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Thread started 01/16/09 3:08pm

SCNDLS

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Gruden fired by Bucs after 7 seasons

Well, I didn't see this one coming. omfg

The Buccaneers Friday said that they have fired head coach Jon Gruden and general manager Bruce Allen.

"We will be forever grateful to Jon for bringing us the Super Bowl title, and we thank Bruce for his contributions to our franchise," Buccaneers Co-Chairman Joel Glazer said in a statement. "However after careful consideration, we feel that this decision is in the best interest of our organization moving forward."
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Reply #1 posted 01/16/09 3:13pm

uPtoWnNY

Tampa's collapse at the end of the season did Gruden in, IMO. Wonder if he'll interview for the Jets job?
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Reply #2 posted 01/16/09 3:21pm

SCNDLS

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uPtoWnNY said:

Tampa's collapse at the end of the season did Gruden in, IMO. Wonder if he'll interview for the Jets job?

nod It still kinda came outta nowhere. I think there will be at least 10-12 coaching changes.
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Reply #3 posted 01/16/09 3:32pm

violator

I'm a huge Bucs fan and this literally came out of nowhere. But, like they did when they fired Dungy in '02, the Glazers can see mediocrity a mile away and are generally proactive. Gruden was never the offensive guru in Tampa that he was hailed as being in Oakland. The team was inconsistent and he failed to develop young talent.

It was time.

But I am grateful for the Lombardi.
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Reply #4 posted 01/16/09 3:34pm

RenHoek

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I'd take him back to run the Raiders... razz
A working class Hero is something to be ~ Lennon
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Reply #5 posted 01/16/09 3:45pm

JerseyKRS

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woot!


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Reply #6 posted 01/17/09 7:16pm

SUPRMAN

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violator said:

I'm a huge Bucs fan and this literally came out of nowhere. But, like they did when they fired Dungy in '02, the Glazers can see mediocrity a mile away and are generally proactive. Gruden was never the offensive guru in Tampa that he was hailed as being in Oakland. The team was inconsistent and he failed to develop young talent.

It was time.

But I am grateful for the Lombardi.



Are you calling Dungy mediocre?
Ten straight consecutive playoff appearances, a record, is now just mediocre?
The first two years were in Tampa . . .
I don't want you to think like me. I just want you to think.
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Reply #7 posted 01/17/09 7:18pm

reneGade20

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As a Saints fan, all I can say is....

evillol evillol evillol evillol evillol evillol evillol evillol evillol evillol evillol evillol evillol evillol evillol evillol evillol evillol evillol evillol evillol evillol evillol evillol evillol evillol evillol evillol evillol evillol evillol evillol evillol evillol evillol evillol evillol evillol evillol evillol evillol evillol evillol evillol evillol evillol evillol evillol

fuck chucky....couldn't have happened to a nicer guy!!! To me, its karmic justice for him getting all the credit for winning the Super Bowl with Tony Dungy's team.....
He was like a cock who thought the sun had risen to hear him crow.
(George Eliot)

the video for the above...evillol
http://www.youtube.com/wa...re=related
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Reply #8 posted 01/17/09 7:40pm

ThreadBare

That loss to his/my Raiders sure didn't help, I'm sure. tease
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Reply #9 posted 01/17/09 8:35pm

uPtoWnNY

There've been many collapses this season(Jets, Broncos), and coaches have paid for it.

In other coaching news, my Giants lost their defensive wizard Spags to the Rams. Sad day.... sad
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Reply #10 posted 01/18/09 12:39am

violator

SUPRMAN said:

violator said:

I'm a huge Bucs fan and this literally came out of nowhere. But, like they did when they fired Dungy in '02, the Glazers can see mediocrity a mile away and are generally proactive. Gruden was never the offensive guru in Tampa that he was hailed as being in Oakland. The team was inconsistent and he failed to develop young talent.

It was time.

But I am grateful for the Lombardi.



