heartofthebear;842311819 said:
First let me be clear that I am pretty much done defending Dykes as I had during most of his first season. The reasons why I am changing my tone would require another thread.
But here is a list of what Dykes has to deal with that make his job more difficult than JT had when he was first hired.
[LIST=1]
Dykes has to dig Cal out of an academic situation. Yes, JT had one too, but this one is different. This one requires an entire shift in how Cal recruits so that the students don't just survive through their junior year but are capable of completing their degree.
Dykes has to work under SB from the start. SB is a great AD in general, but not so much with regard to football.
Dykes is not his own man when it comes to offense. He is tied to an offensive philosophy that is not timed well for success in the pac-12. Note: This is his fault and the main reason why I no longer can defend him.
Dykes' learning curve is longer than JT's because JT came directly from the pac-12, pac-10 at the time.
There is considerably more $$ and high stakes involved in the conference which often leads to more disparity between schools that try to maintain academic standards for their players (ie Cal) and those that don't (ie ASU).
The NCAA, which is supposed to regulate the above so their isn't a disparity, is so much more bought out by ESPN and other TV folks that they are perfectly willing to ignore what is becoming an increasingly unlevel playing field tilted against schools like Cal.
All of this, which is partly just conjecture on my part, is not to say that Dykes, even without the injury problems, is going to turn it around at Cal.
I think Dykes is very much out of touch himself with what it takes to win at Cal, which is not necessarily the same as what it takes to win other places.
If you look at what Kaufman has done, you can get a blueprint for what works at Cal----SIMPLIFICATION!!
Especially when this generation of football players at Cal have so much academic pressure on them to improve Cal's standing, they do not need exotic and complex schemes that require extra work to perfect.
This was JT's problem. I thought, because I believed the rhetoric coming from Tony Franklin, that the new scheme was going to be easy to perfect. That is not really true.
After more than a year, a very talented WR core, many with good size and strength, can't seem to block effectively. And the OL has to make manuevers akin to a yoga master in order to execute the vertical blocking set. And expecting that Cal can get the same kind of linemen they get in Texas or Kentucky is yet again an example of misapplying what works other places to what needs to happen at Cal.
What needs to happen for Cal to be succcessful is less requirements for execution and more time getting in shape so they can compete with the Oregons and the Stanfords, each of whom have great conditioning programs. This is particularly true of our OLs.
We also need to get high school recruits that want to get beyond their high school system and begin to prepare for what is successful and has been successful in the pros for decades...power football. Despite the fact that the NFL is more pass happy, almost none of them run a TFS type system. And Seattle was and is very much a power run team, using, BTW, a Cal back which was recruited to a power run system at Cal.
The other and bigger problem I have with Dykes is something that many here were concerned with from the start, his lack of defensive focus.
Lost amongst all the drama and injuries last year was the fact that Dykes put Griffin Piatt at WR and flipped Joel Willis to WR from DB. They are now both at DB. But, had he developed them as DBs from the start last spring, last season might have gone a bit better.
The really frustrating thing about this is that he already had plenty of WR/TE players on the roster. Piatt and Willis would have been buried 3 deep. He even did this knowing that Piatt was a legit safety prospect as folks can see now.
Dykes history is largely as a WR coach and imo, that is what he basically still is. His bias towards WRs in recruiting is evidenced by the disparity in offers between that position and others. To say that we need more WRs because of the system just begs the question. If the system requires a large disparity of one position over others, then it is no wonder we are thin at other positions like LB and DT. Despite what Dykes says, the TF system does not need 12 WR/TE. Only about 8 guys got meaningful playing time last year (Rodgers, Harper, Treggs, Lawler, S. Anderson, Grissom, Powe, Bouza). The 3rd string hardly saw the field and, if more guys are needed, the RB unit can be used to supplement as was the case when Bigelow and Muhammed were last year.
So Kev.-- I am not a Dykes defender, but I do think his job is more difficult than some people think. In all honesty, if Chip Kelly, David Shaw and Jim Mora had all coached at Cal as part of the same staff, Cal would not win more than a few games per year. And that is why coaches like that won't come to Cal, because they know what it takes to win and Cal makes that very difficult.
But Dykes has made a difficult job practically impossible by rigidly adhering to his biases despite the evidence. I can't forgive him for that, even though the injuries last year were significant and would have devasted the season under any coach.
I really think you are just more aware of the challenges now than you were in JT's time. They both had their unique challenges. I just disagree though with your six points above:
1. Tedford took over with grad rates at about the same level and a long history of grad rates at that level. Also, he was specifically challenged by Gladstone to improve it. AND whether he had to or not, he did what he had to do to get the grad rates into the sixties. If Dykes does that, he is fine. Also, to be clear, I assume that Cal is making the similar requirement that Dykes improve grad rates, but what Cal NEEDS to do is improve APR which is much different and much easier to do. Tedford did not have the APR challenge, though he did have very good APR at the time you are talking about. No question the academic record tanked, but you are talking about what Tedford did at the beginning and I think you would find that if Dykes matches that, everybody would be ecstatic, so his challenge is not greater.
2. Gladstone was the crew coach. Sandy is a much more professional AD. I appreciate what Gladstone did, but mostly he hired JT and established the philosophy that Holmoe style performance is unacceptable. I think if anything Dykes has it better here.
3. You really don't give Dykes enough credit here. Dykes is not tied to Franklin. He is an offensive coordinator in his own right. Franklin is of like mind and yes, his offense has some differences from Dykes, but if Franklin leaves, Dykes will be fine. Dykes IS tied to this offense, but his ties to the offense are based on his own history, not Franklin bringing it to him. He'd be running about the same offense if he never met Franklin. He got the job at LaTech based on his own performance as an OC.
4. I just don't see the learning curve argument. Dykes ran roughly the same offense at UA three years before.
5. There is also APR which may be a joke but at least remotely keeps programs honest. It is much harder to fill your team with illiterates then it was. College football has always been big money. If anything, I believe the gap has been shrinking over the years.
6. You really don't know the history on this one. As big a joke as the NCAA is today, it is far less than it has ever been. The joke was for decades that SC got caught paying players so WSU or Cal or OSU was put on sanctions. The NCAA has always bowed to the big guys an screwed over the little guys. Remember that between the time JT started and Dykes started, SC finally got taken down after 70 years of cheating.
Also, you are not mentioning that Dykes doesn't have to deal with by far the worst facilities in the conference.
I'm not saying Dykes has it easier. In some ways he does. In some ways it's tougher. They both had a really tough job, but discounting JT's job is just revisionist history. Also, it is not like one was slightly better. We are talking a giant chasm between the two performances.