Showing posts with label eric mangini. Show all posts
Showing posts with label eric mangini. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 15, 2010

Eric Mangini to be fired


I was just told by my source that the Browns players have all been informed that Eric Mangini will not be back as their head coach next season--and they're playing these final three games for their jobs. When I asked my source if Eric Mangini would be more likely to quit at this point or go down guns blazing, he replied that he would be more likely to go down guns blazing.

My source also tells me that Mike Holmgren; and not someone he names as a replacement, will be the next head coach of the Cleveland Browns. He says that Holmgren like the 4-3 and Rob Ryan will be elsewhere and looking for a head coaching job. He says that Holmgren loves speed, and will need help installing a new defense here.

Colt McCoy will get first team reps this week, and he'll start Sunday in Cincinnati if there is no set-backs with his ankle. Expect Eric Mangini to drag it out as long as he can as he usually does. Not that this makes a difference. Mangini needs to spend more time getting ready for Sundays and gameplans than these little bits of Tom-foolery with the injury report. It's something he hasn't figured out as a Head Coach in the NFL. Being in that position is based on what you do for three hours on Sunday. Not the shenanigans during the week to keep your opponent in the dark. Name your man, and then line up and beat someone's ass.
 
 

Full Preview - Cleveland Cavaliers at Miami Heat


 

Now it's LeBron James' turn to welcome his former club to his new stomping grounds, as the Miami Heat will play host to the Cleveland Cavaliers tonight from AmericanAirlines Arena.

James spurned the Cavs in the offseason, taking his talents to South Beach, and made his much-anticipated return to Cleveland in a 118-90 blowout at Quicken Loans Arena back on Dec.2, scoring 38 points with eight assists and five rebounds. The only boos James will hear this time around will be towards the visiting team.

The sizzling Heat have won a season-high nine straight games and are starting to live up to their expectations. They are unbeaten in their last five games in south Florida and opened a quick homestand with a 96-84 triumph over New Orleans on Monday. James' sidekick, Dwyane Wade, scored a game-high 32 points and Chris Bosh finished with 23 points and 11 rebounds for Miami, which improved to 11-3 at home.

"They really dictated the game to us," Miami head coach Erik Spoelstra said. "They slowed the tempo down. We couldn't get into a flow with consecutive stops and get out into the open court. We didn't let that frustrate us."

James scored 13 of his 20 points in the third quarter and dished out seven assists. The Heat last won nine straight from March 20 to April 7, 2010, and haven't won 10 in a row since Feb. 12 - March 8, 2006. Wade has scored at least 25 points in the past six contests and is averaging 30.2 ppg during the stretch.

Cleveland has lost eight straight overall and nine consecutive games on the road, including Sunday's 106-77 rout at the hands of the Oklahoma City Thunder.

Anthony Parker scored 12 points and Daniel Gibson had 11 to lead the Cavaliers, who scored only 32 points in the second half. Anderson Varejao had a game-high 16 rebounds to go along with seven points in defeat. Oklahoma City outscored the Cavaliers in the paint by a 56-28 margin and had a 29-11 advantage on the fast break.

"Right now, my biggest concern is those guys in that locker room. I'm not thinking about Miami or the next game, it's just about getting [my] guys to start understanding a little bit more of what we have to do as a team," said Cavs head coach Byron Scott.

On a more uplifting note, the Cavs lead the league in bench scoring per game, averaging 43.0 ppg. Cleveland will also visit Indiana on the road swing and is 3-10 as the guest this season.

Cleveland has still won nine of the past 11 meetings with Miami, which is winless in its last three as the host in this series.

 
 

Wednesday, November 24, 2010

Mangini's 2010 Success Shouldn't Be Win Based


FILE - In this Jan. 3, 2010, file photo, Cleveland Browns coach Eric Mangini is congratulated by his players at the end of the Browns' 23-17 win over the Jacksonville Jaguars in an NFL football game in Cleveland. Mangini will return for a second season as Cleveland's coach, a stunning personal victory following a four-game winning streak by the Browns that may have saved his job. New team president Mike Holmgren decided Thursday, Jan. 7, 2010, to retain Mangini, whose job security was in jeopardy after the Browns started 1-11. (AP Photo/Tony Dejak, File)

Tony Dejak - AP

11 months ago: FILE - In this Jan. 3, 2010, file photo, Cleveland Browns coach Eric Mangini is congratulated by his players at the end of the Browns' 23-17 win over the Jacksonville Jaguars in an NFL football game in Cleveland. Mangini will return for a second season as Cleveland's coach, a stunning personal victory following a four-game winning streak by the Browns that may have saved his job. New team president Mike Holmgren decided Thursday, Jan. 7, 2010, to retain Mangini, whose job security was in jeopardy after the Browns started 1-11. (AP Photo/Tony Dejak, File)

View full size photo »

Eric Mangini's job security shouldn't be based on a win-loss record.

I am sick and tired of reading about Eric Mangini's job security. 

