Tim Tebow.
Take a breath and think about it before responding. It could be a match made in heaven.
Take a breath and think about it before responding. It could be a match made in heaven.
Exactly. Single rebuilding years aren't a problem. They're a fact of life for any school that doesn't recruit at an elite level.IowaBear said:
Is Traylor coming off a 3-9 season? What about Kinne? What about Sumrall ?
Trying to bring in an adjudicated rapist to play quarterback and then lying about it is not "some clandestine personal reason."Daveisabovereproach said:Doctor22 said:
Great call. I posted the same suggestion a couple of weeks ago. He's aggressive, has produced really solid results and can recruit. He'd be a refreshing change as a younger coach.
The resident Puritans on this board have told us that Kinne is a no-go because of some clandestine personal reason
bear2be2 said:Exactly. Single rebuilding years aren't a problem. They're a fact of life for any school that doesn't recruit at an elite level.IowaBear said:
Is Traylor coming off a 3-9 season? What about Kinne? What about Sumrall ?
Aranda's problem is that he's on his third straight rebuilding year and fourth in five seasons.
You can't smoke and mirrors your way to 32 wins in three seasons at UTSA. That program was nothing before he got there. Any success he's had there is his and his alone.PartyBear said:bear2be2 said:Exactly. Single rebuilding years aren't a problem. They're a fact of life for any school that doesn't recruit at an elite level.IowaBear said:
Is Traylor coming off a 3-9 season? What about Kinne? What about Sumrall ?
Aranda's problem is that he's on his third straight rebuilding year and fourth in five seasons.
As I understand it Traylor has lived off of the same core skill players on offense his entire tenure until this season. It could have been smoke an mirrors perhaps it wasn't. If and it is still early and a big " if" we make a move this year and I hope we don't need to, I do not think we should take someone who has had a bad or even a mediocre season. Additionally something that has always concerned me is that even when he was supposedly a hot name, Tech, SMU, A&M and UH all went a different direction after vetting him.
The challenge is that it's difficult to gauge how good a HC is unless he's been at a single place for an extended period and won the majority of the time that he was there, as the new rules around transfers allow coaches to show up and win big for 1-3 seasons based on bringing in players that they likely wouldn't be able to bring on an on-going basis. Given the limited tenure of successful coaches in the G5 and lower P5, it would be best to target someone who has been doing very well at the FCS level for an extended period of time since they have that experience and they have won with relatively minimal advantages over other FCS teams. The latter is particularly important for a program like Baylor.PartyBear said:bear2be2 said:Exactly. Single rebuilding years aren't a problem. They're a fact of life for any school that doesn't recruit at an elite level.IowaBear said:
Is Traylor coming off a 3-9 season? What about Kinne? What about Sumrall ?
Aranda's problem is that he's on his third straight rebuilding year and fourth in five seasons.
As I understand it Traylor has lived off of the same core skill players on offense his entire tenure until this season. It could have been smoke and mirrors perhaps it wasn't. If and it is still early and a big " if" we make a move this year and I hope we don't need to, I do not think we should take someone who has had a bad or even a mediocre season. Additionally something that has always concerned me is that even when he was supposedly a hot name and having great seasons Tech, SMU, A&M and UH all went a different direction after vetting him.
Who had never been a head coach at any level before we hired him.IowaBear said:
You don't think we should take someone who has had a mediocre season. Yet you come on here and defend a coach with 3 losing seasons (soon to be 4 in 5) vigorously. Make it make sense
I would have preferred that Dave Aranda had succeeded as well. He's a good guy who fits Baylor's culture well in a lot of ways. But the facts are the facts.PartyBear said:
First of all Aranda is our HC. A couple of you folks really should realize I did not hire him nor was I consulted. I really don't care how a couple of y'all characterize my saying I hope we do not need to make a change. It is just realism to say I don't know yet how the season will turn out.
