Stampede Blue: An SB Nation Community

Navigation: Jump to content areas:


Sports blogs for fans, by fans.
Around SBN: Cal RB Jahvid Best Seriously Injured, Carted Off Field

It's the off-season, stupid!

Jim Caldwell, future head coach of the Indianapolis Colts.
For the Chargers, Patriots, Giants, and Packers their season marches on. Bully for them. I'll pretend I'm not jealous. The Midwesterner in me has a soft spot for the Pack. SI's Brett Favre tribute was one of their best, and NFL fans snatched it off the rack again and again and again. In a perfect world, the Patriots will have their "perfect" season derailed, and Brett Favre will win another Super Bowl dispelling the perception that the AFC is dominant (a perception I have trumpeted quite a bit). But, we don't live in a perfect world, and karma has little to do with football. Last season was a fairy tale. The "good guys" in sports finally won. This year, I hope the trend continues. Green Bay and Favre are some of the good guys. We will see.

For the Colts, it's now the off-season. It sucks, but hey, whatcha gonna do. Part of football's great appeal is the promise of hope. Right now, all 32 teams think they have a shot in 2008.

Moreso than any other time, there are very few questions heading into this off-season, save the obvious: Will Dungy return? 18 to 88 seems to think he will. I said, almost a year ago, that 2007 was it for Tony D., who is still making up his mind as to whether or not he will come back. If he doesn't, Jim Caldwell will replace him. Irsay and Polian have both made it clear that Indy's next coach, regardless of whether Dungy leaves this year or not, is Jim Caldwell.

I, personally, am a-okay with this. Jim Caldwell is a bright, up-and-coming head coach. Why do I think this? Well...

AOL Fanhouse did a great write-up on John Harbaugh, the newly-hired head coach of the Baltimore Ravens and brother of Jimmy "Captain Comeback" Harbaugh. The subject of coaching "experience" was raised with Harbaugh despite the fact that he's been coaching in the NFL for years. He developed a dominant special teams unit in Philly, and last year coached the Eagles' defensive backs. Yet, despite excelling at coaching, Harbaugh is viewed as having limited experience while someone like Jason Garrett (one year as an offensive coordinator) isn't.

I agree, makes no damn sense to me either, and AOL Fanhouse's Ryan Wilson wrote this about the subject:

A week ago, Harbaugh was best known for being Jim's brother. Now he'll try to turn around a Ravens team that went from 13-3 in 2006 to 5-11 last year. Not to worry, though; Harbaugh may not have any experience as a head coach, or, hell, even as a coordinator, but he's plenty qualified. At least according to his former boss, Philadelphia head coach Andy Reid:
"He'll demand respect just from his makeup and his knowledge," said Reid. "He'll hold players accountable on and off the field for their actions, and he won't back down from anybody. That's his strength. He's not afraid to get after guys."

Hmm, let's see: [John Harbaugh] demands respects, holds players accountable, and he won't back down. Yep, I think this is the exact person Baltimore needs, the anti-Billick. Look, on some level, Xs and Os are overrated -- that's what coordinators are for. The head coach is responsible for all the things Reid cites, and Billick had, by most accounts, lost control of his team.

I've long felt that often many of these coordinator "guru" types are nothing more than ego-maniacal idiots who know more about scheming that actual coaching. Coaching is all about management: Managing people, schemes, ideas, schedules, training, teaching, development, etc. If you are unwilling or unable to look people in the eye and work with them, you should not be a head coach in the NFL. This is why people like Mike Martz, Brian Billick, and even Norv Turner are terrible head coaches. I know Billick has a ring and Turner is in the AFC Championship Game.

Whoopdee-do.

If you are going to look me in the face and say you'd be as comfortable with those guys as your head coach over someone like Tony Dungy, then I'll respond by laughing back in your face.  

Like Dungy, Caldwell is outstanding at managing players and coaches. There is no harder player in this league to manage than Peyton Manning, not because he's lazy, selfish, or anything like that. Manning is a perfectionist, and he has very specific ideas about how to play his position, scheme the offense, coordinate substitutions, etc. You really have to know your crap if Manning is going to respect you, and other than Dungy, Manning does not respect a coach on the team more than Caldwell.

Also, Caldwell would likely continue with the same coaching staff: Tom Moore, Howard Mudd, Clyde Christensen, Ron Meeks, etc. Such continuity is rare in this league where continuity is everything, and each of these coaches are top notch. If Caldwell, or even Dungy, decides to make some coaching changes, then great assistant like Ron Rivera and maybe even Leslie Frazer are available. The cupboard is not bare, and even if it were, the grocery store is fully stocked.

