Sid: Fleck said Tanner Morgan’s starting spot at quarterback is far from guaranteed.

If a coach truly isn't interested in winning right away, it will usually manifest itself in 2 ways. (1) - the coach will basically ignore Jucos and grad transfers in the recruiting process to focus exclusively on high school recruits. (2) Players on the team that were starters will be benched in favor of younger guys, i.e. the new coach's recruits. Neither of these happened under Fleck. People continue to falsely believe that PJ doesn't heavily recruit Jucos and grad transfers even though I would imagine he's averaged more per class than Kill ever did. I also can't think of a single upperclassmen who was expected to start or contribute heavily that was suddenly benched for someone who didn't appear to be significantly better.


Morgan was a true freshman when we had to endure Rhoda and Demry. Even the best of freshmen might not be ready right away, so I wouldn't say that playing a 5th year senior and 3rd year sophomore was sacrificing the season. As for Brohm, I have no idea what he's brought in for Jucos and transfers.

Don't have numbers on transfers but would agree Fleck has brought in more transfers then other recent coaches here. Although I don't think many of them were grad transfers out side of MDT.

This is rough based on a quick glance at the recruiting sites so someone will maybe need to get better numbers but from what I can see Fleck has not recruited JC guys heavily at all. I may have missed a few but this is what I came up with in terms of JUCO players.

Fleck
2017 - 2
2018 - 2
2019 - 2

Claeys
2016 - 5

Kill
2011 - 2
2012 - 4
2013 - 3
2014 - 2
2015 - 1

Brohm at Purdue
2017 - At least 6 JC guys and I know he brought in a handful of transfers as well. His last couple classes have been heavy with high school recruits but he brought in a bunch of upper classmen to play in 2017 and 2018 which is why they graduated a ton of players off of last year's offense.
 

The stuff in bold would have been true if Claeys had still been the coach yet there are still those that maintain 2017 would have bee a good year without the coaching change. The defense might have been fine under Claeys that year but that offensive trainwreck was easy to see coming from a mile away.

Good Year? That is subjective, but I think it takes significant effort to not think 2017 would have been <b>better </b>w/o the coaching change. With that said, I doubt 2019 would look as promising w/o it either. Short-term pain, long-term gain seems to fit.


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Don't have numbers on transfers but would agree Fleck has brought in more transfers then other recent coaches here. Although I don't think many of them were grad transfers out side of MDT.

This is rough based on a quick glance at the recruiting sites so someone will maybe need to get better numbers but from what I can see Fleck has not recruited JC guys heavily at all. I may have missed a few but this is what I came up with in terms of JUCO players.

Fleck
2017 - 4 (Chris Williamson, OJ Smith, Royal Silver, Ben Davis)
2018 - 2 (Viramontes, Dickson)
2019 - 5 (Schad, Clemmons, Owens, Dew-Treadway, Grimes)

Claeys
2016 - 5

Kill
2011 - 2
2012 - 4
2013 - 3
2014 - 2
2015 - 1

Brohm at Purdue
2017 - At least 6 JC guys and I know he brought in a handful of transfers as well. His last couple classes have been heavy with high school recruits but he brought in a bunch of upper classmen to play in 2017 and 2018 which is why they graduated a ton of players off of last year's offense.

Thanks for pulling this together. Fleck's numbers are significantly higher if transfers (grad and regular) are included - which they should be as they are serving the same purpose as a Juco - plug holes and get better quickly.

So Fleck has taken 11 Jucos and transfers in 3 years for an average of 3.7/class.
Kill took 12 in 5 years for an average of 2.4/class.
Claeys was the highest in his one season with 5.

So Fleck has averaged more than 1 Juco/transfer per year than Kill did. Yet Kill has the reputation of dipping heavily into the Juco ranks, and PJ is viewed as someone who spurns them.
 

Thanks for pulling this together. Fleck's numbers are significantly higher if transfers (grad and regular) are included - which they should be as they are serving the same purpose as a Juco - plug holes and get better quickly.

So Fleck has taken 11 Jucos and transfers in 3 years for an average of 3.7/class.
Kill took 12 in 5 years for an average of 2.4/class.
Claeys was the highest in his one season with 5.

So Fleck has averaged more than 1 Juco/transfer per year than Kill did. Yet Kill has the reputation of dipping heavily into the Juco ranks, and PJ is viewed as someone who spurns them.

