Jump to content

Pearl-Cohn at MBA


howdoitknow
 Share

Recommended Posts

I think Pearl Cohn might pull this one out. I expect them to rip off a number of big plays against this MBA defense. In the past two years, the Big Red have fallen victim to the big play numerous times under their new defensive coordinator. I don't see that changing. Really wish MBA had a great defensive coordinator like they did pre-2008.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Replies 49
  • Created
  • Last Reply

Top Posters In This Topic

Thats the huge difference in MBA football. The staff every year comes back with less experience and little continuity. Coach Elliotts departure continues to be the most glaring and the defensive schemes since he left leave lots to be desired. Nothing against current staff just lacks experience. Lots of great coaches are no longer on the hill:Elliott,Redmond,Sutton,Matthews,Counce Sr,Counce Jr,Black,Rutledge,Hiett,Caudill,Moran,Mittens,Whitfield have all left in the last 3 or 4 years. The consistancy of the staff has always been a strength of the program. Sign of the times I guess. Looking forward to Friday night and a great season from th Big Red.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Thats the huge difference in MBA football. The staff every year comes back with less experience and little continuity. Coach Elliotts departure continues to be the most glaring and the defensive schemes since he left leave lots to be desired. Nothing against current staff just lacks experience. Lots of great coaches are no longer on the hill:Elliott,Redmond,Sutton,Matthews,Counce Sr,Counce Jr,Black,Rutledge,Hiett,Caudill,Moran,Mittens,Whitfield have all left in the last 3 or 4 years. The consistancy of the staff has always been a strength of the program. Sign of the times I guess. Looking forward to Friday night and a great season from th Big Red.

 

From 2006 to 2009 points allowed average for MBA, BA, Ensworth

MBA - 16.1 pts

BA - 14.8 pts

EHS - 15.5 pts

Not much "glaring" difference!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Thats the huge difference in MBA football. The staff every year comes back with less experience and little continuity. Coach Elliotts departure continues to be the most glaring and the defensive schemes since he left leave lots to be desired. Nothing against current staff just lacks experience. Lots of great coaches are no longer on the hill:Elliott,Redmond,Sutton,Matthews,Counce Sr,Counce Jr,Black,Rutledge,Hiett,Caudill,Moran,Mittens,Whitfield have all left in the last 3 or 4 years. The consistancy of the staff has always been a strength of the program. Sign of the times I guess. Looking forward to Friday night and a great season from th Big Red.

Of the names you mention, only coach Elliott was at MBA for what I would consider a long period of time (although I can't place how long Caudill was there). Certainly I'd love to see him still out there (more because of the quality and class he brought to the school than his contributions to the football team), but change is inevitable. And MBA has done fairly well with young coaches over the years...Allen, Owen, and Bowers come to mind. I don't think there are any major problems on the Hill, and I certainly don't see any with the coaching staff.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Sure, there has been some turnover, and with a new participant in the game heckbent on throwing enough money at something until it sticks, the threat of turnover will likely continue. Yet, even with the changes, sometimes year-to-year, some trends have emerged in the DII era for MBA:

 

> The two head coaching changes have resulted in state titles in the new coaches' first years

> All three coaching eras have featured blockbuster out-of-state opponents (Bolles, Trinity, Byrnes, Moeller)

> All three coaching eras have featured MBA teams that don't like to lose twice to the same team in the same season and don't fall victim to the "hard to beat a good team twice in the same season" theory....

 

DII Era 1 '97-'01: 2-2 avenging a loss in the same season, 5-0 protecting an earlier win in the same season

DII Era 2 '02-'06: 4-1 avenging, 2-1 protecting

DII Era 3 '07-'09: 3-0 avenging, 2-0 protecting

 

If someone wants to call it paralysis by analysis, I can accept it, but if you look beyond the numbers, there's a very strong argument that tradition and pride carry over from year to year in any era. To me, these numbers really speak loudly: MBA has avenged a loss 75% of the time; their opponents have avenged losses only 10% of the time. And, for what it's worth, those 9 avenged victories haven't been cheapies: 8 of the 9 have been double-digit turnarounds, and 2 of those have been 40+ point turnarounds.