Are you calling Dungy mediocre?
Ten straight consecutive playoff appearances, a record, is now just mediocre?
The first two years were in Tampa . . .


Actually, the first three were in Tampa.

I'm saying the Bucs were a mediocre team at the time of Tony Dungy's firing. Yes. Two consecutive 9-7 seasons capped by embarrassing playoff defeats. Offenses that consistently finished in the bottom third of the league. Suspect OC hirings and a stubborn loyalty to non-productive offensive players.

Tony Dungy deserves all the credit in the world for taking the Bucs from laughingstock to respectability. But it was clear that the team had gone as far as they were going to go under his stewardship.
[Edited 1/18/09 0:48am]
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Reply #11 posted 01/18/09 3:06am

kpowers

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Herm Edwards should get fired, he's done nothing for KC.
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Reply #12 posted 01/18/09 9:10am

violator

kpowers said:

Herm Edwards should get fired, he's done nothing for KC.


Herm has been less than inspiring.
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Reply #13 posted 01/19/09 8:19pm

MuthaFunka

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RenHoek said:

I'd take him back to run the Raiders... razz


Chucky may look crazy but he ain't THAT crazy. lol
nWo: bboy87 - Timmy84 - LittleBlueCorvette - MuthaFunka - phunkdaddy - Christopher

MuthaFunka - Black...by popular demand
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Reply #14 posted 01/19/09 10:14pm

spoolin86

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It all comes down to "what have you done for me lately".....2 or 3 losses at the wrong time and you can cancel Christmas !
Ugly Travels in Pairs.....Don't Believe me......Look at the Sumbitch next to you !
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Reply #15 posted 01/21/09 8:54am

namepeace

violator said:

I'm a huge Bucs fan and this literally came out of nowhere. But, like they did when they fired Dungy in '02, the Glazers can see mediocrity a mile away and are generally proactive. Gruden was never the offensive guru in Tampa that he was hailed as being in Oakland. The team was inconsistent and he failed to develop young talent.

It was time.

But I am grateful for the Lombardi.


Mediocrity? Really? You're a huge Bucs fan, right? Huge Bucs fans I know have long memories.

Surely you remember how moribund they were before Dungy got there. Surely you realize Dungy did one of the best coaching jobs in modern history molding that team into a consistent winner.

Gruden was too type-A, too temperamental, and too finicky with QBs to succeed beyond motivating the talent there to a Super Bowl title. His style has a short shelf life on the pro level. He did what he was paid highly to do: secure a title.

But IMO, Dungy was the better coach.
Good night, sweet Prince | 7 June 1958 - 21 April 2016

Props will be withheld until the showing and proving has commenced. -- Aaron McGruder
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Reply #16 posted 01/21/09 9:00am

namepeace

violator said:


Tony Dungy deserves all the credit in the world for taking the Bucs from laughingstock to respectability. But it was clear that the team had gone as far as they were going to go under his stewardship.
[Edited 1/18/09 0:48am]


Now this is better stated. I could quibble with it, but that was the basis of their decision. That being said, the fact that Dungy didn't stay on the street long enough to buy a hot dog speaks volumes about his ability as a coach.

I believe Dungy could have eventually gotten it done in Tampa. But sometimes even a great coach is the wrong fit at a certain point. Long-term, the decision paid off for everyone. Both coaches and both the Colts and the Bucs collected a Lombardi.
Good night, sweet Prince | 7 June 1958 - 21 April 2016

Props will be withheld until the showing and proving has commenced. -- Aaron McGruder
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Reply #17 posted 01/21/09 9:13am

violator

namepeace said:

violator said:

I'm a huge Bucs fan and this literally came out of nowhere. But, like they did when they fired Dungy in '02, the Glazers can see mediocrity a mile away and are generally proactive. Gruden was never the offensive guru in Tampa that he was hailed as being in Oakland. The team was inconsistent and he failed to develop young talent.

It was time.

But I am grateful for the Lombardi.


Mediocrity? Really? You're a huge Bucs fan, right? Huge Bucs fans I know have long memories.