I think PJs reputation probably came from some statements he made early in his time here where he made it sound like he didn't want to go the JUCO route. He definitely switched modes for year 2 (or year 1 as he would say).

I applaud him for the change though. I think sometimes PJ makes statements about things that sound like they are absolutes, but in this case I think he realized he was wrong and wasn't too stubborn to change. I think that's a good quality to have.
 

The unanswerable question of course is was the conservative offense they ran by design or was it more due to a lack of ability to find/develop playmakers on the offensive side of the ball? They did a solid job of finding RBs but their track record with QBs, WRs and to a lesser degree OL was not good. As a staff their recruiting strength was clearly on the defensive side of the ball where they found a number of solid under the radar guys.

They didn't really have the option of trying to run a dynamic offense because they simply didn't have the personnel to do it. Contrast that against what we are seeing develop right now in regards to an offense with playmakers all over the place working behind what looks like it could be a really good offensive line.

Yes kind of. This actually goes back to Mason. Kill and Mason had some similiarities. Both loved to coach, and both knew that if you play "fundamentals" football, you will win more than you lose. Even if at a SLIGHT talent deficit. I agree that part of it was who Kill and Claeys could bring in. The other part is they REALLY loved being teaching coaches. This is my opinion of course, but I think it is true. IMHO Confidence in teaching ability and the ability to spot a football player, no matter how raw, kind of influenced how they recruited. When you look at the progression of the program, and the players that were there in that era, you could see the growth.

Same with Fleck's program to a degree. What I like about Fleck is he has networked in/ surrounded himself with personnel that are strong where he is "weak".

The state of the program is strong! and getting stronger.
 


Thanks for pulling this together. Fleck's numbers are significantly higher if transfers (grad and regular) are included - which they should be as they are serving the same purpose as a Juco - plug holes and get better quickly.

So Fleck has taken 11 Jucos and transfers in 3 years for an average of 3.7/class.
Kill took 12 in 5 years for an average of 2.4/class.
Claeys was the highest in his one season with 5.

So Fleck has averaged more than 1 Juco/transfer per year than Kill did. Yet Kill has the reputation of dipping heavily into the Juco ranks, and PJ is viewed as someone who spurns them.

My numbers for Kill and Claeys didn't include any transfers they may have brought in so that might shift things some, those are just JUCO guys. On the JUCO front Fleck is pretty similar to Kill, but agree that he has been far more active at bringing in transfers and promising looking transfers at that.
 

Don't have numbers on transfers but would agree Fleck has brought in more transfers then other recent coaches here. Although I don't think many of them were grad transfers out side of MDT.

This is rough based on a quick glance at the recruiting sites so someone will maybe need to get better numbers but from what I can see Fleck has not recruited JC guys heavily at all. I may have missed a few but this is what I came up with in terms of JUCO players.

Fleck
2017 - 2
2018 - 2
2019 - 2

Claeys
2016 - 5

Kill
2011 - 2
2012 - 4
2013 - 3
2014 - 2
2015 - 1

Brohm at Purdue
2017 - At least 6 JC guys and I know he brought in a handful of transfers as well. His last couple classes have been heavy with high school recruits but he brought in a bunch of upper classmen to play in 2017 and 2018 which is why they graduated a ton of players off of last year's offense.

He made a conscious decision to try to win right away and he turned that into the top 25 class for 2019. PJ is taking a more circuitous route and arguments can be made for that but nationally in terms of hype and recruiting Brohm’s approach paid off more early. Will it hold true going forward? MN looks ready to compete for the west. This is going to be fun (I hope).
 

Thanks for pulling this together. Fleck's numbers are significantly higher if transfers (grad and regular) are included - which they should be as they are serving the same purpose as a Juco - plug holes and get better quickly.

So Fleck has taken 11 Jucos and transfers in 3 years for an average of 3.7/class.
Kill took 12 in 5 years for an average of 2.4/class.
Claeys was the highest in his one season with 5.

So Fleck has averaged more than 1 Juco/transfer per year than Kill did. Yet Kill has the reputation of dipping heavily into the Juco ranks, and PJ is viewed as someone who spurns them.

And for all we know PJ would rather not go the JUCO route a lot but ... like all good coach's he is pragmatic.
 

