They held him back without question. I don’t even know how that’s really debatable…He wasn’t even all conference his senior year, but then steps up to the NFL and wins ROY, breaks the rookie TD record and then was an all pro the next year.
******* broyles!Contract negotiations are all about leverage. So what leverage do you think Gattis had when negotiating his contract?
Every contract has a finite dollar amount connected to the consideration of the exchange.Contract negotiations are all about leverage. So what leverage do you think Gattis had when negotiating his contract?
******* broyles!
He was significantly better his senior year than his junior year in every significant statistical category. That he wasn't selected as first team all pac-12 is just another example of the jaded idiocy that we see in these subjective votes that penalize UM kids all the time. He was far and away the best QB in the Pac-12 that year.
Justin Herbert's senior year, in a balanced offense, with a mediocre WR corps that limited the passing game a bit:
3471 yards (10th in P5)
32 TDs (8th in P5)
6 INTs (basically 3rd least among top P5 QB's behind only Fields and Tagovailoa). Tied with Burrow.
He was outstanding his senior year, which is why he was the #6 overall pick. Let's not pretend he was some 3rd round diamond in the rough that college coaches didn't know what to do with.
This ongoing fallacy about Herbert at Oregon is ridiculous.
there’s just things that need worked through and it’s bigger than money or buyouts.
He was already a consensus first rounder after his junior year so when you’re 71st in the country in pass attempts when you have a senior qb and top 6 pick on your team, that is the very definition of holding him back. If you don’t think he would have been better under an offensive minded coach, like he is in the NFL, I don’t know what to tell you.He was significantly better his senior year than his junior year in every significant statistical category. That he wasn't selected as first team all pac-12 is just another example of the jaded idiocy that we see in these subjective votes that penalize UM kids all the time. He was far and away the best QB in the Pac-12 that year.
Justin Herbert's senior year, in a balanced offense, with a mediocre WR corps that limited the passing game a bit:
3471 yards (10th in P5)
32 TDs (8th in P5)
6 INTs (basically 3rd least among top P5 QB's behind only Fields and Tagovailoa). Tied with Burrow.
He was outstanding his senior year, which is why he was the #6 overall pick. Let's not pretend he was some 3rd round diamond in the rough that college coaches didn't know what to do with.
This ongoing fallacy about Herbert at Oregon is ridiculous.
They held him back without question. I don’t even know how that’s really debatable…He wasn’t even all conference his senior year, but then steps up to the NFL and wins ROY, breaks the rookie TD record and then was an all pro the next year.
Hypothetically if that crap is in the contract that he needs to be able to get a comparable position and we violate that then I think he has that type of claim he can make. I can’t imagine it’s in there - and it doesn’t mean he’d be successful.he can?
Posters calling others ******** for questioning Mario is a different and separate issue and I get why people don’t like that.It was a ****** choice and apparently a **** agreement. Not worth arguing the semantics of which pile of **** is causing the stench…
I’m ok with posters picking on Mario for the same reasons the “insiders” discussion is happening… posters told other posters they were ******** for questioning Mario at the beginning and this is the ebb and flow of it…
It’s CIS zen really… Keep Calm and CIS..
damage to reputation or career is tenuous at best. that is usually couched in a defamation case, which you know we don't have here.Hypothetically if that crap is in the contract that he needs to be able to get a comparable position and we violate that then I think he has that type of claim he can make. I can’t imagine it’s in there - and it doesn’t mean he’d be successful.
Is it workman's comp?Absolutely not.
Did you just make up that stat? He attempted more passes his senior year than Lawrence (407) and Fields (355). Herbert was 18th in pass attempts.He was already a consensus first rounder after his junior year so when you’re 71st in the country in pass attempts when you have a senior qb and top 6 pick on your team, that is the very definition of holding him back. If you don’t think he would have been better under an offensive minded coach, like he is in the NFL, I don’t know what to tell you.
And did I somehow imply they only held him back one year? Who was his coach and oc his junior year?
Mario’s bad recruiting history with wr’s and qbs is one reason I remain skeptical of what our ceiling is
I know. I’m trying to say that it appears that there’s something in the contract which complicates it from a simple pay the money and move on and if he’s got something broadly protecting him in there then they need to deal with it accordingly. I don’t know what the specifics are.damage to reputation or career is tenuous at best. that is usually couched in a defamation case, which you know we don't have here.
He was already a consensus first rounder after his junior year so when you’re 71st in the country in pass attempts when you have a senior qb and top 6 pick on your team, that is the very definition of holding him back. If you don’t think he would have been better under an offensive minded coach, like he is in the NFL, I don’t know what to tell you.
And did I somehow imply they only held him back one year? Who was his coach and oc his junior year?
Mario’s bad recruiting history with wr’s and qbs is one reason I remain skeptical of what our ceiling is
Not vouching or anything like that, just what I found from a very superficial research that might be interesting (good or bad)
Sources: Sam Houston State's Cramsey to become Herd OC
HUNTINGTON — Pending a background check and the finalization of paperwork, Marshall has found its new offensive coordinator.www.herald-dispatch.com
A great recommendation
When Polian was deciding who his next offensive coordinator would be, he called Chip Kelly.
Kelly, now the coach of the NFL’s 49ers, was New Hampshire’s offensive coordinator when Cramsey broke into the college ranks as the Wildcats’ tight ends/fullbacks coach in 2003. They worked together for four seasons before Kelly left to become Oregon’s offensive coordinator. When Polian asked Kelly what he thought of Cramsey, he said: “Scoop him up. You’d be nuts if you didn’t.”
“We talked not a lot about the Xs and Os but about the personality, recruiting ability, how he was with the players,” Polian said. “Coach Kelly is a friend and he was kind enough to spend about half an hour with me over the phone and it helped. If you don’t know a guy personally, it’s very important to connect the dots in one step. If it takes three or four, it’s hard. You need somebody you trust and respect to stand on the table for the guy.”
Kelly did that for Cramsey, who eventually rose to the coordinator position at New Hampshire after Kelly left for Oregon. Kelly earned the reputation as an offensive guru with the Ducks and then with the NFL’s Eagles. Cramsey said there are a lot of similarities between his offense and Kelly’s system. Philosophically, there are aligned in many ways.
“A lot of the things I learned from him still make sense today,” Cramsey said. “You look at the offense we both run, they’re different, but the philosophies are the same of trying to tire out the defense, trying to confuse the defense, trying to force the defense to hesitate. That’s what it’s all about.”
The man behind the Wolf Pack's new offense
Cramsey aims to return Nevada to lofty heights.eu.rgj.com
Cramsey said he loves the personnel he inherited and it fits his system. He wants to build depth and plans on using three running backs, seven receivers, three tight ends and seven offensive linemen to fit his fast-paced style. That’s a change from previous seasons as Nevada stuck largely with the same 11, plus one more running back