 

Heck, just the BA games alone speak volumes. MBA is 4-for-4 in flipping the tables on BA when losing to BA earlier in the regular season and 2-0 when facing BA in the playoffs ('00 and '07 title games) after beating BA earlier in the year. And these, too, are trends that have carried over all three eras.

 

I think the past doesn't play much, if any, role in a single game scenario. MBA's 15-0 record versus P-C will likely not be in any of the kids' minds on the field at kickoff tomorrow. And, as they say on Wall Street, past performance is not an indication of future returns. But, I think anyone who saw the three regular season games versus EHS, BGA, and BA last year and then saw what happened in the playoffs against the same three would have a difficult time not believing that there's something in the water on West End that's working.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Sure, there has been some turnover, and with a new participant in the game heckbent on throwing enough money at something until it sticks, the threat of turnover will likely continue. Yet, even with the changes, sometimes year-to-year, some trends have emerged in the DII era for MBA:

 

> The two head coaching changes have resulted in state titles in the new coaches' first years

> All three coaching eras have featured blockbuster out-of-state opponents (Bolles, Trinity, Byrnes, Moeller)

> All three coaching eras have featured MBA teams that don't like to lose twice to the same team in the same season and don't fall victim to the "hard to beat a good team twice in the same season" theory....

 

DII Era 1 '97-'01: 2-2 avenging a loss in the same season, 5-0 protecting an earlier win in the same season

DII Era 2 '02-'06: 4-1 avenging, 2-1 protecting

DII Era 3 '07-'09: 3-0 avenging, 2-0 protecting

 

If someone wants to call it paralysis by analysis, I can accept it, but if you look beyond the numbers, there's a very strong argument that tradition and pride carry over from year to year in any era. To me, these numbers really speak loudly: MBA has avenged a loss 75% of the time; their opponents have avenged losses only 10% of the time. And, for what it's worth, those 9 avenged victories haven't been cheapies: 8 of the 9 have been double-digit turnarounds, and 2 of those have been 40+ point turnarounds.

 

Heck, just the BA games alone speak volumes. MBA is 4-for-4 in flipping the tables on BA when losing to BA earlier in the regular season and 2-0 when facing BA in the playoffs ('00 and '07 title games) after beating BA earlier in the year. And these, too, are trends that have carried over all three eras.

 

I think the past doesn't play much, if any, role in a single game scenario. MBA's 15-0 record versus P-C will likely not be in any of the kids' minds on the field at kickoff tomorrow. And, as they say on Wall Street, past performance is not an indication of future returns. But, I think anyone who saw the three regular season games versus EHS, BGA, and BA last year and then saw what happened in the playoffs against the same three would have a difficult time not believing that there's something in the water on West End that's working.

 

The new participant in D2AA that is throwing $$$$ around is not the only school that has gained an advantage. Back before D2 was formed and schools that gave financial aid could only have three student athletes on the football team that received financial aid there was much more parity. With schools now allowed to have no set number of student athletes receiving financial aid MBA has excelled. MBA had some very strong teams before D2 but when the rules changed and they could throw around as much and often times more money than other schools the program went to another level. I am not saying that MBA is doing anything wrong but when the TSSAA formed D2 and the financial aid rules changed you now have the haves and the have nots and MBA is one of the haves. Let's be honest and say that the Big Red has thrown around a few bucks to kids that have helped make their football team play at a higher level on a regular basis.

 

As for turning the tables on teams that have defeated MBA I would like to know when the Big Red is going to play Byrnes again? Will MBA be making a trip to Duncan, SC in the next coulple of years? I am sure that the Big Red faithful could stop in @ the Beacon and order a chili cheeseburger a pleanty from Ole JC before the game.