Yes kind of. This actually goes back to Mason. Kill and Mason had some similiarities. Both loved to coach, and both knew that if you play "fundamentals" football, you will win more than you lose. Even if at a SLIGHT talent deficit. I agree that part of it was who Kill and Claeys could bring in. The other part is they REALLY loved being teaching coaches. This is my opinion of course, but I think it is true. IMHO Confidence in teaching ability and the ability to spot a football player, no matter how raw, kind of influenced how they recruited. When you look at the progression of the program, and the players that were there in that era, you could see the growth.

Same with Fleck's program to a degree. What I like about Fleck is he has networked in/ surrounded himself with personnel that are strong where he is "weak".

The state of the program is strong! and getting stronger.

You are spot on with Mason and Kill being very similar in terms of a lot of things and especially recruiting. Both were strong on one side of the ball (Offense for Mason, Defense for Kill) and knew how to identify guys that fit their mold on that side of the ball. At the same time both really struggled to find the same consistent success on the other side of the ball.

Kill and Mason also shared very similar recruiting philosophies. They didn't want to go to war with the helmet schools (or even other BIG schools a lot of the time) for players and instead chose to focus their efforts on the next tier/under the radar guys. They were good at finding those players who might be a bit undersized or a step slow but were still very good football players that fit their mold. It was the kind of recruiting that makes you a good team but also makes it really hard to become a great team.

Fleck is willing to pursue some of those higher level recruits and go to war with other schools in the BIG for players. He is very similar to Brewster in this way with the obvious difference being that Fleck has a vision for his program whereas Brewster was learning on the job and had no clue what he was doing or any business even being a head coach at a power 5 school.
 



He made a conscious decision to try to win right away and he turned that into the top 25 class for 2019. PJ is taking a more circuitous route and arguments can be made for that but nationally in terms of hype and recruiting Brohm’s approach paid off more early. Will it hold true going forward? MN looks ready to compete for the west. This is going to be fun (I hope).

Yep...there really is no way to predict the West right now because there are a bunch of teams that all look like they could have a shot at winning it this season. Could easily see this being one of those years where no team in the division has a great record because they all beat up on each other. Hopefully the Gophers can find a way to end up on top when the dust settles.
 

Thanks for pulling this together. Fleck's numbers are significantly higher if transfers (grad and regular) are included - which they should be as they are serving the same purpose as a Juco - plug holes and get better quickly.

So Fleck has taken 11 Jucos and transfers in 3 years for an average of 3.7/class.
Kill took 12 in 5 years for an average of 2.4/class.
Claeys was the highest in his one season with 5.

So Fleck has averaged more than 1 Juco/transfer per year than Kill did. Yet Kill has the reputation of dipping heavily into the Juco ranks, and PJ is viewed as someone who spurns them.

Did you include the transfers Kill brought in? I think Kill brought in Beal and the OSU o-lineman off the top of my head. Not sure if theres others but not seeing them accounted for
 

Did you include the transfers Kill brought in? I think Kill brought in Beal and the OSU o-lineman off the top of my head. Not sure if theres others but not seeing them accounted for

That was the main reason I left transfers out because I couldn't remember who we brought in that way during the Kill years. The OSU lineman that never panned out was definitely one but I would guess there were a few others a long the way. Definitely feels like Fleck is more willing to go after transfers but tough to say for sure without being positive how many the previous staffs brought in.
 

That was the main reason I left transfers out because I couldn't remember who we brought in that way during the Kill years. The OSU lineman that never panned out was definitely one but I would guess there were a few others a long the way. Definitely feels like Fleck is more willing to go after transfers but tough to say for sure without being positive how many the previous staffs brought in.

No issues with your analysis. JG included transfers in his numbers but not sure in the Kill numbers. Trying to keep it apples to apples but also too lazy to look at that many years worth of rosters and try to figure it out
 



You are spot on with Mason and Kill being very similar in terms of a lot of things and especially recruiting. Both were strong on one side of the ball (Offense for Mason, Defense for Kill) and knew how to identify guys that fit their mold on that side of the ball. At the same time both really struggled to find the same consistent success on the other side of the ball.

Kill and Mason also shared very similar recruiting philosophies. They didn't want to go to war with the helmet schools (or even other BIG schools a lot of the time) for players and instead chose to focus their efforts on the next tier/under the radar guys. They were good at finding those players who might be a bit undersized or a step slow but were still very good football players that fit their mold. It was the kind of recruiting that makes you a good team but also makes it really hard to become a great team.

