VolFan4Life87
Negatron
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The author does not appear to precisely define his criteria; it says only that "Below is a complete list of each FBS coach and his record when he has had extra time to prepare for a game." That could include an additional day of preparation, a true bye week or time elapsed prior to a bowl game. Rifleman provided this data (http://www.volnation.com/forum/tennessee-vols-football/205574-butch-jones-record-10-days-off.html) on 10/16/2013, which was prior to the post-bye week games against South Carolina and Vanderbilt:
"Butch Jones record with 10+ days off: 11-4 Updated numbers to reflect USC win.
Folks. This is going to be a great game this weekend, but I have no doubt our guys will be ready.
Why? With 10+ days rest:
* Coach Jones' teams are 11-4, including bowl games.
* They have won 10 of the last 12.
* They have won 8 of the last 9.
* The last five victims are Va Tech, Vandy, Pitt, Louisville and South Carolina.
* The last loss came at West Virginia in 2010, a team that finished #22 in the BCS rankings.
* The loss at West Virginia is Butch's only loss with the full bye week, 14 days rest before a non-bowl game. Interestingly, WVU had 15 days rest before this one, having played on a Friday before a bye week.
* 3 of the 4 losses were by 3 points."
Unfortunately, Rifleman does not cite his source for this data; it may well reflect his own independent research. However, defined in this fashion, Butch's record with additional time to prepare is even more impressive.
Incidentally, am I correct to assume that, within this context, ATS means "against the spread"? If so, that isn't necessarily a true win-loss record but a record of how frequently they beat the spread in games played with additional preparation time.
I don't blame his gameplan. He had the team in position to win.
He can't force Pig to not block in the back, or the Oline to get a push for one yard, or the defense to stop Vandy from converting on 4th down.
Clearly the information posted above is out of date. As previously noted, Butch's last loss after a bye week was at home, to Vanderbilt, in a game he was favored to win, after a full bye week.
My post referenced above was my research last updated before the Vandy game. I believe I only included non-openers with 10 or more days of prep. These are games where both teams have film on the current opponent's roster, which is a key difference from the opener.
To sum up, with 10+ days rest:
* Butch Jones is 11-5 as a head coach
* is 10-6 against the spread
* Has lost 3 times as the favorite: in 2007, 2008 and 2013
* Has won 4 times as the underdog: 2008, 2011, 2012, 2013
A lot of smart people look at bye week data like this in order to rate head coach quality. What the data says to me is that Butch is an above average coach, but not a great one. But it also seems to indicate that he is improving with a bye week upset in each of the last 3 seasons.
If he gets a bye week upset this year it will have to be at Georgia. I fully expect this to be just as close as it was last year in Neyland, coming down to a play or two at the end.
If he can't beat Vanderbilt straight up in a game where he started 13 4 star recruits, then he really doesn't deserve all the myriad of excuses you folks make for him.
If he can't beat Vanderbilt straight up in a game where he started 13 4 star recruits, then he really doesn't deserve all the myriad of excuses you folks make for him.
Franklin's 3 recruiting classes were roughly the same as Dooley's 3 classes, and those were the kids mainly playing in that game last season, so there was not the disparity between the 2 teams that some of you want to believe. Butch is changing that, but it was not the case last season. Throw in an 18-year old QB with no decent targets other than Pig after North went out, and it's not a shock.
Butch will curbstomp Vandy's ass this season and won't need the players to help him do it.
Interesting point to be made here. Who in the SEC would you say is an elite coach? The data in that PDF shows that Butch is better ATS with time to prepare than coaches who many people feel are elite.
To be very clear, I am not disagreeing with you at all. In fact, as per usual, I tend to agree with most of what you are saying.
Clearly you failed to read my introductory remarks in which I stated that the data presented by Rifleman were posted prior to the Vanderbilt game. Why do you insist on being so incessantly negative?
Franklin's 3 recruiting classes were roughly the same as Dooley's 3 classes
and those were the kids mainly playing in that game last season, so there was not the disparity between the 2 teams that some of you want to believe.
Butch is changing that, but it was not the case last season. Throw in an 18-year old QB with no decent targets other than Pig after North went out,
and it's not a shock.
Butch will curbstomp Vandy's ass this season and won't need the players to help him do it.