That said, since 97 I have thought Baylor needs to hire HCs with experience as HCs. You can look at my posts regarding our coaching changes going back to 98 on Austin 365 ( very early pre BFAns board) . If it is possible to research and you have all the time in the world (as some of you seem to have) please feel free to check out not just this site but archives of Austin 365 and Baylor fans if you want.
I also think he would've been a great fit ... if he would have been competent to lead the program.bear2be2 said:I would have preferred that Dave Aranda had succeeded as well. He's a good guy who fits Baylor's culture well in a lot of ways. But the facts are the facts.PartyBear said:
First of all Aranda is our HC. A couple of you folks really should realize I did not hire him nor was I consulted. I really don't care how a couple of y'all characterize my saying I hope we do not need to make a change. It is just realism to say I don't know yet how the season will turn out.
That said, since 97 I have thought Baylor needs to hire HCs with experience as HCs. You can look at my posts regarding our coaching changes going back to 98 on Austin 365 ( very early pre BFAns board) . If it is possible to research and you have all the time in the world (as some of you seem to have) please feel free to check out not just this site but archives of Austin 365 and Baylor fans if you want.
We've lost 16 of our last 21 games, 12 of our last 14 Big 12 games and haven't beaten a P5 team at home in almost two full years. That's atrocious.
At some point, enough has to be enough. And we're probably nine months past that point.
I'm thinking Mack believes Aranda missed out on recruiting/NIL opportunities and that if they just get solid recruits then he can forge a winning program in a couple of years.bear2be2 said:I would have preferred that Dave Aranda had succeeded as well. He's a good guy who fits Baylor's culture well in a lot of ways. But the facts are the facts.PartyBear said:
First of all Aranda is our HC. A couple of you folks really should realize I did not hire him nor was I consulted. I really don't care how a couple of y'all characterize my saying I hope we do not need to make a change. It is just realism to say I don't know yet how the season will turn out.
That said, since 97 I have thought Baylor needs to hire HCs with experience as HCs. You can look at my posts regarding our coaching changes going back to 98 on Austin 365 ( very early pre BFAns board) . If it is possible to research and you have all the time in the world (as some of you seem to have) please feel free to check out not just this site but archives of Austin 365 and Baylor fans if you want.
We've lost 16 of our last 21 games, 12 of our last 14 Big 12 games and haven't beaten a P5 team at home in almost two full years. That's atrocious.
At some point, enough has to be enough. And we're probably nine months past that point.
Exactly. We have a better, more talented team this year and are sitting at 2-3 -- soon to be 2-4 -- because we continue to make the same mistakes and exhibit the same weaknesses game after game, year after year.Doc Holliday said:I'm thinking Mack believes Aranda missed out on recruiting/NIL opportunities and that if they just get solid recruits then he can forge a winning program in a couple of years.bear2be2 said:I would have preferred that Dave Aranda had succeeded as well. He's a good guy who fits Baylor's culture well in a lot of ways. But the facts are the facts.PartyBear said:
First of all Aranda is our HC. A couple of you folks really should realize I did not hire him nor was I consulted. I really don't care how a couple of y'all characterize my saying I hope we do not need to make a change. It is just realism to say I don't know yet how the season will turn out.
That said, since 97 I have thought Baylor needs to hire HCs with experience as HCs. You can look at my posts regarding our coaching changes going back to 98 on Austin 365 ( very early pre BFAns board) . If it is possible to research and you have all the time in the world (as some of you seem to have) please feel free to check out not just this site but archives of Austin 365 and Baylor fans if you want.
We've lost 16 of our last 21 games, 12 of our last 14 Big 12 games and haven't beaten a P5 team at home in almost two full years. That's atrocious.
At some point, enough has to be enough. And we're probably nine months past that point.
But in reality, these players aren't being coached well.