How can anyone watch the Browns this season and think that a change needs to happen? I know Mangini lacks the name recognition of Tony Dungy or Brian Billick. He lacks the in your face attitude of Bill Cowher and Jon Gruden, not to mention the absence of a certain piece of jewelry that each of those four men possesses. When you hear those names, you get excited, you have visions of division titles and Super Bowls.

But Mangini is different. He is the almighty secret keeper. He very rarely yells at officials or players. He has his moments during press conferences, but you would never confuse him with Rex or Rob Ryan. He is milk in a Soda Pop world. Good for you, but "meh".

No, instead Eric Mangini has come to the Cleveland Browns and quietly done exactly what was needed. Maybe we forget how bad the situation was here in Cleveland. A quick refresher may help.

In 2007, this team was a high flying passing offense that, if it had its choice, would rather outscore you than play a slow down game. In the back of most fans minds, we knew that kind of offense would struggle when the weather turned, and sure enough on a windy day in Cinncy, it did. The 2007 Cleveland Browns had some good pieces, but needed to shape the foundation of the roster through the draft and fill small holes through free agency.

Phil Savage had a different idea. He sent draft picks everywhere, and signed older veterans to expensive deals. Savage was going for it. 

Splat. That wasted off-season didn't just harm the 2008 season, it destroyed the season after, and probably after that. Donte Stallworth had a couple of catches and a disastrous wreck to show from his five year, 35 million dollar contract. Mangini and company allowed the Law and Order part of his ordeal play out before dumping him and his deal. Corey Williams was never happy in the 3-4 and his play showed that. He was traded, along with his monstrous contract under Mangini. Did I mention the Brady Quinn saga and the Derek Anderson contract? Shaun Rogers was the one bright spot, although he has been injured, he continues to be one of the best interior defensive linemen in the NFL.

This is what Mangini had to work with. A broken team. A pain in the ass wide receiver, who to this very day thinks he is 100x better than he really is, a tightend who had the knees of 50-year old and wanted to be paid; a horrible, and did I mention over-paid, offensive line, a running back who was years past his prime and a quarterback soap opera that would be more suited for day-time Telemundo. That was just the offense! On the defensive side of the ball, the Browns only have one defensive starter on this team now, Eric Wright. (Two others are on IR, Robaire Smith and D'Qwell Jackson). Everyone else was either brought in, or elevated.

That is what Mangini came into. Doesn't that sound like fun? Add in the fact that Romeo Crennel had lost control of the franchise before he left, and you have complete chaos. 

Mangini was the first Head Coach that decided to do something unique. He started building the roster from the top AND bottom. Not only did he add high end talent (Mack, Haden, Ward), but he completely destroyed and rebuilt the lower end of the roster. Gone from the team were players like Tim Carter, replacing him was Chansi Stuckey. Nothing flashy, but a solid veteran who will do his job when called upon. Young, hungry defenders that wanted to prove themselves (Marcus Benard). No names to 90% of the public, but guys that wanted to play the game in the way Mangini wanted. 

Going into this season, no one thought we were a playoff team. We were a young team trying to learn to walk before we ran. We were building a team like you build a good house. Ground up. We knew that we were probably headed for a 3rd or 4th place finish in the division, but as long as we saw growth from certain areas, we would be happy. We have seen growth at QB, WR, TE, C, OLB, CB and SS. If I told you that before the season, wouldn't you have been bouncing off the walls?

No, the Browns aren't finished. In fact, they still have a lot of work to do. They could use an upgrade on the right side of the offensive line. They need at least 2 starting wide receivers, youth in the front seven, and the need for a top flight pass rusher is glaring. This upcoming draft is a "must" in the development of this team.

But, I will tell you this. This team is so far ahead of where we were when Eric Mangini walked into this job. He has made this and AFC North team. We can punish teams with the run. We can hit you in the mouth of defense. This is a team that is built to play on the shore of Lake Erie in -10 degrees and 35 MPH winds. This is the team that Marty Schottenheimer wanted to build. This is the team that we wanted. A blue collar, tough as nails, never say die, sledgehammer of a team.

So, why is Mangini's job security even a question?

 
 

Tuesday, October 26, 2010

Eric Mangini is still a fat fuckhead

In the wake of LeBron James playing the victim with his new Nike commercial, the door is really open for the Cleveland Browns to steal the stage this time of year.

The excitement of Cleveland could all be built around Colt McCoy after his big win in New Orleans, that is if he was announced the starting Quarterback. Which Eric Mangini isn't ready to do:

"With the decision as we get Seneca back and Jake back, which we may have a chance for one or both against New England, then I'll just sit down and think about it. I'll talk to Brian (Daboll), I'll talk to Mike (Holmgren); I'll definitely get his input. He's been through these decisions quite a few times. It's got to get to the point where it really is a decision as opposed to where we're at now, where we just got a couple games under our belts."


And why would they? When Cleveland can watch 30-year old career back-up Seneca Wallace or 35-year old over the hill player Jake Delhomme and feed to the fans that these veterans give them a better chance to win each week.

This is how Cleveland has gotten to where Cleveland is at now. Go ahead and start these guys. Don't get a feel for what this kid can do and draft another QB in the first round when we have other needs. After all, this is Cleveland.

Followers