Rocksolid Light

Welcome to Rocksolid Light

mail  files  register  newsreader  groups  login

Message-ID:  

Football is a game designed to keep coalminers off the streets. -- Jimmy Breslin


sport / alt.sports.football.pro.sd-chargers / ESPN.com (Barnwell): Chargers hire Jim Harbaugh as coach: Perfect match for both sides?

SubjectAuthor
o ESPN.com (Barnwell): Chargers hire Jim Harbaugh as coach: Perfect match for bothphlash74

1
ESPN.com (Barnwell): Chargers hire Jim Harbaugh as coach: Perfect match for both sides?

<258f392a-a8bc-44f2-b70e-793c5dfdb94cn@googlegroups.com>

  copy mid

https://news.novabbs.org/sport/article-flat.php?id=4237&group=alt.sports.football.pro.sd-chargers#4237

  copy link   Newsgroups: alt.sports.football.pro.sd-chargers
X-Received: by 2002:a05:620a:6d8d:b0:783:bd44:5543 with SMTP id um13-20020a05620a6d8d00b00783bd445543mr23882qkn.0.1706159386666;
Wed, 24 Jan 2024 21:09:46 -0800 (PST)
X-Received: by 2002:a05:6902:f02:b0:dc3:6b67:9342 with SMTP id
et2-20020a0569020f0200b00dc36b679342mr305817ybb.4.1706159386373; Wed, 24 Jan
2024 21:09:46 -0800 (PST)
Path: i2pn2.org!rocksolid2!news.neodome.net!news.mixmin.net!proxad.net!feeder1-2.proxad.net!209.85.160.216.MISMATCH!news-out.google.com!nntp.google.com!postnews.google.com!google-groups.googlegroups.com!not-for-mail
Newsgroups: alt.sports.football.pro.sd-chargers
Date: Wed, 24 Jan 2024 21:09:46 -0800 (PST)
Injection-Info: google-groups.googlegroups.com; posting-host=2603:8000:99f0:8420:d919:75e6:8284:f572;
posting-account=3e8SXQoAAADv5bsOKUuyEz0OLF3iRx2Y
NNTP-Posting-Host: 2603:8000:99f0:8420:d919:75e6:8284:f572
User-Agent: G2/1.0
MIME-Version: 1.0
Message-ID: <258f392a-a8bc-44f2-b70e-793c5dfdb94cn@googlegroups.com>
Subject: ESPN.com (Barnwell): Chargers hire Jim Harbaugh as coach: Perfect
match for both sides?
From: phlash74@msn.com (phlash74)
Injection-Date: Thu, 25 Jan 2024 05:09:46 +0000
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="UTF-8"
Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable
 by: phlash74 - Thu, 25 Jan 2024 05:09 UTC

https://www.espn.com/nfl/story/_/id/39380294/chargers-hire-jim-harbaugh-nfl-coach-michigan-perfect-match-next

Chargers hire Jim Harbaugh as coach: Perfect match for both sides?
play

Bill Barnwell, ESPN Staff Writer
Jan 24, 2024, 11:55 PM ET

If you have to hire a head coach, landing the reigning national champion seems like a good place to look. The Chargers got their man Wednesday, hiring Jim Harbaugh away from Michigan to take over. After nine seasons in college, Harbaugh returns to the NFL, where he went 44-19-1 in four seasons with the 49ers between 2011 and 2014.

I'll start with the conclusion: This is a great hire. Things can obviously go haywire on all sides in the NFL, but if the Chargers were going to hire someone to rebuild their organization, Harbaugh had to be the most qualified candidate available, short of former Patriots coach Bill Belichick. And if Harbaugh ever wanted to return to the NFL, this feels like the right place for him to go. There's still some work left to be done, though, and what happens next for L.A. might be even more intriguing than its hire.

Before all that, let's look at this hire from each side's perspective. Why is this a great fit?

The Harbaugh side
Two years ago, Harbaugh had an interview with the Vikings, lost out on the position to Kevin O'Connell and said "this is the last time" he would pursue an NFL position. Last year, he had a video meeting with the Broncos before taking his name out of the running for Denver's job. This year, after winning a national championship, the lure of the NFL and the chance to win a Super Bowl was apparently too strong.

If Harbaugh was going to pursue an NFL job, the Chargers opportunity clearly seems like the sort of role that would best align with what he might look for in an opportunity. Even without considering the finished business at Michigan, he and the Chargers are a better match than the previous openings in Minnesota and Denver. I had reservations about the L.A. opening when I ranked it second among the likely openings earlier this offseason, but there were elements that should appeal to Harbaugh, especially in light of what happened during his first tenure in the league.

To start, there's a franchise quarterback already in place. Harbaugh will inherit a 25-year-old budding star in Justin Herbert, albeit one who is yet to make the leap from very good quarterback to superstar. Just about everyone believes Herbert to be capable of making that jump, and I'm sure his new coach wouldn't have taken this job unless he felt the same way.

From the coach's perspective, the last time he had a quarterback this good to tutor would have been when he coached Andrew Luck at Stanford. When Harbaugh took over the 49ers job, he inherited Alex Smith and used a second-round pick on Colin Kaepernick. Smith started in 2011 before Kaepernick took the job over in 2012. The 49ers also traded for Blaine Gabbert after long-standing interest from the coach in the 2011 first-round pick, although Gabbert didn't start a game for San Francisco until after Harbaugh had left for Michigan.