It may not be smoke and mirrors, but it's clear that having the same core group + extra years due to COVID helped a lot of teams, including UTSA. That and Traylor no longer has Harris, nor Cephus, nor the 5-6 OL that played 4-5 years for him. His core players were already there and all of those guys are gone now.bear2be2 said:You can't smoke and mirrors your way to 32 wins in three seasons at UTSA. That program was nothing before he got there. Any success he's had there is his and his alone.PartyBear said:bear2be2 said:Exactly. Single rebuilding years aren't a problem. They're a fact of life for any school that doesn't recruit at an elite level.IowaBear said:
Is Traylor coming off a 3-9 season? What about Kinne? What about Sumrall ?
Aranda's problem is that he's on his third straight rebuilding year and fourth in five seasons.
As I understand it Traylor has lived off of the same core skill players on offense his entire tenure until this season. It could have been smoke an mirrors perhaps it wasn't. If and it is still early and a big " if" we make a move this year and I hope we don't need to, I do not think we should take someone who has had a bad or even a mediocre season. Additionally something that has always concerned me is that even when he was supposedly a hot name, Tech, SMU, A&M and UH all went a different direction after vetting him.
Have a feeling he's way too person over player. Next. But his personal life checks all of the boxes for the leadership team.BellCountyBear said:
Tim Tebow.
Didn't realize it was comedy hourBellCountyBear said:
Tim Tebow.
Take a breath and think about it before responding. It could be a match made in heaven.
He graduated key players off each of those teams and kept it rolling longer than most programs do. And who do you guys think recruited those players to UTSA and developed them?morethanhecouldbear said:It may not be smoke and mirrors, but it's clear that having the same core group + extra years due to COVID helped a lot of teams, including UTSA. That and Traylor didn't recruit most of those guys. His core players were already there and just about all of those guys are gone now.bear2be2 said:You can't smoke and mirrors your way to 32 wins in three seasons at UTSA. That program was nothing before he got there. Any success he's had there is his and his alone.PartyBear said:bear2be2 said:Exactly. Single rebuilding years aren't a problem. They're a fact of life for any school that doesn't recruit at an elite level.IowaBear said:
Is Traylor coming off a 3-9 season? What about Kinne? What about Sumrall ?
Aranda's problem is that he's on his third straight rebuilding year and fourth in five seasons.
As I understand it Traylor has lived off of the same core skill players on offense his entire tenure until this season. It could have been smoke an mirrors perhaps it wasn't. If and it is still early and a big " if" we make a move this year and I hope we don't need to, I do not think we should take someone who has had a bad or even a mediocre season. Additionally something that has always concerned me is that even when he was supposedly a hot name, Tech, SMU, A&M and UH all went a different direction after vetting him.
UTSA is 2-3 and 0-1 in conference this year. If he is kicking but in a season or 2, then I think he's a lock for a move up. I wouldn't pull the trigger on him yet though.
Traylor's network in Texas HS coaching and in college coaching circles, along with his personality, makes me think he's well suited to attract and manage a staff and a roster. I think he's strong exactly where Aranda is weak.bear2be2 said:He graduated key players off each of those teams and kept it rolling longer than most programs do. And who do you guys think recruited those players to UTSA and developed them?morethanhecouldbear said:It may not be smoke and mirrors, but it's clear that having the same core group + extra years due to COVID helped a lot of teams, including UTSA. That and Traylor didn't recruit most of those guys. His core players were already there and just about all of those guys are gone now.bear2be2 said:You can't smoke and mirrors your way to 32 wins in three seasons at UTSA. That program was nothing before he got there. Any success he's had there is his and his alone.PartyBear said:bear2be2 said:Exactly. Single rebuilding years aren't a problem. They're a fact of life for any school that doesn't recruit at an elite level.IowaBear said:
Is Traylor coming off a 3-9 season? What about Kinne? What about Sumrall ?
Aranda's problem is that he's on his third straight rebuilding year and fourth in five seasons.
As I understand it Traylor has lived off of the same core skill players on offense his entire tenure until this season. It could have been smoke an mirrors perhaps it wasn't. If and it is still early and a big " if" we make a move this year and I hope we don't need to, I do not think we should take someone who has had a bad or even a mediocre season. Additionally something that has always concerned me is that even when he was supposedly a hot name, Tech, SMU, A&M and UH all went a different direction after vetting him.