Fleck is willing to pursue some of those higher level recruits and go to war with other schools in the BIG for players. He is very similar to Brewster in this way with the obvious difference being that Fleck has a vision for his program whereas Brewster was learning on the job and had no clue what he was doing or any business even being a head coach at a power 5 school.

Agree. The one thing I will say about Brewster is that IMHO the timing of the hire did him in. I think he wanted to be more of a balanced power team, but in scrambling to assemble a staff and save the first recruiting class, he was forced to work with what he could pull together in a hurry. I partially blame that on Maturi. If you are trying to build up the team for a new on campus stadium, you don't hire Brewster at that time. Especially without a strong mentor on the staff. Dunbar (The first OC under Brewster) wasn't it. If you hire a Brewster, you have to give someone like him the chance to learn how to be a head coach.
 

Did you include the transfers Kill brought in? I think Kill brought in Beal and the OSU o-lineman off the top of my head. Not sure if theres others but not seeing them accounted for

No I didn't - I was just using the numbers that MNVCGUY provided. It may bring Kill's numbers up slightly, but I think it will still be below PJ. Beal was a transfer during the Brewster era if I remember correctly.
 

I think PJs reputation probably came from some statements he made early in his time here where he made it sound like he didn't want to go the JUCO route. He definitely switched modes for year 2 (or year 1 as he would say).

I applaud him for the change though. I think sometimes PJ makes statements about things that sound like they are absolutes, but in this case I think he realized he was wrong and wasn't too stubborn to change. I think that's a good quality to have.

Also, within the last few years transfers are much more prevalent with the more lenient restrictions. Very good source to fill holes.
 

Also, within the last few years transfers are much more prevalent with the more lenient restrictions. Very good source to fill holes.

But if we ignore this and don’t count all for the previous coaches it makes JG’s point look much stronger.


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Agree. The one thing I will say about Brewster is that IMHO the timing of the hire did him in. I think he wanted to be more of a balanced power team, but in scrambling to assemble a staff and save the first recruiting class, he was forced to work with what he could pull together in a hurry. I partially blame that on Maturi. If you are trying to build up the team for a new on campus stadium, you don't hire Brewster at that time. Especially without a strong mentor on the staff. Dunbar (The first OC under Brewster) wasn't it. If you hire a Brewster, you have to give someone like him the chance to learn how to be a head coach.

I'm not sure the timing was really an issue. Don't forget - the Gophers made it to a Bowl game the last year in the Dome and the first year in TCF Bank Stadium with Brew. And the crowds were willing to forgive a mediocre record because of the new stadium smell anyway. Not to mention, I think he was able to get some players in because they had the opportunity to play in the new stadium.

The bigger issue was the mentor point. Brew said in an interview after he was canned that his grand plan was to start off as a spread team because he thought he could get better players, then once the better players were here switch to a power running offense. Obviously that makes little sense, as the type of player you need for both systems is different. He needed to have someone tell him it was a terrible idea. That could have been an experienced coordinator (ex-head coach type) OR it could have been an AD committed to revenue sports success. I'm not sure how Maturi didn't know Brew's plan when Brew was hired. If Maturi didn't, that just adds one more knock on his record. Either way, Maturi should have been guiding him.
 

I'm not sure the timing was really an issue. Don't forget - the Gophers made it to a Bowl game the last year in the Dome and the first year in TCF Bank Stadium with Brew. And the crowds were willing to forgive a mediocre record because of the new stadium smell anyway. Not to mention, I think he was able to get some players in because they had the opportunity to play in the new stadium.

The bigger issue was the mentor point. Brew said in an interview after he was canned that his grand plan was to start off as a spread team because he thought he could get better players, then once the better players were here switch to a power running offense. Obviously that makes little sense, as the type of player you need for both systems is different. He needed to have someone tell him it was a terrible idea. That could have been an experienced coordinator (ex-head coach type) OR it could have been an AD committed to revenue sports success. I'm not sure how Maturi didn't know Brew's plan when Brew was hired. If Maturi didn't, that just adds one more knock on his record. Either way, Maturi should have been guiding him.

It may also not really have been his plan but just what he said after the fact to make things look better. Having said that I'm in the camp that thinks Brewster gets blamed for far too much here. His biggest mistake was switching coordinators all the time, which is largely on him. I doubt it was his plan going in to switch coordinators so much - just some bad hires.
 

