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When Coordinators get hired to be a Head Coach


Magox

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When a Defensive or Offensive Coordinator gets hired to become a head coach of an organization, presumably its because that coordinator excelled in that role.   It never made sense to me that as soon as they are hired that they pretty much give up what they were good at, outsource it to a new coordinator who often times they don't have previous working relationships with.

 

I think if you see guys like McVay and Reid to name a couple, these guys still have very active roles in where they made their living and they've had good results doing so.

 

I think we are beginning to see that with McDermott, yes its early to make any final proclamations but McD was a hell of a Defensive coordinator and I think you are seeing his style of defense playout with how the Bills have played the past few weeks.

 

I think if I were the GM or owner of the organization and I were to make a new hire for head coach I'd want him to play a more involved role on what got him hired than what we traditionally see from head coaches.

 

Thoughts?

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Just now, Magox said:

When a Defensive or Offensive Coordinator gets hired to become a head coach of an organization, presumably its because that coordinator excelled in that role.   It never made sense to me that as soon as they are hired that they pretty much give up what they were good at, outsource it to a new coordinator who often times they don't have previous working relationships with.

 

I think if you see guys like McVay and Reid to name a couple, these guys still have very active roles in where they made their living and they've had good results doing so.

 

I think we are beginning to see that with McDermott, yes its early to make any final proclamations but McD was a hell of a Defensive coordinator and I think you are seeing his style of defense playout with how the Bills have played the past few weeks.

 

I think if I were the GM or owner of the organization and I were to make a new hire for head coach I'd want him to play a more involved role on what got him hired than what we traditionally see from head coaches.

 

Thoughts?

I’ll tell you after they play eagles , dolphins x2 , chiefs , and bengals.

 

 

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Core competency.

 

I talk about it with my staff all the time. It's great to excell and move into a new position, but we can't forget or leave behind our core competency.

 

I own 3 restaurants and am currently building out a 4th... And I still cook every day. As good as I like to think I am in business, my core competency is cooking and managing a kitchen and I'm the most value to my own business when I do that.

 

It also gets you respect from staff (or players in Sean's case) when they see you leading from the front. I have been very lucky to maintain an amazing staff but you can't hold on to people if they don't respect you or believe in your justification of authority.

 

Sean is doing what he's best at, which also makes him a better HC and I'm sure the players feel he is more "in it" with them as opposed to them being "in it" for him.

 

My $.02 anyway...

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12 minutes ago, Magox said:

When a Defensive or Offensive Coordinator gets hired to become a head coach of an organization, presumably its because that coordinator excelled in that role.   It never made sense to me that as soon as they are hired that they pretty much give up what they were good at, outsource it to a new coordinator who often times they don't have previous working relationships with.

 

I think if you see guys like McVay and Reid to name a couple, these guys still have very active roles in where they made their living and they've had good results doing so.

 

I think we are beginning to see that with McDermott, yes its early to make any final proclamations but McD was a hell of a Defensive coordinator and I think you are seeing his style of defense playout with how the Bills have played the past few weeks.

 

I think if I were the GM or owner of the organization and I were to make a new hire for head coach I'd want him to play a more involved role on what got him hired than what we traditionally see from head coaches.

 

Thoughts?

You're just describing the Peter principle, which has been around for about 50 years.

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4 minutes ago, Heavy Kevi said:

Core competency.

 

I talk about it with my staff all the time. It's great to excell and move into a new position, but we can't forget or leave behind our core competency.

 

I own 3 restaurants and am currently building out a 4th... And I still cook every day. As good as I like to think I am in business, my core competency is cooking and managing a kitchen and I'm the most value to my own business when I do that.

 

It also gets you respect from staff (or players in Sean's case) when they see you leading from the front. I have been very lucky to maintain an amazing staff but you can't hold on to people if they don't respect you or believe in your justification of authority.

 

Sean is doing what he's best at, which also makes him a better HC and I'm sure the players feel he is more "in it" with them as opposed to them being "in it" for him.

 

My $.02 anyway...

