Started By
Message

re: Alabama Hires Patriots' TE Brian Daboll as Offensive Coordinator

Posted on 2/9/17 at 1:08 pm to
Posted by TidalSurge1
Ft Walton Beach
Member since Sep 2016
36467 posts
Posted on 2/9/17 at 1:08 pm to
quote:

Oklahoma ran the ball pretty well IIRC

Yeah. I'm not ready to buy this echo chamber narrative that Saban has all of sudden done a 180 on offensive style and philosophy.

A lot has been invested in migrating toward a balanced adaptable, multiple offense that blends modern DT-QB, zone-read RPOs, jet sweeps, screens, etc. with a physical blended zone-read and conventional downhill inside running attack.

All season long, Saban repeatedly expressed his desire to get the passing game going better and get the ball into the hands of our receiving corp players. Saban loves explosive chunk plays as much as he loves being able to run the ball down other teams throats.

All season long, the media's narrative was about how Saban has changed his tune and embraced incorporating modern spread offense concepts into Alabama's offense.

Now, suddenly the narrative is that he's changed his mind about that. I'm just not buying it.
This post was edited on 2/9/17 at 1:17 pm
Posted by alabamabuckeye
Member since Jun 2010
22206 posts
Posted on 2/9/17 at 1:10 pm to
I don't think Saban cares what type of offense we run, as long as its balanced. That's all he really wants, and all we really want.
Posted by Triple Daves
ITP
Member since Sep 2016
5740 posts
Posted on 2/9/17 at 1:26 pm to
Yea, we're not going to Les Miles I-formation 47 plays a game football or anything.
Posted by TidalSurge1
Ft Walton Beach
Member since Sep 2016
36467 posts
Posted on 2/9/17 at 1:53 pm to
Eric Kiesau, Lane Kiffin's 2015 roommate making early impression as OC at Fresno State
AL.com | Jul 10, 2016
quote:

Thursday night is "date night" for Alabama coaches during the season, the one in-season evening coaches can get home relatively early and spend time with their families.

Last year, Alabama offensive coordinator Lane Kiffin often spent those nights at home with Eric Kiesau.

Kiffin's family was in California. Kiesau's was in Washington. So the two spent many of those Thursday nights relaxing and watching football at their home a short walk from the Tide's team headquarters.

Prior to taking over as Fresno State's offensive coordinator in January, Kiesau spent last year as an offensive analyst with Alabama, living with Kiffin while helping the Tide transition to more of a no-huddle, up-tempo offense.

At Fresno, the 43-year old Kiesau said his offense will be a combination of 2015 Alabama and what he ran as the offensive coordinator at Washington in 2013.

"Really excited about the progress he's been able to make, not only with our players, but with our entire offensive staff and bringing them together around a common focus of what we want to be offensively," Fresno State coach Tim DeRuyter said. "What we're doing is a little bit more mentally taxing on our players, but he's made it simple. We had relatively few busts during the spring, and I was impressed with how quickly our players assimilated to our system."

Before joining Alabama, Kiesau was Colorado's offensive coordinator in 2009 and 2010, California's passing game coordinator and wide receivers coach in 2011, Washington's offensive coordinator in 2012 and 2013 and the wide receivers coach and eventually the interim offensive coordinator at Kansas in 2014.

Within Kiesau's up-tempo spread offense, Washington ranked 13th nationally in total offense in 2013. However, coach Steve Sarkisian left Washington for USC in December 2013 and retained the Trojans' previous offensive coordinator. Kiesau went to Kansas, but he was again out of work after Kansas fired coach Charlie Weis.

Alabama hired Kiesau last March heading into Kiffin's second season as the Tide offensive coordinator.

"In 2014, Bama, they were a huddle team. But near the end of the season, they started to go with a little bit more no-huddle and using tempo," Kiesau said. "So when the season was over, coach Saban wanted to go all-in, all no-huddle, and coach Kiffin as well. But they didn't know the process of how to do it and what it takes to go from a huddle team, where you have long calls and a lot of long play calls, to a no-huddle team, where you have to abbreviate everything down and shorten it down."