UTSA is 2-3 and 0-1 in conference this year. If he is kicking but in a season or 2, then I think he's a lock for a move up. I wouldn't pull the trigger on him yet though.
Yet as mentioned for some reason SMU, A&M, Tech and UH have all gone a different direction upon vetting. That should at least be a reddish flag.Robert Wilson said:Traylor's network in Texas HS coaching and in college coaching circles, along with his personality, makes me think he's well suited to attract and manage a staff and a roster. I think he's strong exactly where Aranda is weak.bear2be2 said:He graduated key players off each of those teams and kept it rolling longer than most programs do. And who do you guys think recruited those players to UTSA and developed them?morethanhecouldbear said:It may not be smoke and mirrors, but it's clear that having the same core group + extra years due to COVID helped a lot of teams, including UTSA. That and Traylor didn't recruit most of those guys. His core players were already there and just about all of those guys are gone now.bear2be2 said:You can't smoke and mirrors your way to 32 wins in three seasons at UTSA. That program was nothing before he got there. Any success he's had there is his and his alone.PartyBear said:bear2be2 said:Exactly. Single rebuilding years aren't a problem. They're a fact of life for any school that doesn't recruit at an elite level.IowaBear said:
Is Traylor coming off a 3-9 season? What about Kinne? What about Sumrall ?
Aranda's problem is that he's on his third straight rebuilding year and fourth in five seasons.
As I understand it Traylor has lived off of the same core skill players on offense his entire tenure until this season. It could have been smoke an mirrors perhaps it wasn't. If and it is still early and a big " if" we make a move this year and I hope we don't need to, I do not think we should take someone who has had a bad or even a mediocre season. Additionally something that has always concerned me is that even when he was supposedly a hot name, Tech, SMU, A&M and UH all went a different direction after vetting him.
UTSA is 2-3 and 0-1 in conference this year. If he is kicking but in a season or 2, then I think he's a lock for a move up. I wouldn't pull the trigger on him yet though.
Sometimes things get so dark, you just have to laugh.jikespingleton said:Didn't realize it was comedy hourBellCountyBear said:
Tim Tebow.
Take a breath and think about it before responding. It could be a match made in heaven.
His key players were their from the time he started, until last year. Sure he had to replace dudes each year, like everyone, but his core +10 dudes were there...for years and he built off those guys. Just like most programs strive to do. I'm not singling out Traylor for having super seniors, far from it.bear2be2 said:He graduated key players off each of those teams and kept it rolling longer than most programs do. And who do you guys think recruited those players to UTSA and developed them?morethanhecouldbear said:It may not be smoke and mirrors, but it's clear that having the same core group + extra years due to COVID helped a lot of teams, including UTSA. That and Traylor didn't recruit most of those guys. His core players were already there and just about all of those guys are gone now.bear2be2 said:You can't smoke and mirrors your way to 32 wins in three seasons at UTSA. That program was nothing before he got there. Any success he's had there is his and his alone.PartyBear said:bear2be2 said:Exactly. Single rebuilding years aren't a problem. They're a fact of life for any school that doesn't recruit at an elite level.IowaBear said:
Is Traylor coming off a 3-9 season? What about Kinne? What about Sumrall ?
Aranda's problem is that he's on his third straight rebuilding year and fourth in five seasons.
As I understand it Traylor has lived off of the same core skill players on offense his entire tenure until this season. It could have been smoke an mirrors perhaps it wasn't. If and it is still early and a big " if" we make a move this year and I hope we don't need to, I do not think we should take someone who has had a bad or even a mediocre season. Additionally something that has always concerned me is that even when he was supposedly a hot name, Tech, SMU, A&M and UH all went a different direction after vetting him.
UTSA is 2-3 and 0-1 in conference this year. If he is kicking but in a season or 2, then I think he's a lock for a move up. I wouldn't pull the trigger on him yet though.