You talking McDermott or Payton? 🤔😉😁

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13 minutes ago, Heavy Kevi said:

Core competency.

 

I talk about it with my staff all the time. It's great to excell and move into a new position, but we can't forget or leave behind our core competency.

 

I own 3 restaurants and am currently building out a 4th... And I still cook every day. As good as I like to think I am in business, my core competency is cooking and managing a kitchen and I'm the most value to my own business when I do that.

 

It also gets you respect from staff (or players in Sean's case) when they see you leading from the front. I have been very lucky to maintain an amazing staff but you can't hold on to people if they don't respect you or believe in your justification of authority.

 

Sean is doing what he's best at, which also makes him a better HC and I'm sure the players feel he is more "in it" with them as opposed to them being "in it" for him.

 

My $.02 anyway...

Excellent post 

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Its called delegation.  Probably because its a new job, its a promotion and requires a lot of new focus in different areas.  Clearly, calling plays is something a HC can do, as several do that but you cannot have the same amount of focus as the HC to only offense or only defense as you do when you are a coordinator.  There are not enough hours in the day.

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The owners shouldn't be hiring successful coordinators, they should be hiring successful leaders. Often, those will coordinators, but they don't have to be.

 

The skill set for a HC is very different from that of a coordinator. That is why most fail. I actually think McDermott does have the right skill set to be a HC. The fact that he is also a good coordinator is great. But you can't replace the role of a HC with that of a coordinator. Someone needs to fill that role. And being a HC and a coordinator is asking a lot. Some can pull it off, some can't.

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A lot of times great coordinators can not transition successfully to a head coaching job. I just don't think some of them have what it takes. Their best destiny is to be a coordinator. I've thought, and said this many times over the past couple of decades. You see it rather frequently. A couple of names come to mind; Norv Turner, Jim Schwartz, Dan Quinn, Wade Phillips. A couple of those had marginal success as head coaches, but they're still better at the coordinator job. 

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1 hour ago, Magox said:

When a Defensive or Offensive Coordinator gets hired to become a head coach of an organization, presumably its because that coordinator excelled in that role.   It never made sense to me that as soon as they are hired that they pretty much give up what they were good at, outsource it to a new coordinator who often times they don't have previous working relationships with.

 

I think if you see guys like McVay and Reid to name a couple, these guys still have very active roles in where they made their living and they've had good results doing so.

 

I think we are beginning to see that with McDermott, yes its early to make any final proclamations but McD was a hell of a Defensive coordinator and I think you are seeing his style of defense playout with how the Bills have played the past few weeks.

 

I think if I were the GM or owner of the organization and I were to make a new hire for head coach I'd want him to play a more involved role on what got him hired than what we traditionally see from head coaches.

 

Thoughts?

 

When I promote someone to manager/leader, I expect them to perform the duties of leading the team, making sure they have what they need to succeed, etc.

 

I do NOT want them actually doing their old job. If they are, they are failing in getting their team members coached up.

 

Most recently, I had to work for 6 months with a newly promoted Tech Support manager who couldn't help herself from going into her team's tickets and resolving them herself. Sure, she could knock out all the tickets in an hour, and it would take her 5 hours to show everyone how to do it themselves properly. But that is her job. Coaching, not doing.

 

IMO, head coaches have plenty on their plate. They shouldn't be calling plays. However, I'd be willing to change that perspective on HCs who have been in place a long time and their culture and "process" should be running on its own.

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1 hour ago, Heavy Kevi said:

Core competency.

 

I talk about it with my staff all the time. It's great to excell and move into a new position, but we can't forget or leave behind our core competency.

 

I own 3 restaurants and am currently building out a 4th... And I still cook every day. As good as I like to think I am in business, my core competency is cooking and managing a kitchen and I'm the most value to my own business when I do that.

 

It also gets you respect from staff (or players in Sean's case) when they see you leading from the front. I have been very lucky to maintain an amazing staff but you can't hold on to people if they don't respect you or believe in your justification of authority.

