So what will the departure of Dianne Murphy mean for this upcoming football season?
If Head Coach Pete Mangurian
and his staff come to their senses, it could really help.
The fear factor from the football offices in the Campbell
Center is palpable.
Notice how some of the commenters on this blog who are
mouthpieces for one or two of the assistant coaches have gone completely
silent.
They are scared, scared enough to finally realize that
trolling on a blog is a waste of their time when their jobs are at stake.
But it won’t save them.
Mangurian has two more seasons on his contract, but a new
A.D. is a lot less likely to feel any obligation to honor that final year and Murphy
herself has a lot less to lose if she jettisons Mangurian at the end of the
season.
That means Mangurian needs the CU football team to start
winning now.
Job security has been a funny thing for Mangurian throughout
his career; it seems he hasn’t learned the hard lessons from the experiences
that have cost him jobs in the past.
It’s been his ideological belief in lighter offensive lines
that got him in trouble with the Giants and Buccaneers and made him a
disliked figure just about everywhere he’s gone.
Here at CU, it’s that ideology and his belief that a purely
drop back passing offense is appropriate in the Ivies, (it isn’t), that’s put
him in a lot of trouble already.
But even if Mangurian suddenly snaps out of it now, it’s too
late to suddenly hope the Lion O-line suddenly gets adequate size.
He can, however, make some changes to the drop back passing
offense.
He can run the ball
more, especially with the right runners. Right now, I am only impressed with
the freshman Chris Schroer. Cameron
Molina and the other upperclassmen on the depth chart should be on a very
short leash or lose their starting spots now if they don’t show something in
the final week of practice.
He can also throw an H-back into just about every play – not
to run or catch the ball – but to provide QB Brett Nottingham with one more emergency blocker.
On defense, he can move the darn linebackers closer to the
line of scrimmage.
If Columbia doesn’t win three or more games this season,
(and I have to admit I think three is an extreme stretch), I just don’t see how
Mangurian keeps his job especially with a new A.D. on the way.
There are a lot of Columbia fans who, even before Murphy made her announcement, assured me that Mangurian was a goner at the end of this season if we didn't win at least four games.
They're delusional.
Sadly, I think just ONE win would have been enough for the apologists in the department to make a case to keep Mangurian.
But now, those people are leaving and the bar just got raised higher.
Let me say for the 100th time that I hope I'm wrong and Columbia wins and wins and wins this season. But I just don't see it.
2 comments:
I like that photo. So many word balloons come to mind.
I don't think this year's team will win but I am hoping they make a good showing, stay patient and try to gain some momentum. Sustaining long drives should be the focus of the offense. The defense just has to man up. Problem is depth and it will show itself.
Jake, unless the posted weights are bogus, it looks to me as if we average in the 270s on the OL. That in and of itself does not spell disaster.
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