Yep you're correct.... He reminds me a lot of Jerry Jones... im betting he was the one that chose Caley and now Ryan's is stuck with him. Caley knows there is nothing Ryan's can do since Caserio is the one that made the choice. T_Man
No doubt about that. It probably hurt Demeco having to give up on the system he grew up with. Probably told him Caley knows every style. mhmm. But I'll say the same thing I said in the Slo threads, you can try to run any offense and it's likely to fail with the dollar tree O line and backs we have.
Made me kinda wish I played lacrosse just so I'd have a chance to hit Kinkaid kids. We never played them in football.
Reminds me of this guy that is in a lot of films, great character actor, one of them being the teacher that ruined his life by sleeping with Reese Witherspoon in Election.
We gonna hear about margins and allocation or resources that isn’t being allocated well and blah blah blah. Caserio time should be up he got us out the mud. Now it’s time to bring in someone to get us to the next level cause caserio can’t.
I have learned to turn the channel when Nick starts one of his word salad interviews, same with Demeco...........just gotta execute, play clean football blah blah blah...................truth is your scheme sucks and the O Line can't do what you want, you can't "will" these guys to do something there not capable of doing. What a waste of a GREAT D
From the beginning, they've put folks in charge who map out bad strategies and make lousy decisions.(Coaches, GM (personnel), etc) Then, are hesitant to move on. Rinse and repeat...Neverending cycle. *Ryans is a good motivator and great DC who has no business being a HC.
I think Cal recognizes he didn't earn his position and isn't some hypercompetent organizational leader. So he relies on consensus and reputation and outside job search consulting firms. Not the worst way to go about it if you don't trust your ability to hire good people. The exception being when he fell under the spell of Jack "Rasputin" Easterby. But he seems to have largely recognized that mistake.