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Coin flip

I knew when we won the toss and elected to receive, we were in trouble. Deferring is the best option, always. It gives you opportunity. Hell, Belichick figured it out. Defer, we got better last year and last week, deferring. But we try to outsmart the room every time. Like I’ve been saying, it’s the decisions from the sideline that give me worry. We are dumb. When you try to be the smartest in the room, it never works.

THE JUICE: Critical window for Kingsbury, Texas Tech

The 2015 football season will be Kliff Kingsbury's third as head coach of the Texas Tech Red Raiders. Everything, from the roster to the uniforms and everything in between, has his fingerprints on it. This is his team and his program.

The third and fourth seasons of a coach's tenure is, on average, a critical window. History suggests that if Kingsbury is going to take the Red Raiders forward and (even temporarily) change the program's status quo, it will likely either happen sometime in his first four seasons or not at all.

There are always exceptions, but this mostly holds true if you look around the Big 12. Bob Stoops won a national championship in his second season in Norman and followed that up with an 11-2 campaign in Year 3. Charlie Strong went from 14-12 in his first two seasons at Louisville to 23-3 the following two seasons. Bill Snyder led Kansas State to its first winning season in a decade in his third season in Manhattan. He did it again after his brief retirement, jumping from 13-12 from 2009-10 to 21-5 from 2011-12. Art Briles' third season at Baylor ended with the program's first bowl game in 15 years; his fourth featured a Heisman Trophy and BU's first 10-win season in 30 years. Oklahoma State went 9-4 in Mike Gundy's fourth season at the helm, the program's second-best season since Barry Sanders' departure.

The four-year window does not always deliver positive results, of course. Guy Morris, Briles' predecessor at Baylor, regressed from Year 3 to Year 4 and was out the door after his fifth season on the Brazos. Dana Holgorsen hasn't come close to matching the success of his debut 10-3 season and went 11-14 combined in his third and fourth seasons. Charlie Weis was fired four games into his third season at Kansas. Paul Rhoads was at best treading water in his third and fourth seasons at Iowa State and the bottom has since fallen out.

Texas Tech's modern coaching history generally supports this theory. Tommy Tuberville's third season was nothing special compared to the seasons that preceded his arrival and he wasn't around for a fourth. Mike Leach's third season was the program's best (9-5) in seven years. Spike Dykes also reached nine wins in his third season, the program's best mark in nearly 15 years. Jerry Moore didn't have anyone feeling Moore Excitement by Year 3 or 4. Rex Dockery was named Southwest Conference Coach of the Year after his first season, but things went south quickly and he was gone after his third. Steve Sloan peaked in Year 2 with a 10-2 record and was off to Ole Miss after going 7-5 in Year 3. Jim Carlen won 19 combined games in his third and fourth seasons in Lubbock, the best two-year stretch in program history at that point. J.T. King snapped a seven-year string of losing seasons with a 5-5 mark in his third season on campus, and followed that up with a 6-4-1 season and a trip to the Sun Bowl a year later. DeWitt Weaver's tenure ended with five-straight losing campaigns but he won 18 games and the Gator Bowl in his third and fourth seasons.

Mack Brown's head coaching career tracks along with this theory, as he took major steps forward in his third and/or fourth seasons at Tulane, North Carolina and Texas. The same goes for Urban Meyer (Florida, Ohio State), Nick Saban (Michigan State, LSU, Alabama) and Jim Harbaugh (San Diego, Stanford).

This notion doesn't just track with the sport's blue blood programs and elite coaches.

Clemson -- Tommy West plateaued at sub-par seven and eight wins -- Clemson had won nine or more games in six of the seven years before West's arrival -- in Years 2-4 and never broke through. Tommy Bowden had three nine-win seasons in his 10 years (Years 2, 5 and 9) but mostly hovered around seven and eight wins. Dabo Swinney's third season was the program's first 10-win campaign in 20 years and he's posted double-digit wins every season since.

Iowa -- Bob Commings inherited a program that hadn't had a winning season in 13 seasons and that streak continued throughout his tenure. The Hawyekes broke through with an 8-4 season in Hayden Fry's third season; he won 54 games over the next six years. Kirk Ferentz posted the program's first 11-win season in Year 3.

Michigan State -- Bobby Williams, a holdover from Nick Saban's staff, debuted with the program's first losing season since before Saban's arrival. He rebounded with a 7-5 season in Year 2 but finished last in the Big Ten the following year and was fired. John L. Smith's high point in East Lansing was his first season (8-5) and he won just nine combined games in Years 3 and 4. Mark Dantonio's third season (6-7) was a dip compared to his first two (16-10), but he followed that up with an 11-2 campaign in Year 4.

