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New Defensive Coordinator?


wsheldon

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I like the fact that Pagano has a special teams bacground as well. If there is any aspect of Auburn's game in which we strive for mediocrity it would have to be special teams. I know that if he were to become DC, he wouldn't be able to run special teams as well, but hopefully he'd at least have some input. Lord knows we could use it.

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Max just said that Will Muschamp and Randy Shannon are the leading candidates.

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Max?

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Max just said that Will Muschamp and Randy Shannon are the leading candidates.

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Max?

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Probably means Max Howell, long-time sports radio talk show host. He's out of south Alabama/FL panhandle nowadays. He coached as an assitant or played at Auburn, or something. Thinks he has insider info.

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Max just said that Will Muschamp and Randy Shannon are the leading candidates.

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Randy Shannon would be a great hire IMHO, but why on earth would he make a lateral move like that? Same question stands for Charlie Strong, too. This makes it seem to me that Muschamps or Pagano would be the two most realistic possibilties. Anyone know anything about the contract situations with Strong and Shannon? Maybe that could be a factor. Regardless, though I'd probably favor one or two over the others, I wouldn't be disappointed with any of these selections.

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Max just said that Will Muschamp and Randy Shannon are the leading candidates.

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FWIW, they are my top choices too.

With a wife named Tina and kids named Tara, Taylor, and Tori, Pagano may be TT's choice :D

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Max just said that Will Muschamp and Randy Shannon are the leading candidates.

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FWIW, they are my top choices too.

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Agreed!!!

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Maybe im just dumb, but where is Pagano coming from? What is his History?

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Click on his name in the first post in this thread.

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MUSCHAMP IS WHAT I'VE HEARD FROM THREE DIFFERENT PEOPLE.

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no need to shout...

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From what I remember about Muschamp's teams at LSU, maybe he/we have reason to SHOUT. ;)

Maybe we will hear something today. Little birdies are talking.

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Max just said that Will Muschamp and Randy Shannon are the leading candidates.

217488[/snapback]

Randy Shannon would be a great hire IMHO, but why on earth would he make a lateral move like that? Same question stands for Charlie Strong, too. This makes it seem to me that Muschamps or Pagano would be the two most realistic possibilties. Anyone know anything about the contract situations with Strong and Shannon? Maybe that could be a factor. Regardless, though I'd probably favor one or two over the others, I wouldn't be disappointed with any of these selections.

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I believe that Coker is under heavy fire at the moment at Miami

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From 2004

By John DeShazier

Staff writer/The Times-Picayune

He's young, and Will Muschamp's résumé suggests he's a tad inexperienced.

He's not so headstrong he doesn't recognize good advice, not so stubborn he won't use it, not so independent he can't admit being LSU's defensive coordinator at age 33 carries the built-in advantage of having defensive guru Nick Saban as his head coach and mentor.

Maybe, even, the age is a positive. After all, who better for Saban to mold than someone who likely doesn't have his own agenda, who is receptive to his teaching, who as a second-year coordinator in Saban's four-year reign already has lasted longer than the previous three men to hold the position under Saban at LSU?

"I call the defenses," Muschamp said. "Coach Saban and I have a great working relationship. It wasn't intimidating at all (to be offered the job). The bottom line is, he wants to be good on defense, he wants to win football games.

"I sort of look at coaching like playing. In playing, there's no substitute for speed. In coaching, there's no substitute for experience. He's got great experience, his expertise is obviously on defense, he's as good a football coach as I've ever been around.

"So I welcome all the input with open arms when it helps our football team be better, which it does about 100 percent of the time. Because he's been through it before, he's done it before, he's seen it before, so it helps me on game day and through the preparation process."

Oh, yeah, it helps.

Statistically Oklahoma, LSU's opponent in the Sugar Bowl, has the best defense in the nation. It is one of the few that, arguably, is playing as well as LSU's blitz-'em-as-soon-as-they-wake-up unit.

The Tigers, for whom 15 players have combined for 39 sacks, lead the nation in scoring defense (10.8 points per game) and rushing touchdowns allowed (three), and only one team (Arkansas) scored more than 20 against them. And the Tigers won that game 55-24.

"It's a fun defense," safety Jack Hunt said. "There's always something going on, always something different -- a lot of mind games, doing different stuff, giving different looks."

"I think LSU will blitz (Oklahoma quarterback) Jason (White) in warm-ups," Oklahoma offensive line coach/run game coordinator Kevin Wilson said. "They're coming, they keep coming, and that's nothing new.

"The key thing against a blitzing team is that you keep attacking them, and you pick your spots to do that, and that is one of the best things we've done all year. We've attacked, not gone into a shell and curled up like a turtle.

"We keep coming and coming, and we're going to keep doing that this game." So will Muschamp. Because it's what he has learned.

"To (Saban's) credit, he stayed up with the times and maybe even has gone ahead of the times in his philosophies of the zone blitz," Oklahoma offensive coordinator Chuck Long said. "He's probably on the cutting edge of that entire zone blitz and implemented it."

Muschamp feels he's not far behind. He said he learned much about blitzing, aggressive defenses while serving as a graduate assistant at Auburn from 1995-97. That, coupled with a few other stops -- secondary coach at West Georgia in '98 and at Eastern Kentucky in '99, defensive coordinator at Valdosta State in 2000 and linebackers coach at LSU in '01 -- was enough for Saban.

Given the challenge of running a defense he knew was someone else's, Muschamp gladly accepted.

"Coach Saban and I have had a great working relationship from the time I was a linebackers coach," he said. "He and I have gotten along perfectly fine.

"He's got great passion and work ethic for what he wants to do. He's never asked me as an assistant coach to do anything more than he's already doing. And I respect that. It's easy to work hard for a guy that's willing to make the commitment and have the passion that he does."

Easy to follow him when you're 33. Smart, too.

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