Started By
Message
Posted on 1/31/12 at 4:25 pm to JBeam
He will do a little tv until he becomes an assistant in the NFL. Then who knows.
Posted on 1/31/12 at 4:27 pm to TigerSpy
Posted on 1/31/12 at 4:28 pm to JBeam
I don't think he would be a good HC. IMO, but unless he's a GREAT speaker/motivator, many great players expect too much out of players that just may not be as good.
from a qb perspective, how could you think you could live up to his expectations? How would he react if you didn't live up to his expectations, which judging from his own of himself, are pretty damn high?
see:..Mike Singletary
from a qb perspective, how could you think you could live up to his expectations? How would he react if you didn't live up to his expectations, which judging from his own of himself, are pretty damn high?
see:..Mike Singletary
This post was edited on 1/31/12 at 4:29 pm
Posted on 1/31/12 at 4:45 pm to mostbesttigerfanever
quote:
from a qb perspective, how could you think you could live up to his expectations? How would he react if you didn't live up to his expectations, which judging from his own of himself, are pretty damn high?
This is true. Saban was a DB in college, and the word is he demands a lot from his DBs. You're obviously going to be more critical of the position you played
This post was edited on 1/31/12 at 4:45 pm
Posted on 1/31/12 at 4:46 pm to JBeam
Are you serious? How many all-pro NFL QBs have started a coaching career in their late 30s? Not many. In fact, I can't think of a single successful NFL QB that is currently rising through the coaching ranks, other than the possibility of Jim Harbaugh. If anything, he would become a coach at the NFL level over the next several years. Recruiting alone, at the college level, would be his down fall. He's never done it.
Posted on 1/31/12 at 7:05 pm to sheek
Networks will have a hell in a cell match to see who gets to sign him. He's got a TV personality they'll all kill for.
I'd love to have him as a QB coach until he can prove to me he can call plays successfully off the field if he wants to coach.
I'd love to have him as a QB coach until he can prove to me he can call plays successfully off the field if he wants to coach.
Posted on 1/31/12 at 7:06 pm to JBeam
The only coaching Peyton Manning will do is at his passing camp.
Posted on 1/31/12 at 7:25 pm to JBeam
The guy was the offensive coordinator for the Colts for over a decade, has a great public personality, and no recruit in the nation would turn down a chance to have Peyton Manning in their living room. He would make an excellent coordinator and eventual head coach. The question is, is he willing to work that hard for about the same amount of cash he could make being a tv personality?
Posted on 1/31/12 at 7:30 pm to JBeam
No. He will be Governor of Tennessee within ten years, though.
Posted on 1/31/12 at 7:31 pm to JBeam
He is going to team up with Bill Haslam (gov of Tennessee and CEO of Pilot) and purchase the Tennessee Titans when their owner passes
Posted on 1/31/12 at 8:14 pm to JBeam
He'll go on the speech circuit for a while....
Posted on 1/31/12 at 8:18 pm to sheek
Yep, the Vols would take ANYTHING about now on Rocky Top, especially Peyton.
Posted on 1/31/12 at 8:23 pm to TN Bhoy
quote:ehh you think?
No. He will be Governor of Tennessee within ten years, though.
Posted on 1/31/12 at 8:24 pm to JBeam
quote:I could see this happening in the next 5-7 years.
Any of y'all think Peyton Manning becomes an SEC HC soon?
Posted on 1/31/12 at 8:36 pm to JBeam
Does he not have any non-football related business ventures? I could see him going the Roger Staubach route of being a regular guy who doesn't need it.
I wouldn't want to see him possibly soil his immaculate football career by failing as a coach (see Mike Singletary).
He might be good on TV but you never can tell. Nobody in Dallas thought Troy Aikman would be good at it and he's great. (Aikman never gave more than a yes or no answer to reports during his whole playing career)
If he does get into coaching just to stay in it, I would think being an offensive coordinator in the pros would be more fun than the same position in college (no recruiting).
I wouldn't want to see him possibly soil his immaculate football career by failing as a coach (see Mike Singletary).
He might be good on TV but you never can tell. Nobody in Dallas thought Troy Aikman would be good at it and he's great. (Aikman never gave more than a yes or no answer to reports during his whole playing career)
If he does get into coaching just to stay in it, I would think being an offensive coordinator in the pros would be more fun than the same position in college (no recruiting).
Posted on 1/31/12 at 8:41 pm to Legend13
he will be a co-owner of an NFL team. I can sit here and say I have inside info on this (which I do), but no one would believe me so what's the purpose...
Popular
Back to top
