barzilla said:
Texanschic,
That is true, but I think the comparison with the Phil Jacksons is not as apt because teams can be turned around in the NFL in two years if that. I agree it will take money, but I think some might demand control of player personnel as well. At least you might get a JJ saying he won't come back unless he has total control or have Casserly gone at the very least. Coach-GMs have had mixed results in the NFL, but as least when it goes wrong you know who to blame.
True, turnarounds can happen fast in the NFL--what I am hoping for. I was just using the Phil Jackson example as just the most obvious situation of a guy who only has gone to the most cherry picked situations (except this year).
JJ has had all sorts of opportunities to come back to the NFL and has chosen not to. It will surprise the heck out of me if he comes here, whether he is offered the GM position or not.
I just think that we will have a hard time attracting a superstar experienced coach to our situation. It is more likely that those guys would use the Texans job as a way to make more money from their current situation or from another job.
I think that it is more likely we get a hungry for his first head coaching job kinda guy--sometimes that works, and sometimes that goes really wrong. It is not my first choice, but we may not get the pick of coaches because even though we are not an expansion team, our situation is more difficult than ones where the team has been around longer. There is no history of success. There is no loser team scheduling like they used to have. Teams keep their key free agents better than in the past because they have got more used to the cap.
I am just not very optimistic about a guy trying to figure out how to be a head coach for the first time whilst trying to figure out how to fix all our problems.
A history of success really does help a down team improve. A small example. Each year I go to the Texans Fashion Show. From what I understand, it is a charity thing that every NFL team does because it is required by league. (BTW, if you want to see and talk to the players, this is a best event to go to for the entire year because all the top players are in it, and they often visit with fans before and after the event).
Anyhow, I was talking to a player who came from a different team and he said he participated in his previous team's fashion show before. He was almost wistful in describing the other team's event, talking about how much larger it was than ours.
Of course, his previous team had been around for a long time and had success and a huge fan base, and the Texans event has gotten a little bigger over the years but is still pretty much mostly corporate sponsor types and a few fans. Who wants to go to a place without a huge hardcore base? The Texans have support, but it ain't very deep.
I guess my not very well described point is something that I just sense--that no matter how good or bad our fans are, there is no substitute for a history and tradition to build upon. Mack Brown understood that with Texas--reaching out to Darrell Royal first thing upon getting the job.
Hmmm, I don't think I am really saying what I mean on this. Let's just say that I will be more surprised for us to get the Uber coach that fixes all of our problems than I will for us to continue not doing well for a while. Cuz it ain't easy building from scratch.