Maybe it’s my imagination but it sure seems like a lot of schools have a revolving door for coaches and coordinators, Ohio State and Alabama come to mind and of course we’ve had some turnover at MN recently. Is it possible it isn’t so much the changing of coordinators that’s an issue but the failure of coordinators to survey their player landscape, adapt their system to current nomenclature, and most importantly effectively communicate how to execute? I’m somewhat skeptical players require 2+ years to adapt to new systems. Is it possible the coaches and/or players are just subpar or aren’t utilizing their tools properly?
 

It may also not really have been his plan but just what he said after the fact to make things look better. Having said that I'm in the camp that thinks Brewster gets blamed for far too much here. His biggest mistake was switching coordinators all the time, which is largely on him. I doubt it was his plan going in to switch coordinators so much - just some bad hires.

Brewster was the HC, not sure how much he can be blamed "too much". It was his choice who he picked, when he changed them. He just didn't know how to do any of that or run a program.... I don't think you can blame a dude "too much" for that.

Having said that, I'd take Brew back in a heartbeat as a position coach / chief recruiter type guy. + To Tim's credit, I haven't heard him say an ill word about the U or anyone since he was fired.
 

I'm not sure the timing was really an issue. Don't forget - the Gophers made it to a Bowl game the last year in the Dome and the first year in TCF Bank Stadium with Brew. And the crowds were willing to forgive a mediocre record because of the new stadium smell anyway. Not to mention, I think he was able to get some players in because they had the opportunity to play in the new stadium.

The bigger issue was the mentor point. Brew said in an interview after he was canned that his grand plan was to start off as a spread team because he thought he could get better players, then once the better players were here switch to a power running offense. Obviously that makes little sense, as the type of player you need for both systems is different. He needed to have someone tell him it was a terrible idea. That could have been an experienced coordinator (ex-head coach type) OR it could have been an AD committed to revenue sports success. I'm not sure how Maturi didn't know Brew's plan when Brew was hired. If Maturi didn't, that just adds one more knock on his record. Either way, Maturi should have been guiding him.

Basically I agree with what you said. I was more than a little vague on the timing point. What I meant is that IMHO there is no way a coach with no Head coaching experience can do all of the things that Brewster was asked to do in the short time frame Brewster was given. Looking back, maybe (and it's a big maybe) Brewster would have had a chance if he had the Scenario that Ryan Day had. That and "replacing" Mason itself was a tall order. Most expected a fully groomed Mack Brown disciple to take the program from a solid, but middle of the road program to a power in the BigTen. Looking back, that would have been a tall order for even a top tier coach. The problem with Brewster is those initial missteps carried through his whole time here.

With all of that blather/ nonsense I just spewed, I still love Brewster for instilling hope. For getting people to think about possibilities for this program. Not that our program was destined to be forever bad or mediocre. Although I wasn't impressed with how Coyle did the change, I think he has found a coach that can do what needs to be done to get this program to the next level.

With that said,(going back to the original point in this thread) I do trust that Fleck and staff will figure out who between Annexstad and Morgan is best to start this season. It might not be the best arm. It might just be the better leader.
 

Maybe it’s my imagination but it sure seems like a lot of schools have a revolving door for coaches and coordinators, Ohio State and Alabama come to mind and of course we’ve had some turnover at MN recently. Is it possible it isn’t so much the changing of coordinators that’s an issue but the failure of coordinators to survey their player landscape, adapt their system to current nomenclature, and most importantly effectively communicate how to execute? I’m somewhat skeptical players require 2+ years to adapt to new systems. Is it possible the coaches and/or players are just subpar or aren’t utilizing their tools properly?

Very interesting points. I'd add could it be that some head coaches are better at identifying and hiring position coaches and coordinators that can addapt to the system(s) in place and coach it in a way that utilizes the the players strengths in a way that will still fit the system.
I think most coaches going to OSU or Alabama would know that they won't just be coming in and changing the whole system. New wrinkles? Maybe. Not the whole system though.
 

It may also not really have been his plan but just what he said after the fact to make things look better. Having said that I'm in the camp that thinks Brewster gets blamed for far too much here. His biggest mistake was switching coordinators all the time, which is largely on him. I doubt it was his plan going in to switch coordinators so much - just some bad hires.

Or good hires that had no intensions of staying for the long haul. Ted Roof comes to mind. He was what was needed. I just don't think the program would have been able to offer enough to keep him.
 




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