My honest belief is that while there are several great recruiters, there is no elite game coach right now in the SEC. When I think of elite coaches I think of brilliant game plans--guys who solve problems no one else has come close to solving. See Bill Snyder holding Auburn to a 2.8 ypc average last night. Crazy!
Young Spurrier was the best I've seen in my lifetime at coming up with a genius gameplan. The 1992 SEC Championship--even though Florida lost to probably the best defense this side of General Neyland's in '39--was unbelievable. They should have been blown out, but he figured out how to use Bama's strengths against them and they nearly won. Maybe Spurrier can still do that from time to time, but as we saw him get outcoached last year in Neyland, it becomes clear he does not have to fire to stay at that level of excellence.
Having said that, the best formula these days is likely to have a great recruiter and motivator at HC along with very strong coordinators and position coaches who share his philosophy. I definitely think by that matrix this staff can and will be elite in the terms of wins and losses.
I also think that Coach Jones is flexible enough to grow with the game, spot important new trends and always stay ahead of the learning curve on both sides of the ball without being compelled to chase the latest gimmickry. We've seen a lot of dominant coaches who could not do that and were eventually swallowed up. Even General Neyland stayed with an outmoded offensive scheme too long.
SIAP
I couldn't see it because I don't have a VIP account, but 247 Sports did an article on Butch always being tough after Bye weeks. Anyone with a membership care to tell us what the article says and if it tells us his record after byes?
My honest belief is that while there are several great recruiters, there is no elite game coach right now in the SEC. When I think of elite coaches I think of brilliant game plans--guys who solve problems no one else has come close to solving. See Bill Snyder holding Auburn to a 2.8 ypc average last night. Crazy!
Young Spurrier was the best I've seen in my lifetime at coming up with a genius gameplan. The 1992 SEC Championship--even though Florida lost to probably the best defense this side of General Neyland's in '39--was unbelievable. They should have been blown out, but he figured out how to use Bama's strengths against them and they nearly won. Maybe Spurrier can still do that from time to time, but as we saw him get outcoached last year in Neyland, it becomes clear he does not have to fire to stay at that level of excellence.
Having said that, the best formula these days is likely to have a great recruiter and motivator at HC along with very strong coordinators and position coaches who share his philosophy. I definitely think by that matrix this staff can and will be elite in the terms of wins and losses.
I also think that Coach Jones is flexible enough to grow with the game, spot important new trends and always stay ahead of the learning curve on both sides of the ball without being compelled to chase the latest gimmickry. We've seen a lot of dominant coaches who could not do that and were eventually swallowed up. Even General Neyland stayed with an outmoded offensive scheme too long.
Franklin's 3 recruiting classes were roughly the same as Dooley's 3 classes, and those were the kids mainly playing in that game last season, so there was not the disparity between the 2 teams that some of you want to believe. Butch is changing that, but it was not the case last season. Throw in an 18-year old QB with no decent targets other than Pig after North went out, and it's not a shock.
Butch will curbstomp Vandy's ass this season and won't need the players to help him do it.
I agree on every point except your last sentence. Clearly our program stayed with the single wing long after everyone else in the country had abandoned it and we paid the consequences by losing homegrown passing quarterbacks such as Steve Spurrier and Steve Sloan because of it. However, given the fact that the General won a national championship in his next to last season and, in his last season, we still finished 8th in both polls, I don't believe that he can justifiably be accused of staying with it too long. According to Ben Byrd, long-term columnist for the Knoxville Journal, Neyland stated that Everybody thought that I was absolutely married to the single-wing offense and crazy about it and just wouldnt change because I was too stubborn. Frankly, I didnt give a **** about any kind of offense. The only reason I went to the single-wing, with a balanced line, was that it gave me a little quicker power between tackle and end. . . . I never worried about offense at all. I would have gone to the T if I felt that it offered me anything that I didnt already have (fast-forward to the 8:40 mark of https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cBWJgoBZTeM).
Speaking of Kansas States defense of Auburns running attack, do you or any of our more schematically oriented observers have an explanation for what Snyder specifically did to throttle Malzahns offense so effectively? I only saw bits and pieces of that game.
hey Butch still liking those Big East plays you run; but, come on.....yes, they are freshmen, but the quote in today's Tennessean.....17 and 18 year olds????
now how many of those, long ago identified talent, were probably held back somewhere in their "education", and are older than the typical college freshmen.
call them freshmen, but don't call them 17, 18 year old boys. That quote is getting old.