Surely you remember how moribund they were before Dungy got there. Surely you realize Dungy did one of the best coaching jobs in modern history molding that team into a consistent winner.

Gruden was too type-A, too temperamental, and too finicky with QBs to succeed beyond motivating the talent there to a Super Bowl title. His style has a short shelf life on the pro level. He did what he was paid highly to do: secure a title.

But IMO, Dungy was the better coach.


That's why I said, in my later post, that Dungy "deserves all the credit in the world for taking the Bucs from laughingstock to respectability". And when it comes to general stability and growth, I do believe Tony Dungy is the better coach. But make no mistake, when Dungy left, the Bucs were an average performing team with championship caliber talent. He made baffling offensive coordinator hires like Les Steckel and Clyde Christensen when more respected, accomplished guys like Norv Turner and Chan Gailey were publicly lobbying to work with him. He remained stubbornly loyal to failed wideouts Jacquez Green and Reidel Anthony who were the Bucs #2 and #3 receivers, respectively, at the time of Dungy's firing. Both were out of football the next season. Tony held the defense to a standard that he didn't hold the offense to and it led to some wasted seasons. In Dungy's last three post-season games as Bucs coach, Tampa failed to score a single offensive touchdown.

As loved as Dungy is in Tampa, there's a fair contingency of folks who are bitter towards him for not making the changes necessary on the offensive side of the ball to get over the hump. No bitterness here, but I do believe he could have won at least one championship, maybe two in Tampa had he been more flexible.

Gruden was, as I said, the right person at the right time. The Bucs window of opportunity was closing under Dungy and ownership saw it. Certainly, they underestimated what kind of coach Gruden would be for the long haul, but the firing of Dungy was the right call and worth it because Gruden delivered the Lombardi the very next season.
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Reply #18 posted 01/21/09 3:52pm

namepeace

violator said:


That's why I said, in my later post, that Dungy "deserves all the credit in the world for taking the Bucs from laughingstock to respectability". And when it comes to general stability and growth, I do believe Tony Dungy is the better coach. But make no mistake, when Dungy left, the Bucs were an average performing team with championship caliber talent. He made baffling offensive coordinator hires like Les Steckel and Clyde Christensen when more respected, accomplished guys like Norv Turner and Chan Gailey were publicly lobbying to work with him. He remained stubbornly loyal to failed wideouts Jacquez Green and Reidel Anthony who were the Bucs #2 and #3 receivers, respectively, at the time of Dungy's firing. Both were out of football the next season. Tony held the defense to a standard that he didn't hold the offense to and it led to some wasted seasons. In Dungy's last three post-season games as Bucs coach, Tampa failed to score a single offensive touchdown.

As loved as Dungy is in Tampa, there's a fair contingency of folks who are bitter towards him for not making the changes necessary on the offensive side of the ball to get over the hump. No bitterness here, but I do believe he could have won at least one championship, maybe two in Tampa had he been more flexible.

Gruden was, as I said, the right person at the right time. The Bucs window of opportunity was closing under Dungy and ownership saw it. Certainly, they underestimated what kind of coach Gruden would be for the long haul, but the firing of Dungy was the right call and worth it because Gruden delivered the Lombardi the very next season.


Yup, you're a true fan. I think Dungy was trying to mold a Titan-esque offense, especially having hired Steckel. That was undeniably his problem (perhaps his reticence to hire respected coaches with head coaching experience spoke to his insecurity in that job, perhaps not.) Fortunately for him, when he went to Indy, he didn't have to change a thing on the offensive side of the ball.

As I said in response to your later post, perhaps Dungy wasn't the right fit for the team after a certain time. Gruden was for a little while.

Well said.
Good night, sweet Prince | 7 June 1958 - 21 April 2016

Props will be withheld until the showing and proving has commenced. -- Aaron McGruder
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Reply #19 posted 01/21/09 5:37pm

kcherisse1977

When I saw the news this morning on ESPN News my jaw was on the floor.
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