It's been reported he turned both Tech and Houston down. He's been well taken care of by UTSA and has never been a job-hopper, even dating back to his high school days. To my knowledge, A&M is the only job he's been up for that went another direction, and they hire from a different talent pool than those other places ... or at least think they do. Traylor wasn't a big enough name for their fans, who later mutinied over Mark Stoops.PartyBear said:Yet as mentioned for some reason SMU, A&M, Tech and UH have all gone a different direction upon vetting. That should at least be a reddish flag.Robert Wilson said:Traylor's network in Texas HS coaching and in college coaching circles, along with his personality, makes me think he's well suited to attract and manage a staff and a roster. I think he's strong exactly where Aranda is weak.bear2be2 said:He graduated key players off each of those teams and kept it rolling longer than most programs do. And who do you guys think recruited those players to UTSA and developed them?morethanhecouldbear said:It may not be smoke and mirrors, but it's clear that having the same core group + extra years due to COVID helped a lot of teams, including UTSA. That and Traylor didn't recruit most of those guys. His core players were already there and just about all of those guys are gone now.bear2be2 said:You can't smoke and mirrors your way to 32 wins in three seasons at UTSA. That program was nothing before he got there. Any success he's had there is his and his alone.PartyBear said:bear2be2 said:Exactly. Single rebuilding years aren't a problem. They're a fact of life for any school that doesn't recruit at an elite level.IowaBear said:
Is Traylor coming off a 3-9 season? What about Kinne? What about Sumrall ?
Aranda's problem is that he's on his third straight rebuilding year and fourth in five seasons.
As I understand it Traylor has lived off of the same core skill players on offense his entire tenure until this season. It could have been smoke an mirrors perhaps it wasn't. If and it is still early and a big " if" we make a move this year and I hope we don't need to, I do not think we should take someone who has had a bad or even a mediocre season. Additionally something that has always concerned me is that even when he was supposedly a hot name, Tech, SMU, A&M and UH all went a different direction after vetting him.
UTSA is 2-3 and 0-1 in conference this year. If he is kicking but in a season or 2, then I think he's a lock for a move up. I wouldn't pull the trigger on him yet though.
No, they weren't. Some of you guys just talk out of your asses.morethanhecouldbear said:His key players were their from the time he started, until last year. Sure he had to replace dudes each year, like everyone, but his core +10 dudes were there...for years.bear2be2 said:He graduated key players off each of those teams and kept it rolling longer than most programs do. And who do you guys think recruited those players to UTSA and developed them?morethanhecouldbear said:It may not be smoke and mirrors, but it's clear that having the same core group + extra years due to COVID helped a lot of teams, including UTSA. That and Traylor didn't recruit most of those guys. His core players were already there and just about all of those guys are gone now.bear2be2 said:You can't smoke and mirrors your way to 32 wins in three seasons at UTSA. That program was nothing before he got there. Any success he's had there is his and his alone.PartyBear said:bear2be2 said:Exactly. Single rebuilding years aren't a problem. They're a fact of life for any school that doesn't recruit at an elite level.IowaBear said:
Is Traylor coming off a 3-9 season? What about Kinne? What about Sumrall ?
Aranda's problem is that he's on his third straight rebuilding year and fourth in five seasons.
As I understand it Traylor has lived off of the same core skill players on offense his entire tenure until this season. It could have been smoke an mirrors perhaps it wasn't. If and it is still early and a big " if" we make a move this year and I hope we don't need to, I do not think we should take someone who has had a bad or even a mediocre season. Additionally something that has always concerned me is that even when he was supposedly a hot name, Tech, SMU, A&M and UH all went a different direction after vetting him.
UTSA is 2-3 and 0-1 in conference this year. If he is kicking but in a season or 2, then I think he's a lock for a move up. I wouldn't pull the trigger on him yet though.
This is his first year with just his guys and the team looks bad early on.
For that reason I'm thinking another year or two and we'll see how things look.
