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is it one team or two teams ..????
anyway this year I would like to see
NFC Greenbay
AFC Patriots or Texans
I highly doubt greenbay or new england are going to volunteer, and I don't think playoff teams can be forced to do it
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is it one team or two teams ..????
anyway this year I would like to see
NFC Greenbay
AFC Patriots or Texans
yeah, and that's why I was wondering what the NFL would do if a team assigned to this show said "no" to it all.
Fine 'em? McNair's got deep pockets. Maybe lose a draft pick?![]()
McNair aint giving up a dime.
LOL, that you think this could be possible. Billionaires don't get that way doing things like this.
What would the NFL do if a team straight up said "no"?
Please keep this huge distraction away from our Texans as they try to build this thing into a good football team.
They don't get there by being cheapskates who never take risks and don't care about winning either but that doesn't stop your storyline.
Agreed about the risk taking thingy.
Winning? What's that?
yeah.... Yeah!
Cleveland would make much better drama TV...
Josh Pothead and JFF! What's not to watch?
yeah I'm thinking they would lose a draft pick or 2.
Or you're forced to fire your GM....
what everyone wants but only one knows how to get
McNair aint giving up a dime.
LOL, that you think this could be possible. Billionaires don't get that way doing things like this.
I side with the head coach. Football first.
And I think the evidence is McNair does too. He has both opposed and favored the Texans being on Hard Knocks in the past. Good guess would be based on what the coach thought.
McNair can spend money when he wants to. He fired a head coach with a year left on his contract, so it's not like the bottom line is the only factor in his decisions (I know, contrary to your oft-stated assumptions).
I could see McNair being on board with the show. It's another great marketing opportunity.
I just don't see O'Brien being on board with it. It is too disruptive to football operations and has the potential of revealing things that he does not want to be revealed.
I side with the head coach. Football first.
Yep, I agree. Which is why I asked the initial question with regards to how far would McNair go to honor his head coach's thoughts on it.
I personally think McNair always wants what is best for his franchise, first in terms of football operations and then in terms of positive media. Contrary to the bitterman perspective, I do not think profit is what drives him. He is already wealthy beyond imagination, and almost all teams make a profit regardless of seasonal outcome.
They've also increased the price of beer to $8 a can. That's beyond ridiculous.
McNair can spend money when he wants to. He fired a head coach with a year left on his contract, so it's not like the bottom line is the only factor in his decisions (I know, contrary to your oft-stated assumptions).
I could see McNair being on board with the show. It's another great marketing opportunity.
I just don't see O'Brien being on board with it. It is too disruptive to football operations and has the potential of revealing things that he does not want to be revealed.
I side with the head coach. Football first.
Kubiak was fired because there was no way McNair could sell a 2-14 HC to the fanbase.
Nrg is going to be sold out regardless of the Texans record.
Smith having 2 yrs on his contract and the 4-6 mil buyout of BOB's Penial St. contract probably has a lot to do with why Smith got retained as GM.
Honest question. Do we really know how disruptive it is to football operations? I mean, that's the overriding sentiment, but how pervasive is it, overall?
I think one thing fans don't understand is a lot of the stuff they think is for increased profits don't having anything or very little to do with increased profits. For example, jersey sales. With a few exceptions, most things are pooled in the NFL. The individual stadium ticket sales and concessions are not but the Texans have sold out every game.
Yep, I agree. Which is why I asked the initial question with regards to how far would McNair go to honor his head coach's thoughts on it.
I personally think McNair always wants what is best for his franchise, first in terms of football operations and then in terms of positive media. Contrary to the bitterman perspective, I do not think profit is what drives him. He is already wealthy beyond imagination, and almost all teams make a profit regardless of seasonal outcome.
Someone needs a continuity checker.
Hiring OB is proof all your cheap talk is wrong. There were plenty of candidates who were free to hire and McNair paid millions to get the one he liked best.
The continuity of me talking about how incompetent Rick Smith is?
If the McNair's aren't being frugal then they are the most incompetent owners when it comes to the on the field product imaginable. (Cleveland/Tampa bad)
The continuity of the two quotes right before the continuity comment. It's not that hard.
Yeah because anyone who disagrees with you is incompetent.
Teams that have made the playoffs in the last two years, teams with new coaches, and teams that have been on Hard Knocks within the last decade are exempt.Why such a small list of teams, why are the patriots not on the list, they have never been on the show. How did they get out of it?
I would like for the patriots to be on it for the sole reason of bill belichick, he would absolutely hate cameras on his field. Even though he is used to watching other teams practice
Why such a small list of teams, why are the patriots not on the list, they have never been on the show. How did they get out of it?
I would like for the patriots to be on it for the sole reason of bill belichick, he would absolutely hate cameras on his field. Even though he is used to watching other teams practice
The patriots are always in the playoffs so they can't be forced to do it.Why such a small list of teams, why are the patriots not on the list, they have never been on the show. How did they get out of it?
I would like for the patriots to be on it for the sole reason of bill belichick, he would absolutely hate cameras on his field. Even though he is used to watching other teams practice
OB being a dick to the media because that is what Belichick does...
Playing that card. LOL
Tell me how those quotes lacked continuity?
Kubiak was fired because there was no way McNair could sell a 2-14 HC to the fanbase.
