sdhusky
1972,73 & 98 Boneyard Poster of the Year
- Joined
- Aug 24, 2011
- Messages
- 9,262
- Reaction Score
- 6,550
Completely disagree. Diaco in his own words learned from some of his mistakes. I was very consistent in his first year. I didn't care as much about the results because I knew where the the program was.
I didn't want to see the QB carousel prior to Casey getting hurt.
I wanted Geremy Davis on the field on 3rd & 7.
I didn't want to hear the BS he was trying to sell which, IMO, lead to the team quitting at the end of the year (and make no mistake, the team absolutely quit).
He's gotten a lot better with those things. I haven't ripped him for any of that. Some of the things that have carried over to last year: the use of TO's because we can't get a play in and the mind boggling in game decisions (last play at Mizzou).
I don't think he needed to do all those things to get to 6-6 last year. But whatever, I've moved on and thankfully the team has to.
Conference championship in year 3 is very ambitious. I don't think we're there yet but I also didn't see 6-6 coming last year either. So there's that.
Diaco will say he is learning every day of his coaching career. That's his DNA.
The QB carousel was because he knew Casey was one hit from being not available. We didn't know it at the time.
The team didn't not "absolutely quit". That is total BS. They got ground down. BIG F- DIFFERENCE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
But here is the bottomline
You spent his entire first year whining and complaining about how terrible he was and wah wah wah, woe is me, woe is me. They sky is falling, I've soiled my shorts...
Meanwhile Diaco kept grinding.
And now he is winning but instead of admitting what is obvious to everyone - the guy had a plan and worked it - you have to save your ego and pretend we lost because of poor coaching and not a poor program.
