Pics of the owner with a few amputee midgets, a donkey, and a car battery with jumper cables.
Maybe, if he goes 0-32 the next 2 seasons they'll get rid of him. He impressed the brass too much with his 1-31 showing.Because Browns ? .. and I know that's rich coming from a Lions fan, so sorry. Watching his presser after he learned he'd be coming back, he almost seemed embarrassed that he still had the gig.
So you are saying we should assassinate Jimmy. Interesting, I like it.
I don't understand being upset at Haslam for this at all. If anything he should be commended for sticking with a coach who was dealt a team that he couldn't possibly have success with.
This has to be a "show me" year for Jackson.
Year one was a throw away. This past year was extremely disappointing, but still the odds were against them having anything that resembled real success.
Next year they need to show marked improvement. They will still be the youngest team in the NFL, but there's no excuse to not see massive improvement given all their picks and cap space to fix the problem.
John Dorsey knows Hue Jackson is a shit coach. Can't let Hue cry to the media in advance.
John Dorsey knows Hue Jackson is a shit coach. Can't let Hue cry to the media in advance.
A few years ago, all the NFL "experts" were writing that Hue Jackson was a genius hire, and Doug Pederson the worst hire. Mike Lombardi went further and said Pederson was the least qualified head coach he had ever seen in the NFL.
Pederson now is a Super Bowl champ and Jackson is 1-31 in two years.
Moral of the story: Coaches matter, but organizations are more than coaches.
True, but having a bad coach is like having a failing heart. Can only go on so long regardless of how the rest of body is doing.A few years ago, all the NFL "experts" were writing that Hue Jackson was a genius hire, and Doug Pederson the worst hire. Mike Lombardi went further and said Pederson was the least qualified head coach he had ever seen in the NFL.
Pederson now is a Super Bowl champ and Jackson is 1-31 in two years.
Moral of the story: Coaches matter, but organizations are more than coaches.
A few years ago, all the NFL "experts" were writing that Hue Jackson was a genius hire, and Doug Pederson the worst hire. Mike Lombardi went further and said Pederson was the least qualified head coach he had ever seen in the NFL.
Pederson now is a Super Bowl champ and Jackson is 1-31 in two years.
Moral of the story: Coaches matter, but organizations are more than coaches.
Secondary moral: grading transactions shortly after they happen means nothing.
What good is the internet if we can't knee jerk react to everything?
Rooting for a team that sticks with a dead weight coach is never easy (Fisher), but it is SOOO nice once you get the right one!
IMO, the jury is still out on Jackson in Cleveland. Both the owner and GM recognize Jackson was hired at a time when the franchise was purposefully tanking in order to acquire the capital necessary to rebuild. It's unfair to judge him based on the last 2 seasons. Maybe he could have or should have won a few extra games, but we're splitting hairs when we're talking about going 4-29 vs 1-31.
That said, this coming season is definitely a "show me" season for Jackson. With the free agents and coaching added to the team in the offseason in addition to whoever they draft, significant improvement must be shown for Jackson to retain his job. If he fails, then some lucky coach is going to walk into a seriously plum job.
He probably keeps people off-balance with the weird spelling of his name. The Browns might have tried to fire him several times, but they informed the wrong guy