Nrg is going to be sold out regardless of the Texans record.
Keeping Rick Smith is what's best for the football operations side of the org?
We will have to disagree, Profit is what drives most billionaires, maybe McNair is different. But I don't see anything that provides evidence to the contrary.
Do you want to know what would make him even MORE profit? Winning a championship.
Kinda' weird how it works out that way, yeah?
Who is this ONE you speak of. I do believe there's a higher power. Lets hire him on ASAP. LOL
Don't buy it. That's something we actually have control over. Beer sales go down 25% and you'll see the price come down.
Unless I can watch Bavarian gnomes massaging the hops, I'm not buying an $8 beer.
Mo Money
Don't buy it. That's something we actually have control over. Beer sales go down 25% and you'll see the price come down.
Unless I can watch Bavarian gnomes massaging the hops, I'm not buying an $8 beer.
Since we truly do not know the scope of Smith's duties, we cannot really have an educated opinion on the reason(s) why McNair continues to employ him.
There is much speculation that Smith is not a traditional GM (i.e. a conduit between the owner and head coach). Even O'Brien said that him and Smith are equals in the organizational structure. That is not a traditional power structure.
I honestly think that Charlie Casserly turned McNair off to a powerful GM that controls everything with his franchise. After the Casserly experience, I think McNair was looking for a GM that would operate more like a corporate board room, something McNair is comfortable and familiar with based on his history as a businessman.
Even Smith admitted to coaches having a lot of power when they fired Kubiak. It is easy to put all the blame on one man, but Smith is not the one coaching the players and calling the plays. Heck, he might not even be the one picking the players.
Dude makes a profit regardless of what happens on the field. They could go 0-16 for two seasons and still make a profit.
Do you want to know what would make him even MORE profit? Winning a championship.
Kinda' weird how it works out that way, yeah?
Honest question. Do we really know how disruptive it is to football operations? I mean, that's the overriding sentiment, but how pervasive is it, overall?
I'd ask the question differently:
Has appearance on this show been demonstrated to be, in any way, beneficial to a team's win column? If not, if I'm head coach, I don't have time for it.
The Power structure is not unusual in business. There is an operations hierarchy and staff positions. I suspect Rick Smith is simply in a Staff Position with the Texans rather than the operations hierarchy.
Houston Texans
Owner: Bob McNair, 13th year
General Manager: Rick Smith, 9th year
Head Coach: Bill O'Brien, 1st year
Other front-office notables: Cal McNair, Chief Operating Officer; Brian Gaine, Director of Pro Personnel; Mike Maccagnan, Director of College Scouting; Chris Olsen, Vice President of Football Administration.
Who's really in charge? The firing of Gary Kubiak brought the first big shakeup for McNair's organization in almost a decade. Smith survived the switch as the team's GM, and he still runs the draft and free agency. But just the same, it's clear that O'Brien carries a big stick coming aboard from Penn State, as evidenced by his securing contractual final say over the 53-man roster.
McNair has long viewed the Patriots organization -- which O'Brien spent five years in -- as a model. To that end, the Texans brought Brian Gaine -- who interviewed for the Dolphins', Jets' and Rams' GM openings in the past three years -- over from Miami as pro director. Gaine is fluent in the Parcells/Belichick language. Perhaps the biggest difference from last year is the specificity of the traits that O'Brien and his staff look for in players (the difference between "X" and "Z" receivers, "Y" and "F" tight ends, etc.). Maccagnan is a holdover, and has long been a trusted voice for Smith. Olsen handles the cap.
Both O'Brien and Smith report to McNair, who's very well-respected in ownership circles. McNair is in the office when he's in town, but because his other businesses do take him away at times, he has entrusted his son Cal to oversee day-to-day operations. McNair also is there as a tiebreaker for big football decisions, though that hasn't been needed early on in the O'Brien/Smith partnership.
An outside perspective from an NFC personnel executive: "They've been an operation where the owner lets the GM do his deal the way he wants to do it. Rick's well-respected. Some of the decisions that have been made, you wonder, Are they coach-driven or GM-driven, or a combination? That's a question that's tough to answer. They do a lot, draft-wise, off of need -- and that's what causes you to question some of their decisions. ... I know from the people that I've talked to, it seems like Bill's a hell of a coach and quarterback developer. You know that in that tree, with the things they're used to doing, it will be interesting to see the player personnel stuff work, because he's from New England, where Belichick runs everything."
Based on the above, blaming Rick Smith for everything is not just a little myopic, but also basically misinformed.
Are you guys really whining about being on hard knocks?
I don't see a single person whining. Some don't like the idea.
What card? You like ascribing evil intentions or incompetence to anyone on the team you disagree with or want gone. It's never good enough for you to just say they did something poorly or you'd prefer someone else. It's they don't want to win, they're cheap, etc.
They speak for themselves.
What's worse is your contradiction is in pursuit of the same stupid demonization. Can't give McNair credit for getting rid of Kubiak because it was best for the team - have to sell that as "he had to" or he'd lose the fan base. Then turn around and paint keeping Smith as another cheap move he can get away with because he can't lose the fan base. It's absurd.
And that has nothing to do with the individuals involved. Other folks manage to talk about owners, coaches, players without demonizing everyone they would like to see gone.
You add nothing to this board.. You are a bully and need to be stripped of moderator title