So, if Jim Caldwell becomes our team's coach sooner rather than later, I don't expect any drop-off in team accomplishments on the field. Caldwell is a great head coaching prospect, and we're lucky to have him in the event Tony retires.

0 recs  |  Comment 7 comments

Story-email Email Printer Print

Comments

Display:

bring on the caldwell era!
i agree with everything you say here about continuity and faith in caldwell's judgment.  i do, however, hope for a more aggressive approach; no team should have entered their divisional playoff with the lack of passion and effort as this colts team did (save for a handful of players, one of them being number 18).

by tenyardfight on Jan 19, 2008 5:47 PM EST reply actions   0 recs

Lack of passion
We must not think that this isn't Dungy's fault. And we must not think that this isn't what kicked us right out of the playoffs. Maybe we should accept Dungy's retirement, and move on.

We all blame someone for our failure against a weaker team. I blame Dungy. Sort of. I'm not asking for his head, he may just be the best, or 2nd best, coach in the league right now. But if he comes back, I really hope that I won't need to blame him again for anything.

Walk on, walk on With hope in your heart And you'll never walk alone You'll never walk alone

by MerryGoByeBye on Jan 19, 2008 7:39 PM EST up reply actions   0 recs

Draft?
Does this mean we can start talking draft?

by Bullard47 on Jan 19, 2008 8:34 PM EST reply actions   0 recs

Well some of the suspence is gone
since we already know who our first round pick is and that he is awesome.
my blog http://shakennbaken.blogspot.com/

by shake n bake on Jan 20, 2008 12:58 AM EST up reply actions   0 recs

Agreed
The other day I was thinking, "damn, I wish we had a 1st round pick." Then I remembered that we have Ugoh, who has a season's experience now. Made me feel much better.  

by ctnyc on Jan 20, 2008 1:11 AM EST up reply actions   0 recs

+1
.... But BP is also awsome at drafting in earlier rounds :)

by pukcab on Jan 20, 2008 5:54 AM EST up reply actions   0 recs

Honorary Packer-Backer for this post season
When the Colts went out against the Bolts last week, I looked at my Bears fan hubby, and said, "Honey, I know the Cheeseheads are mortal enemies of the Bears, but...c'mon, it's Brett Favre." To my relief, he agreed that since his team was done weeks ago, and now that his wifey's team is out too, he'll go for the Pack to make it all the way.
As a matter of interest, we looked up who Brett has his first Superbowl ring against, and lo, if it wasn't the Pats. Well well! Wouldn't that be fun?
On the other hand, it's fun that Eli and the Giants are hitting their stride. They're gonna be a lotta fun to watch next year, too. Frankly, I just hope for a well-matched game between two honorable teams, and no big injuries.
As for the AFC champ game...well, I'll save that for another comment.
May the wind be always at your back, and may your placekicker have icewater in his veins.

by juperee on Jan 20, 2008 2:11 PM EST reply actions   0 recs

Comments For This Post Are Closed


User Tools

Welcome to the SB Nation blog about the Indianapolis Colts, 2006 NFL Champions!
Start posting about the Colts »

Join SB Nation and dive into communities focused on all your favorite teams.

FanPosts

Community blog posts and discussion.

Recommended FanPosts

Naruto_rasengan_by_kishoto_small
The Day of Depth- An analysis of current injuries and their effects on our depth
Aaiu088_bob-sanders-posters_small
THE STATE OF THE TEXANS: WEEK 9 EDITION
Peyton_dungy_small
Perception altering Reality: Why the Colts are better than the Saints
No_1_small
Power Rankings - Week 9 - Final Update
Medium_jabe_small
One For the Ladies - The NFL's Best Looking Offense

Recent FanPosts

Champ_small
Five Things I Think I Know: Week 9 Edition
Novemberdecember_2007-115_small
MarkFive's 5 Points
Small
5 Big Things, Houston @ Indy Edition
Tlbux4_small
Good Game Houston
Small
PRE GAME Manning Facts
Small
LATE NIGHT THREAD
Bobzilla_small
Just to clear things up
Small
Jack Williams
Small
college football open thread

+ New FanPost All FanPosts >

Latest NFL Headlines from SB Nation

Big Blue View
Lawrence Taylor arrested in South Florida
Gang Green Nation
Looking Ahead
Buffalo Rumblings
Dungy: Buffalo a 'dark horse' landing spot for Vick

Head Writer, Editor-In-Chief

Stampedeblue_small BigBlueShoe

Site Editor

Bob-sanders-081107_small shake n bake

Contributing Writers

Masonair_small JakeTheSnake

Mgrex03_avatar_small mgrex03

Seyton_manning_feature_small KingRichard

Change_small Colts Homer