Yeah it's a high bar. Perhaps Traylor has surpassed that bar. This is his 5th or 6th season, so maybe we have enough of a sample size.Aberzombie1892 said:The challenge is that it's difficult to gauge how good a HC is unless he's been at a single place for an extended period and won the majority of the time that he was there,PartyBear said:bear2be2 said:Exactly. Single rebuilding years aren't a problem. They're a fact of life for any school that doesn't recruit at an elite level.IowaBear said:
Is Traylor coming off a 3-9 season? What about Kinne? What about Sumrall ?
Aranda's problem is that he's on his third straight rebuilding year and fourth in five seasons.
As I understand it Traylor has lived off of the same core skill players on offense his entire tenure until this season. It could have been smoke and mirrors perhaps it wasn't. If and it is still early and a big " if" we make a move this year and I hope we don't need to, I do not think we should take someone who has had a bad or even a mediocre season. Additionally something that has always concerned me is that even when he was supposedly a hot name and having great seasons Tech, SMU, A&M and UH all went a different direction after vetting him.
Yeah, I read that as "opportunity" rather than necessarily as "warning."bear2be2 said:It's been reported he turned both Tech and Houston down. He's been well taken care of by UTSA and has never been a job-hopper, even dating back to his high school days. To my knowledge, A&M is the only job he's been up for that went another direction, and they hire from a different talent pool than those other places ... or at least think they do. Traylor wasn't a big enough name for their fans, who later mutinied over Mark Stoops.PartyBear said:Yet as mentioned for some reason SMU, A&M, Tech and UH have all gone a different direction upon vetting. That should at least be a reddish flag.Robert Wilson said:Traylor's network in Texas HS coaching and in college coaching circles, along with his personality, makes me think he's well suited to attract and manage a staff and a roster. I think he's strong exactly where Aranda is weak.bear2be2 said:He graduated key players off each of those teams and kept it rolling longer than most programs do. And who do you guys think recruited those players to UTSA and developed them?morethanhecouldbear said:It may not be smoke and mirrors, but it's clear that having the same core group + extra years due to COVID helped a lot of teams, including UTSA. That and Traylor didn't recruit most of those guys. His core players were already there and just about all of those guys are gone now.bear2be2 said:You can't smoke and mirrors your way to 32 wins in three seasons at UTSA. That program was nothing before he got there. Any success he's had there is his and his alone.PartyBear said:bear2be2 said:Exactly. Single rebuilding years aren't a problem. They're a fact of life for any school that doesn't recruit at an elite level.IowaBear said:
Is Traylor coming off a 3-9 season? What about Kinne? What about Sumrall ?
Aranda's problem is that he's on his third straight rebuilding year and fourth in five seasons.
As I understand it Traylor has lived off of the same core skill players on offense his entire tenure until this season. It could have been smoke an mirrors perhaps it wasn't. If and it is still early and a big " if" we make a move this year and I hope we don't need to, I do not think we should take someone who has had a bad or even a mediocre season. Additionally something that has always concerned me is that even when he was supposedly a hot name, Tech, SMU, A&M and UH all went a different direction after vetting him.
UTSA is 2-3 and 0-1 in conference this year. If he is kicking but in a season or 2, then I think he's a lock for a move up. I wouldn't pull the trigger on him yet though.
Yes, they were.bear2be2 said:No, they weren'tmorethanhecouldbear said:His key players were their from the time he started, until last year. Sure he had to replace dudes each year, like everyone, but his core +10 dudes were there...for years.bear2be2 said:He graduated key players off each of those teams and kept it rolling longer than most programs do. And who do you guys think recruited those players to UTSA and developed them?morethanhecouldbear said:It may not be smoke and mirrors, but it's clear that having the same core group + extra years due to COVID helped a lot of teams, including UTSA. That and Traylor didn't recruit most of those guys. His core players were already there and just about all of those guys are gone now.bear2be2 said:You can't smoke and mirrors your way to 32 wins in three seasons at UTSA. That program was nothing before he got there. Any success he's had there is his and his alone.PartyBear said:bear2be2 said:Exactly. Single rebuilding years aren't a problem. They're a fact of life for any school that doesn't recruit at an elite level.IowaBear said:
Is Traylor coming off a 3-9 season? What about Kinne? What about Sumrall ?