While there was speculation Harbaugh might take over a team like the Falcons and draft J.J. McCarthy, his quarterback from Michigan, the decision to take over the Chargers surely brings that train of thought to a close. Herbert hasn't even started the new seasons on his five-year, $262.5 million extension, and the the team wouldn't be able to handle the $108.5 million in dead money on a trade. Harbaugh won't be reuniting with his title-winning quarterback any time soon.

The other element that would likely be most valuable to Harbaugh is personnel control. He famously grew apart from general manager Trent Baalke during their shared tenure with the 49ers, leading to tension between the coach and both Baalke and the team's ownership. After the team lost three straight games to fall to 7-7 in 2014, the organization told Harbaugh he wouldn't be returning. He finished out the season, and while the 49ers characterized it as a parting of ways, he believed he had been fired.

The 49ers chose Baalke over Harbaugh with disastrous results, as they cycled through Jim Tomsula and Chip Kelly with dismal results before turning things over to Kyle Shanahan and John Lynch in 2017. It was always going to be tough for Harbaugh to join an organization where an existing general manager had power as Kwesi Adofo-Mensah does in Minnesota and George Paton in Denver. Most teams in the NFL simply aren't willing to hand one person control over both coaching and personnel, and two of the coaches who had been afforded both those responsibilities (Belichick and Pete Carroll) were fired earlier this month.

After the Chargers fired Tom Telesco in December, there is no general manager in the building for Los Angeles. They hired Harbaugh before picking their general manager, which seems telling. At the very least, whomever they hire to take over personnel duties will need to be comfortable with Harbaugh as the coach, while Harbaugh should have the ability to say whether he'll feel in tune with whichever candidate team owner Dean Spanos preferred. When push inevitably comes to shove down the line, though, his status as a desired candidate and as the first of the two to join the organization suggests that the coach will get his way, not whoever eventually lands here as general manager.

Of the eight openings that came available this offseason, the Chargers might have been the only one that was going to offer some level of personnel control. The Titans and Seahawks had existing general managers who have assumed more power after their coaches were let go. The Commanders were about to hire a general manager. The Patriots, Raiders and Panthers have given a coach personnel control in recent years with disappointing results. The Falcons might have been willing to let a new coach make decisions over Terry Fontenot, but L.A. was the only franchise that had a clear opening and nothing standing in the way of a coach with significant power.

Harbaugh also lands a destination where it will be easy to recruit. California doesn't offer the same state income tax-free benefits that warm-weather states such as Texas and Florida do for players, but Los Angeles has been a highly desirable destination for free agents in every single major American sport for decades. Beyond big names, the Rams have been able to lure players to suit up for less than they would have likely gotten elsewhere. That can be a big name toward the end of their career, such as Clay Matthews or Bobby Wagner, or a lesser-known player like Ahkello Witherspoon, who played for close to the minimum this season and produced an excellent year for the Rams. Harbaugh should have no trouble selling players on L.A.

The Chargers side
While beating the Rams for hearts and minds in Los Angeles shouldn't be Spanos' primary goal, this has to feel like one of the few things the Chargers could do to draw attention. They have spent most of their time in Los Angeles as unwanted afterthoughts amid a steady run of success from Sean McVay and the Rams. Their home games are typically overrun by fans of the opposition, who can both take a trip to a warm-weather destination to support their team while knowing they'll likely be surrounded by more of their brethren than Chargers fans. People aren't going to suddenly love this team because Harbaugh's around, but when Herbert didn't move the needle, the only thing that will swing long-term support towards the Chargers in Los Angeles might be a coach who consistently wins.

The expectation for Harbaugh should be that he'll turn around the ship. In 2004, Harbaugh took over a University of San Diego team that had never won double-digit games and got them there in his second and third seasons at the helm. He then inherited a 1-11 Stanford team in 2007, got them to a winning record in Year 3 and went 12-1 in his fourth and final season with the school. And while it took him six years before he really challenged for a national title with Michigan, he took over a 5-7 team from Brady Hoke and immediately got them to 10 wins, a mark they hit in six of Harbaugh's eight full seasons in Ann Arbor.

The most impressive turnaround might have been what he accomplished with the 49ers. After cap issues and subpar drafting finally sank the dynasty that began in the Bill Walsh era, they wandered through the wilderness for nearly a decade. They went 9-23 with Dennis Erickson, 18-37 with Mike Nolan and 18-22 with Mike Singletary, posting zero winning seasons in the process.

Singletary was fired late in the 2010 season, in a year in which the most memorable moment likely came in Week 5. Smith, the team's No. 1 overall pick in 2005, had been under center for an 0-4 start. Amid an ugly performance against the Eagles, fans booed Smith off the field while chanting "We Want Carr," in reference to journeyman backup David Carr, who hadn't started a game since 2007. Smith eventually lost his job via injury to Troy Smith, who held the role before it went back to Alex Smith for the end of the season. He was a free agent, and it seemed like it was time for a clean break between the highly-touted prospect and the 49ers.

Instead, while it didn't happen until July because of the lockout, Harbaugh brought Smith back. He immediately morphed into a different quarterback. Smith cut his interception rate from 2.9% to a league-best 1.1% and topped a 60% completion percentage and 7.0 yards per attempt for the first time in his pro career. A quarterback who had gone 19-31 across six pro seasons went 13-3. The same fans who were booing Smith off the field a year earlier roared for their quarterback as he went punch-for-punch with Drew Brees in one of the great playoff games in league history, culminating with a final-minute touchdown pass to Vernon Davis for a famous 49ers victory. The organization Smith described as "dysfunctional" and a locker room that had been "very separated" suddenly coalesced around Harbaugh.


Click here to read the complete article
1
server_pubkey.txt

rocksolid light 0.9.81
clearnet tor