Ole Miss -- Ed Orgeron didn't show any improvement from Year 1 to Year 3 and he wasn't around for a fourth season. Houston Nutt won 18 games in his first two seasons and just six in his third and fourth. Hugh Freeze took over a 2-10 team and posted a 9-4 record in Year 3.

Mississippi State -- Jackie Sherrill dipped from seven wins to four from Year 2 to Year 3, but the Bulldogs posted their highest win total (8) in more than a decade during his fourth season. Sylvester Croom won nine combined games in his first three seasons and eight in his fourth; he was fired after going 4-8 the next year. Dan Mullen's big bump came in Year 2 with a 9-4 record and he hasn't looked back posting seasons of 7, 8, 7 and 10 wins since.

Missouri -- Bob Stull's high-water mark was four wins in Year 2 and he didn't do better than 3-7 in the three seasons after that. Larry Smith's third season was the Tigers' best in nine years (5-6) and his 7-5 fourth was their first winning season in almost 15 years. Gary Pinkel started off with two seven-loss seasons but rebounded with the program's second-best season in 20 years (8-5) in Year 3.

Oklahoma State -- Bob Simmons peaked with an eight-win season in his third year in Stillwater, but followed that up with a five-win season. Les Miles' third-season was the Pokes' first with nine wins in 15 years. We already covered Gundy; his nine-win fourth season marked the beginning if the best six-year stretch in program history.

Perhaps the best current exception to this is Frank Beamer. He inherited a Virginia Tech team that not only hadn't had a losing season in seven seasons, but won 33 games in the four years before he took over. Beamer proceeded to go 5-17 in his first two seasons and just 12-9 in his third and fourth. He posted four losing seasons in his first six in Blacksburg and didn't start to get things on track until Year 7.

Beamer isn't the only exception, though.

Mike Stoops's Arizona tenure doesn't fit neatly into this theory either. He didn't post a single winning season in his first four tries with the Wildcats. He eventually broke through with the program's best seasons in a decade (back-to-back 8-5 seasons) but it wasn't until Year 5 and 6.

Houston Nutt's time at Arkansas didn't really follow this theory, but Bobby Petrino's did.

R.C. Slocum's tenure took a major step forward at Texas A&M starting in Year 3, but his successors in Aggieland haven't been able to sustain any momentum. Dennis Franchione's fourth-season was his best (9-4) but he was out after Year 5. Mike Sherman, in Year 3, also posted a high mark of 9-4 but he was gone a year later. Kevin Sumlin has regressed from 11 wins in Year 1 to just eight in Year 3.

The future, of course, is not written. Kingsbury could go 4-8 again this season and next and then reel off five-straight undefeated seasons. Maybe he's the next Frank Beamer? That probably won't happen. The more likely outcome, however, is 2015 and 2016 will prove to be a major pivot point of Kingsbury's tenure as Texas Tech's head football coach.

4th & 11

Going for it on 4th & 11 with the game still not decided and a qb that couldn’t hit an open receiver and an OC that doesn’t like to throw the ball downfield was just as bad a decision as kicking a field goal on 2nd down with the Elite One.

I’ve given Kittley a lot of shit (and rightfully so), but that moment proved that this job is too big for Joey McGuire.

We’ve regressed in year three, and there is NO analytics book in the world that says going for it in that situation is a smart call.

Heading back from Pullman

Some thoughts from the game. Wazzu fans were nice and very hospitable.
Facilities were average… so glad our facilities are amazing. Really translates on the field.
I’m so numb to this $hit show. How does K State strike out one time in 40 years with HC and we continually get it wrong.
And Micah is pissed because of Don Williams asking Joey in the presser about Micah and not using him again. Joey responded with something like we can’t focus so much on a freshman ??? Can’t defend this crap…. lol

Ease His Pain !!

Remember the movie about Iowa farm and baseball. He got a message......Ease HIs Pain.

Last night for the first time ever in 77 years, I could see it was going to be a hard night without the best RB in College Football, and late into the game I Turned it off. So I called my wise old cousin and he said he did the same.

It looked it was mist up there. We dont see much rain in Lubbock, so not used to it. But we all just carry on. To make it worse UT goes to Mich and does a job on them.

