So being a complete failure and having your replacement improve the offense substantially on the way to a Super Bowl is something teams look for? Is failure ok if it's in the NFL? I would think a team as prestigious as LSU would be looking for something a little better.
I will be happy if Cam Cameron mismanages the talent at LSU the same way he did at Baltimore.
So being a complete failure and having your replacement improve the offense substantially on the way to a Super Bowl is something teams look for? Is failure ok if it's in the NFL? I would think a team as prestigious as LSU would be looking for something a little better.
I will be happy if Cam Cameron mismanages the talent at LSU the same way he did at Baltimore.
Is this a joke? You cant honestly believe Cam Cameron cant coach.
Brees ,Rivers and the whole offenses play while he was at San Diego. He oversaw the transition from a defensive team to an offensive team on the Ravens. Even though he got fired this year they were still running his offense. Flacco matured in his offense.
Cameron has had some success as a coordinator, but he doesn't strike fear in my heart. He most certainly doesn't have what it takes to be a head coach. We can always hope that Miles moves on and they decide to promote Camoron (his pet name in Miami).
I'll never forget his philosophy of failure, failing forward fast.....
That press conference wasn't really funny at the time if you were a Dolphins fan, but now it's funny as hell.
As for him going to LSU, all I'm gonna say is that most of us thought Charlie Weis was a good hire too.
I still dont think Weis was a bad hire it is not like Meyer or Pease did much better with those players on offense. Plus he had an injured QB. Verducci on the other hand was a bad hire.
He oversaw the transition from a defensive team to an offensive team on the Ravens. Even though he got fired this year they were still running his offense.
That's an interesting way to put it. They accumulated a ton of offensive talent while he was there and never had a very good offense to show for it as far as I'm concerned. He gets fired, Baltimore catches fire on offense. Spin it how you want, that reflects poorly on him.
That's an interesting way to put it. They accumulated a ton of offensive talent while he was there and never had a very good offense to show for it as far as I'm concerned. He gets fired, Baltimore catches fire on offense. Spin it how you want, that reflects poorly on him.
That's an interesting way to put it. They accumulated a ton of offensive talent while he was there and never had a very good offense to show for it as far as I'm concerned. He gets fired, Baltimore catches fire on offense. Spin it how you want, that reflects poorly on him.
Exactly. No other way to see it unless you're blind or football illiterate.
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"The difference between the impossible and the possible lies in a man's determination."--Tommy Lasorda
I live in Baltimore, and I had to watch that lousy product he put on the field each week up until the Ravens' organization decided to part ways with him. He did an absolutely horrendous job with that franchise. Baltimore has two very good RBs (Pierce and Rice) a francise QB, way too much talent at WR/TE, and Cameron couldn't have done a worse job with the tools he was given.
I don't care if the guy can recruit. On gameday, in Baltimore, his product stank. I'd be very disappointed if Muschamp was talking about bringing Cameron in. Of course, you would almost expect foolishness like this from Les Miles, so I'm not surprised LSU is doing everything possible to set their program back another 2-3 years with this hire.
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"I can shoot threes now. I can finesse you. I can dunk on you. I can guard anything, and I'm rebounding better. When I block shots I catch the ball. I can post you up with my back to the basket and hit you with a post move. Or I can face you up and use my quickness to blow by you." - Chris Walker