Aranda's problem is that he's on his third straight rebuilding year and fourth in five seasons.
As I understand it Traylor has lived off of the same core skill players on offense his entire tenure until this season. It could have been smoke an mirrors perhaps it wasn't. If and it is still early and a big " if" we make a move this year and I hope we don't need to, I do not think we should take someone who has had a bad or even a mediocre season. Additionally something that has always concerned me is that even when he was supposedly a hot name, Tech, SMU, A&M and UH all went a different direction after vetting him.
UTSA is 2-3 and 0-1 in conference this year. If he is kicking but in a season or 2, then I think he's a lock for a move up. I wouldn't pull the trigger on him yet though.
This is his first year with just his guys and the team looks bad early on.
For that reason I'm thinking another year or two and we'll see how things look.
Frank Harris and Joshua Cephus both graduated after last year, but they've been losing key parts of their offense every year for the last three.
After losing all those guys, they were always due a rebuilding year. But they've lost and replaced key players before in Traylor's tenure.
I think he is in year 5 right now.morethanhecouldbear said:Yeah it's a high bar. Perhaps Traylor has surpassed that bar. This is his 6th season, so maybe we have enough of a sample size.Aberzombie1892 said:The challenge is that it's difficult to gauge how good a HC is unless he's been at a single place for an extended period and won the majority of the time that he was there,PartyBear said:bear2be2 said:Exactly. Single rebuilding years aren't a problem. They're a fact of life for any school that doesn't recruit at an elite level.IowaBear said:
Is Traylor coming off a 3-9 season? What about Kinne? What about Sumrall ?
Aranda's problem is that he's on his third straight rebuilding year and fourth in five seasons.
As I understand it Traylor has lived off of the same core skill players on offense his entire tenure until this season. It could have been smoke and mirrors perhaps it wasn't. If and it is still early and a big " if" we make a move this year and I hope we don't need to, I do not think we should take someone who has had a bad or even a mediocre season. Additionally something that has always concerned me is that even when he was supposedly a hot name and having great seasons Tech, SMU, A&M and UH all went a different direction after vetting him.
I'd still like to see how this year goes - it's his first without his 7 year veteran QB and the large covid group that left last year.
McCormick was an all-American -- the only all-American ever for UTSA.morethanhecouldbear said:Yes, they were.bear2be2 said:No, they weren'tmorethanhecouldbear said:His key players were their from the time he started, until last year. Sure he had to replace dudes each year, like everyone, but his core +10 dudes were there...for years.bear2be2 said:He graduated key players off each of those teams and kept it rolling longer than most programs do. And who do you guys think recruited those players to UTSA and developed them?morethanhecouldbear said:It may not be smoke and mirrors, but it's clear that having the same core group + extra years due to COVID helped a lot of teams, including UTSA. That and Traylor didn't recruit most of those guys. His core players were already there and just about all of those guys are gone now.bear2be2 said:You can't smoke and mirrors your way to 32 wins in three seasons at UTSA. That program was nothing before he got there. Any success he's had there is his and his alone.PartyBear said:bear2be2 said:Exactly. Single rebuilding years aren't a problem. They're a fact of life for any school that doesn't recruit at an elite level.IowaBear said:
Is Traylor coming off a 3-9 season? What about Kinne? What about Sumrall ?
Aranda's problem is that he's on his third straight rebuilding year and fourth in five seasons.
As I understand it Traylor has lived off of the same core skill players on offense his entire tenure until this season. It could have been smoke an mirrors perhaps it wasn't. If and it is still early and a big " if" we make a move this year and I hope we don't need to, I do not think we should take someone who has had a bad or even a mediocre season. Additionally something that has always concerned me is that even when he was supposedly a hot name, Tech, SMU, A&M and UH all went a different direction after vetting him.