Enter Kiesau.

Some plays when you're a huddle team can be as many as eight or nine words, Kiesau said. When you're going no-huddle, you want play calls to be two or three words.

Helping Alabama simplify its play calls and terminology was one of Kiesau's primary contributions last year.

With Kiesau's assistance, Tide coaches also learned how to better use the sideline boards that have become so popular with no-huddle teams.

Kiesau later served as a sounding board and was there to answer no-huddle-related questions like 'How'd you handle this, Kiesau?' or 'How'd you do this?'

Aided by Kiesau, Alabama ranked 45th nationally in total offense last year despite having to replace all but two offensive starters.

"That was my primary role, to transition them from a huddle team to a no-huddle team and help them go through the process of changing, using the boards, using the signs, how you signal it and how you communicate it," said Kiesau, who also assisted the Tide with its scouting of upcoming opponents.

Much of Kiesau's time was spent with his roommate, Kiffin.

Kiffin was the primary person Kiesau was in contact with during the workday. He usually stood with Kiffin and the quarterbacks during practice. The two were then obviously also together after practice.

Kiffin as a roommate?

"It was fun," Kiesau said. "It was easy because of being right across the street from the facility, so we could just walk on over, work all day, get some dinner, then go back to the room and just hang out."

Kiesau said he couldn't think of any great or funny stories from his time living with Kiffin.

"We worked all day, and we wouldn't get back to the place until 11 o'clock sometimes, and we'd just sit and watch TV," Kiesau said.

Kiffin was one of several big-name coaches that endorsed Kiesau as DeRuyter went through the process of finding a new offensive coordinator.

The initial recommendation was from former Boise State and Colorado coach Dan Hawkins, whom Kiesau worked under at Colorado from 2006-10.

There were later endorsements from others like Oregon coach Mark Helfrich, Weis and former California coach Jeff Tedford. And Kiffin.

"Lane couldn't say enough good things about him," DeRuyter said. "He was really impressed with the level of detail, his knowledge of the game, his approach to how he installed things, just everything as a football coach that you would want. Lane's been a head coach, and I think he knows what he's looking for in an assistant. He was very detailed in how he thought Eric hit all those kinds of things, that you don't have to be a micromanager with him, that you give him the big picture and he'll run with it, that he's going to set a direction, that he's going to be positive for the players, that they're going to enjoy playing for him and that he's going to recruit his tail off. All of the things you want to hear as a head coach."

In all, DeRuyter talked to around 10 candidates. Kiesau was one of three DeRuyter interviewed in person. What DeRuyter said was the "icing on the cake" was Kiesau's year at Alabama with Saban and his now former roommate.

"To have some insight on that system and how coach Saban does things and to see how we could maybe incorporate some of those principles into our program, I thought that was really a unique opportunity for us to hire someone like Eric with that background," DeRuyter said. "And in interviewing the different candidates, I was struck by how organized Eric was, how he was able to incorporate a few of the principles of what coach Saban was bringing to the table within his own personal philosophy. So it just all came together where it felt like he was the right fit here, and he's done a terrific job."
This post was edited on 2/9/17 at 2:03 pm
Posted by Huddie Leadbetter
Member since May 2016
3822 posts
Posted on 2/9/17 at 2:20 pm to
quote:

All season long, Saban repeatedly expressed his desire to get the passing game going better and get the ball into the hands of our receiving corp players. Saban loves explosive chunk plays as much as he loves being able to run the ball down other teams throats.


We had success getting the ball to the receivers when we ran the pro set. Saban expressing a desire "to get the passing game going better" was his nice way of saying that Hurts needed to improve.
first pageprev pagePage 1 of 1Next pagelast page
refresh

Back to top
logoFollow SECRant for SEC Football News
Follow us on Twitter and Facebook to get the latest updates on SEC Football and Recruiting.

FacebookTwitter