, because we don't have the alumni interest/resources. One way to try to ameliorate that is to look for anybody left in college FB that's not solely motivated by $$$. Rivera may be one, I don't know, since the NFL revolves almost entirely around $$$ (see Mariucci, Steve). If he's willing to stay at Cal for somewhat less money over time, because it's Cal, that would be a reason to consider him, given everyone's assumption that he's got some coaching skills.
drunkoski;431425 said:
you are arguing we can't compete in teh arms race when we are paying our football coach $2.5 mil a year, plus bonus, with no buyout?
drunkoski;431425 said:
you are arguing we can't compete in teh arms race when we are paying our football coach $2.5 mil a year, plus bonus, with no buyout?
drunkoski;431858 said:
according to USA today in a report widely discussed here we're 16th in the country in spending for football programs. i think you are living in 1985. things have changed.
drunkoski;431858 said:
according to USA today in a report widely discussed here we're 16th in the country in spending for football programs. i think you are living in 1985. things have changed.
Jeff82;430078 said:
He's a defensive guy, not an offensive guy, and he's never recruited a player in his life. I don't see it, other than the fact that he's a Cal guy, and he's not Tedford. I don't want to replace the current infighting between the coach and the OC with a new conflict between a new coach and the DC. But I'm willing to be pursuaded.
going4roses;842638433 said:
Not I
FCBear;842638417 said:
Are you getting it now?
Jeff82;430078 said:
He's a defensive guy, not an offensive guy, and he's never recruited a player in his life. I don't see it, other than the fact that he's a Cal guy, and he's not Tedford. I don't want to replace the current infighting between the coach and the OC with a new conflict between a new coach and the DC. But I'm willing to be pursuaded.
Cal84;430088 said:
Can he work for minimum wage? Cuz that's what we'll be paying ...
DrDanger;842638432 said:
A lot of people are eating some crow on this thread.
Uthaithani;842638628 said:
I'm not sure what the point of bringing this back, except for some weird, childish "I-told-you-so" Internet smack.
Rivera has turned out to be a very successful pro coach. Maybe he never wanted the Cal job. Maybe he did and is quietly thanking his lucky stars for the rejection.
Maybe he'll end up on the Cal sideline at some point in the future.
At any rate, this is all stupid. Nobody here had any hand in his not being hired at Cal.
He's happy for Cal; we're happy for him; everything is way it's supposed to be.
Go Bears!
Jeff82;430078 said:
He's a defensive guy, not an offensive guy, and he's never recruited a player in his life.
bar20;842638592 said:
... Former NFL HC that have gone back to college football don't seem to have a problem recruiting.
Uthaithani;842638628 said:
I'm not sure what the point of bringing this back, except for some weird, childish "I-told-you-so" Internet smack.
Rivera has turned out to be a very successful pro coach. Maybe he never wanted the Cal job. Maybe he did and is quietly thanking his lucky stars for the rejection.
Maybe he'll end up on the Cal sideline at some point in the future.
At any rate, this is all stupid. Nobody here had any hand in his not being hired at Cal.
He's happy for Cal; we're happy for him; everything is way it's supposed to be.
Go Bears!