Changing subjects, I have posted about the famous Carswell Airbase 3 miles to my west in Ft. Worth, and its part in Roswell Deal. Also Carswell was number 3 on Russian target list if a war started.


My friend said he was told, Oppenheimer and Werner Von Bont came to Carswell at lease 2 times getting ready for the A bomb! Guns up !

Sometimes You Gotta Shoot the Horse to End the Pain & Suffering

It’s time to end the pain & suffering. Joey needs to fire Kittley to save his job and possibly this season.

There is absolutely 0% nothing that gives me any sort of hope that Kittley can prepare and execute a decent offensive gameplan. He flat out is ass my dude. He sucks beyond bad.

As much as Joey, Kirby, and the big money donors may like Kittley, he has to be replaced immediately.

Each loss is only setting this program back more and more. It will take years to fix this f***** up mess.

Ideally I’d fire Kirby and start there but that won’t happen.

Firing Kittley right now is not only feasible, it should be rightfully exoected.

I hope Joey will do the honorable thing and replace Kittley today.

15 Years

Watching that video that @codycc64 posted on the tweets was beyond nostalgic and so awesome. I dearly miss that insanely fun Era. I dearly miss Mike himself, RIP.
The players, the culture, the rabid fan base, the winning…all of it. I said in the game thread, under Mike we had an absolute chip on our shoulder. An edge, an attitude under Leach. Players and Fans alike. We embraced the underdog role and the fight you in an alley mentality. Been almost the opposite culture since.

It’s now been 15 years since the Captain Leach tenure was locked up in a shed. FIFTEEN.

Mike coached 10 seasons here
10 straight bowl games
This program has been to 8 total bowls in the 15 years since

Mike won 8 or more games 8 straight years in a row 02-09. He won 9 or more games 5 times (half the seasons he coached here)
We’ve won 8 games a grand total of FOUR times since and we’ve never once hit that 9 win mark (even with a guy named Pat Mahomes at QB)

Tuberville, Kingsbury, Wells, McGuire, hasn’t mattered…

In comparison to simply other Texas Tech programs… in that same 15 year span:

Tech Basketball: Big 12 champs, 3 Sweet 16s, 2 Elite 8s, Final Four, Natty Appearance. Has become a legitimate brand in college hoops.

Tech Baseball: 3 Big 12 titles, 8 tourney appearances, 4 CWS trips and one of the elite brands in college baseball

Track and Field a couple natties, Tech soccer a Big 12 title… and so on

I don’t even really have some deeper or even metaphorical point here. We suck at playing pigskin. Like a lot of you I’m just numb to Tech football. We’ve been good to elite in the majority of our other programs for an extended period. Yet Tech football just continues to flatline. Okie State, Baylor, TCU, K State etc. doing their thing. Tech Football… Weekend at Bernie’s and after the first two weeks of 24, no life in sight. Frankly embarrassing. Big shiny stadium with nothing to show for it.

15 years of this… I’m fine embracing Tech is just not a football school. But also tired of knowing what Leach showed us we can be as a program. My younger self misses that Pirate era immensely. Current reality tells me just embrace what we are as an athletic program, it ain’t coming back.

A Couple of Suggestions

We lost a weird game, mainly because of field position. I think if we tee it up again 20 times, this would be the only one that played out this way. BUT THIS ONE DID. I also think we should have beaten that team.

So on to the suggestions: We seem confused and not fully engaged on offense. I think it because we try to do too much, and because the game Kittley calls is kind of a grab bag of plays from his vast playbook. We need to simplify and execute. We need a game plan that is connected, where one play leads to another and there is a unified purpose. The passes to Jordan Brown late in the game are a perfect example...we could have done that all night long...we could have used our TEs in pass routes as well.

We need to get away from trying to invent plays that trick the defense. It puts the wrong thought process in the players heads. We need to lineup and kick some ass. We need these young players to get mean and nasty. And we need them to know that we are serious about eliminating dumb mistakes.

On defense I see some growth in the secondary and along the line. I saw Rigsby, Cofield and Nedore and few others rising to the occasion. Isaac Smith is beginning to get his feet back under him. But Rodriquez is struggling as is Baskerville. The young CBs and Ss seemed to be playing better this game than the last. It would help them a lot if the other team has more than 50 yards to go from the beginning of a drive.

The entire team needs a "be smart, get tough and play football" message. And that shouldn't just be in a speech before or after practice, but every coach needs to be hammering it into their heads all practice long. You make your own luck...you will never trick your way into winning football.
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