 

Sean is doing what he's best at, which also makes him a better HC and I'm sure the players feel he is more "in it" with them as opposed to them being "in it" for him.

 

My $.02 anyway...

Very well said. It’s exactly how I ran my business. But…there are others whose core competency is actually ‘management’ and not ‘doing’ the actual work as I did, and you apparently still do. It was my philosophy that I could sit in my office contributing nothing more than oversight all day, or I could do that AND pull on the proverbial wagon. Many in management think the promotion is a ‘get out of work for free’ card. I never chose that path. I never felt that I was too expensive to actually help get things done. I had many business partners who sadly never learned that lesson. 

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My only question is, if they act as a coordinator, then what things aren't they doing that a HC should be doing during the offseason, practices, and games?  

 

If it's negligible, then I don't know why I would care what they do.  But if they are clearly not involved in aspects of the team that affect performance and team atmosphere, then it would be a concern for me.

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1 hour ago, Heavy Kevi said:

Core competency.

 

I talk about it with my staff all the time. It's great to excell and move into a new position, but we can't forget or leave behind our core competency.

 

I own 3 restaurants and am currently building out a 4th... And I still cook every day. As good as I like to think I am in business, my core competency is cooking and managing a kitchen and I'm the most value to my own business when I do that.

 

It also gets you respect from staff (or players in Sean's case) when they see you leading from the front. I have been very lucky to maintain an amazing staff but you can't hold on to people if they don't respect you or believe in your justification of authority.

 

Sean is doing what he's best at, which also makes him a better HC and I'm sure the players feel he is more "in it" with them as opposed to them being "in it" for him.

 

My $.02 anyway...

 

I agree with this.   Same here, I head the company that I work for sales operations and we have call centers that we have setup throughout the country and the guys that I've promoted to head the call centers all were star performers in sales, of course they needed to have other qualities and intangibles to get the position, but to this day I still have them heavily involved in the sales side of their call centers, specially on the sales training.   Even to this day, where I have nearly 500 employees who report to me, I still myself have a book of business of clients that I service.  I don't do that to make the extra money, I do that primarily so that I know of the challenges and trends in our industry that our sales agents have to face.  

 

Yes, being an overall leader of a team, you have to be more than what you were as a coordinator, I see a couple people commenting saying that they need other qualities as if this was an EITHER OR scenario.  Of course you need leadership, but it requires more than just leadership or you could hire someone from outside of Football to lead your team.  There has to be a strong understanding of the game and if you were someone who has proven to be a really good coordinator then it's absolutely mind numbingly stupid to not have the coach have an active hands on role on that side of the ball specially considering that they excelled at a high level.

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2 minutes ago, Magox said:

 

I agree with this.   Same here, I head the company that I work for sales operations and we have call centers that we have setup throughout the country and the guys that I've promoted to head the call centers all were star performers in sales, of course they needed to have other qualities and intangibles to get the position, but to this day I still have them heavily involved in the sales side of their call centers, specially on the sales training.   Even to this day, where I have nearly 500 employees who report to me, I still myself have a book of business of clients that I service.  I don't do that to make the extra money, I do that primarily so that I know of the challenges and trends in our industry that our sales agents have to face.  

 

Yes, being an overall leader of a team, you have to be more than what you were as a coordinator, I see a couple people commenting saying that they need other qualities as if this was an EITHER OR scenario.  Of course you need leadership, but it requires more than just leadership or you could hire someone from outside of Football to lead your team.  There has to be a strong understanding of the game and if you were someone who has proven to be a really good coordinator then it's absolutely mind numbingly stupid to not have the coach have an active hands on role on that side of the ball specially considering that they excelled at a high level.

 

It is not an either or but Leadership > Xs and Os for a Head Coach hire IMO. 

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1 minute ago, GunnerBill said:

 

It is not an either or but Leadership > Xs and Os for a Head Coach hire IMO. 

 

That's fine, I'm not saying what is more important than the other just that if I were to make a hire as a GM, I would want the coach that I hired to not just oversee the side of the ball where he was a coordinator but to have a very active role in implementing the system.

 

 

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