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Rex Ryan is the right guy for the Jets
...............and he's a 180 from Mangini
Photo
by Rob Carr - AP
Photo
by Bill Kostroun - AP |
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Woody Johnson mentioned things like
“straightforward”,
“expertise” and “instincts”. He
could
have added honest, aggressive, confident, smart and tough.
Rex Ryan! I’m impressed! After
Ryan’s
hard-hitting opening press conference in beautiful Florham Park
this morning, I’m ready for some football. And
so is he!
What a difference from Mangini!
Rex
imparted more information in ten minutes
than you’d extract from Mangini in a year.
That’s
for openers.
Anybody
interested in following the team and the league has to be happy about
that
alone.
Ryan didn’t say “process”
once.
What he said was “full speed”,
“aggressive”. “team”, “physical”, “run the football”, “opportunity”,
“challenge”,
and “take a swipe at one of ours, we’ll take a swipe at two of yours”.
Oh BABY!!
But he’s not an animal either.
He
showed his style and class.
He opened his
remarks with a reference to
maybe meeting the new President, breaking the ice nicely, then showed
some
humility by expressing his thanks to the ownership and management.
Best of all, he thanked his wife and cracked
everyone up with his observation that there are only two kinds of
coaches
wives, ex-wives and great wives.
Then he
totally ad-libbed that he had probably “outkicked his coverage”.
The overwhelming feeling I get is that
he’s Buddy Ryan’s
son, but he’s a little more conscious of style, those rough edges honed
down to
glass. Everything he said made sense,
and he used words that painted pictures in your mind.
Much as a teacher would.
He laid out his immediate plans, emphasizing that he’d
first
surround himself with good people.
Before
he does anything else, he’s going to decide
on a coaching
staff.
He mentioned Callahan and Mike
Pettine, who’s joining the team from the Ravens.
Then he talked about providing his
players with all the
tools they’d need for success, and “KILL” or keep it likeable and
learnable. He stressed that everything
would be full speed, that they’d be aggressive and they’d play as a
team.
He talked about the importance of preparation, and how it
all starts on the practice field; they’d play “physical” and hit things
head
on.
They’d let opponents know “The Jets
are comin’” .
His team would have pride
and all three units would be involved.
But he likes Favre.
Rex was very impressed by a thrashing Favre had
given his Ravens back in
2001, and wouldn’t mind having him back at all. But
when asked when he’ll talk with Brett, he said
he’d be talking to
all his players, and that “when we get around to the “f’s”, I’ll talk
with
Brett”.
When asked specifically about the 2 TD’s and 9
interceptions
Favre produced to end 2008, he said he hadn’t reviewed the tapes of
those
games, and after he did, he and his coaches would take appropriate
action then.
If his team does show pride, it’ll be
a reflection of the
coach. Rex is justifiably proud of his
“consistent” personal coaching record and laid out the success he has
had all
along the way, in Cincinnati, then in Oklahoma for a year before he
moved along
to Baltimore, where his defense finished 1st or 2nd
every
year for about ten years. What could say
it better than his parting shot on that topic, “you got the right guy”!
On the subject of Brian Schottenheimer, Ryan once again
showed his humanity by empathizing with the Jets existing offensive
coordinator,
relating his feelings last year when he was bypassed by John Harbaugh
for the
Ravens top job, saying he “knows the sting”.
But
he “got over himself” and recognized it as an
opportunity to become
better prepared for the head coaching job himself.
Upon being asked about the “same old
Jets”, he stressed that
he’s taking over a good football team that had won nine games. But the style of play will be different, with
an emphasis on defense, and that “that read and react stuff is for
somebody
else”. His players would play through
the whistle.
If he likes his style, he seems to
honestly like his content
too, mentioning his “edge rushers”, guy in the middle, his linebackers
and his
“best cornerback in football” (Revis).
On Jets #1 pick Vernon Gholston, he related that
situation
to that of his Ravens Terrell Suggs, and how he changed perceptions
from being
a bust to being Rookie of the Year.
Ryan was sure to mention the fans too,
and how he can’t wait
for those home games with those great Jets fans out there, and that
it’d be
“rough on people”. And he’s legitimately
proud that his Ravens hadn’t allowed more than 13 points in any home
game all
of last year.
He seemed a little Parcells-like when replying to a
question
about Mangini and the possibility that he’d irritate players with a
‘gee, I
hope I don’t irritate ‘em’ kind of response, but then softened it by
saying he
wouldn’t last long if he irritated his players.
For a guy who maintains he doesn’t
have a silver tongue, he
surely did a nice job of parrying the questions he got this morning,
and they
weren’t softballs either. He honestly
and intelligently handled all the questions on Favre, Schottenheimer,
Mangini
and the “say” he’d have in the organization with aplomb, saying not too
much or
too little. He honestly appreciates his
new job and team and appreciates the limits of his place in it.
Ryan did make it clear that personnel is Tannenbaum’s job
but that that function too would be a joint effort among coaches and
scouts,
but that he has never had pressure from above to hire a coach and that
any
speculation to that effect was not true.
Woody Johnson by all accounts wanted
somebody who could fire
guys up. He would seem to, as Ryan says,
“have the right guy”. I know I’m fired
up already, waddaya kiddin’ me? A fiery
guy with a good record, a guy with brains, a guy who’ll answer your
questions? What’s not to like?
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