UTSA is 2-3 and 0-1 in conference this year. If he is kicking but in a season or 2, then I think he's a lock for a move up. I wouldn't pull the trigger on him yet though.
This is his first year with just his guys and the team looks bad early on.
For that reason I'm thinking another year or two and we'll see how things look.
Frank Harris and Joshua Cephus both graduated after last year, but they've been losing key parts of their offense every year for the last three.
After losing all those guys, they were always due a rebuilding year. But they've lost and replaced key players before in Traylor's tenure.
Harris was the key guy. They had super seniors all over the roster, including OL, DL and Cephus.
I want to see how UTSA does for a full season with Harris gone.
So far Traylor is 3-8 when Harris isn't under center and they lost to Texas St and E. Carolina a combined 79-30
UTSA is struggling to move the ball and it's not a coincidence with Cephus, key OL and Harris not being there anymore.
Two years!!! Oh, please, not that long. How about 2 months?PartyBear said:
Who Baylor should look at should a change occur in the next 2 years .........
bear2be2 said:McCormick was an all-American -- the only all-American ever for UTSA.morethanhecouldbear said:Yes, they were.bear2be2 said:No, they weren'tmorethanhecouldbear said:His key player Harris was there from the time he started, until last year. Sure he had to replace dudes each year, like everyone, but his core +10 dudes were there...for years.bear2be2 said:He graduated key players off each of those teams and kept it rolling longer than most programs do. And who do you guys think recruited those players to UTSA and developed them?morethanhecouldbear said:It may not be smoke and mirrors, but it's clear that having the same core group + extra years due to COVID helped a lot of teams, including UTSA. That and Traylor didn't recruit most of those guys. His core players were already there and just about all of those guys are gone now.bear2be2 said:You can't smoke and mirrors your way to 32 wins in three seasons at UTSA. That program was nothing before he got there. Any success he's had there is his and his alone.PartyBear said:bear2be2 said:Exactly. Single rebuilding years aren't a problem. They're a fact of life for any school that doesn't recruit at an elite level.IowaBear said:
Is Traylor coming off a 3-9 season? What about Kinne? What about Sumrall ?
Aranda's problem is that he's on his third straight rebuilding year and fourth in five seasons.
As I understand it Traylor has lived off of the same core skill players on offense his entire tenure until this season. It could have been smoke an mirrors perhaps it wasn't. If and it is still early and a big " if" we make a move this year and I hope we don't need to, I do not think we should take someone who has had a bad or even a mediocre season. Additionally something that has always concerned me is that even when he was supposedly a hot name, Tech, SMU, A&M and UH all went a different direction after vetting him.
UTSA is 2-3 and 0-1 in conference this year. If he is kicking but in a season or 2, then I think he's a lock for a move up. I wouldn't pull the trigger on him yet though.
This is his first year with just his guys and the team looks bad early on.
For that reason I'm thinking another year or two and we'll see how things look.
Frank Harris and Joshua Cephus both graduated after last year, but they've been losing key parts of their offense every year for the last three.
After losing all those guys, they were always due a rebuilding year. But they've lost and replaced key players before in Traylor's tenure.
Harris was the key guy. They had super seniors all over the roster, including OL, DL and Cephus.
I want to see how UTSA does for a full season with Harris gone.
So far Traylor is 3-8 when Harris isn't under center and they lost to Texas St and E. Carolina a combined 79-30
UTSA is struggling to move the ball and it's not a coincidence with Cephus, key OL and Harris not being there anymore.
And Franklin left as the program's all-time leading receiver, before being passed by Cephus (in an extra season) last year.
You're wrong. Just admit it.
Harris was a big loss. And Traylor will have to find or develop a quarterback to get UTSA back where it was. But this season was a long time coming.
Group of 5 programs don't lose the talent they've lost the last three seasons and not feel it. Hell, teams at our level don't either.