Popeyejones":31cbuhgt said:Great OC for sure but HC is a very different job.
I'm rooting for him but there's no shortage of really great coordinators who failed trying to make that transition.
Subzero717":1uoxncrq said:Look no further than Wade Philips.
Philips defenses are better when is coordinating rather than coaching. The same is true of Romeo Crennel. This list goes on.pehawk":3k4lvh3i said:Subzero717":3k4lvh3i said:Look no further than Wade Philips.
Great OC, that Wade.
Actually, Wade was a good HC. His teams were playoffs or playoff contenders perennialy. At the helm of teams who hadn't really had such success before and after (Bills and Cowboys especially).
pehawk":osu2anwp said:Subzero717":osu2anwp said:Look no further than Wade Philips.
Great OC, that Wade.
Actually, Wade was a good HC. His teams were playoffs or playoff contenders perennialy. At the helm of teams who hadn't really had such success before and after (Bills and Cowboys especially).
Maulbert":39r92s2o said:pehawk":39r92s2o said:Subzero717":39r92s2o said:Look no further than Wade Philips.
Great OC, that Wade.
Actually, Wade was a good HC. His teams were playoffs or playoff contenders perennialy. At the helm of teams who hadn't really had such success before and after (Bills and Cowboys especially).
Uh, the Bills had seven 10-win seasons in the decade leading up to Wade Phillips being named their head coach, and had 8 winning seasons in that span. True, they were tapering off, but they didn't have a losing culture when he got there. And Parcells had 3 winning seasons in the four years before Phillips was hired in Dallas, including 2 playoff appearances, with arguably inferior talent (seriously, Quincy Carter started a playoff game).