Edited by cbg
Link to comment
Share on other sites

The Big Red will handle Pearl-Cohn! Pearl-Cohn does have one or two D1 players (well one for sure...the kid going to Duke) and they looked good at the Vandy 7-7 from what I saw. However, Pearl-Cohn's players are not discipline enough to beat the likes of MBA or other private schools nor do they have the heart or composure to do so. If I remember correctly they also lost to BGA last year as well... a team they should have beat! If If Pearl-Cohn is to have any chance of beating the Big Red they will have to play as a TEAM...an quite frankly I don't think they can on their best day! Speaking of beatings if I remember correctly Thats EXACTLY what they took from the BIG REG last year. Get ready for history to repeat itself! Pearl-Cohn is VERY OVERATED!

 

 

MBA 35

 

Pearl-Cohn 14

Link to comment
Share on other sites

The Big Red will handle Pearl-Cohn! Pearl-Cohn does have one or two D1 players (well one for sure...the kid going to Duke) and they looked good at the Vandy 7-7 from what I saw. However, Pearl-Cohn's players are not discipline enough to beat the likes of MBA or other private schools nor do they have the heart or composure to do so. If I remember correctly they also lost to BGA last year as well... a team they should have beat! If If Pearl-Cohn is to have any chance of beating the Big Red they will have to play as a TEAM...an quite frankly I don't think they can on their best day! Speaking of beatings if I remember correctly Thats EXACTLY what they took from the BIG REG last year. Get ready for history to repeat itself! Pearl-Cohn is VERY OVERATED!

 

 

MBA 35

How dare you say that Pearl Cohn should have beaten BGA last year. We beat them and MBA what is your point.

Pearl-Cohn 14

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Sure, there has been some turnover, and with a new participant in the game heckbent on throwing enough money at something until it sticks, the threat of turnover will likely continue. Yet, even with the changes, sometimes year-to-year, some trends have emerged in the DII era for MBA:

 

> The two head coaching changes have resulted in state titles in the new coaches' first years

> All three coaching eras have featured blockbuster out-of-state opponents (Bolles, Trinity, Byrnes, Moeller)

> All three coaching eras have featured MBA teams that don't like to lose twice to the same team in the same season and don't fall victim to the "hard to beat a good team twice in the same season" theory....

 

DII Era 1 '97-'01: 2-2 avenging a loss in the same season, 5-0 protecting an earlier win in the same season

DII Era 2 '02-'06: 4-1 avenging, 2-1 protecting

DII Era 3 '07-'09: 3-0 avenging, 2-0 protecting

 

If someone wants to call it paralysis by analysis, I can accept it, but if you look beyond the numbers, there's a very strong argument that tradition and pride carry over from year to year in any era. To me, these numbers really speak loudly: MBA has avenged a loss 75% of the time; their opponents have avenged losses only 10% of the time. And, for what it's worth, those 9 avenged victories haven't been cheapies: 8 of the 9 have been double-digit turnarounds, and 2 of those have been 40+ point turnarounds.

 

Heck, just the BA games alone speak volumes. MBA is 4-for-4 in flipping the tables on BA when losing to BA earlier in the regular season and 2-0 when facing BA in the playoffs ('00 and '07 title games) after beating BA earlier in the year. And these, too, are trends that have carried over all three eras.

 

I think the past doesn't play much, if any, role in a single game scenario. MBA's 15-0 record versus P-C will likely not be in any of the kids' minds on the field at kickoff tomorrow. And, as they say on Wall Street, past performance is not an indication of future returns. But, I think anyone who saw the three regular season games versus EHS, BGA, and BA last year and then saw what happened in the playoffs against the same three would have a difficult time not believing that there's something in the water on West End that's working.

 

So there is a possibility of a "wall street collaspe" tonight on West End?

Don't think so. I'm going with historical averages even though the kids play one game at a time.

Edited by shakinthefat
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

 Share

Announcements


  • Recent Posts

    • Deja vu all over again, 7 yrs apart. SMDH Does anybody talk to each other?
    • OK, well, that’s because two quarterbacks can’t start. That’s football 101. The main quarterback won the starting job, so he was on varsity, and the Seymour transfer did not win the starting job. He played some varsity. He was mainly junior varsity, and he balled out when healthy, so for the starting quarterback who’s been starting varsity since his freshman year, if you have any form of proof that he’s gotten worse, somehow, whether that means stats or whatnot, please feel free to share.
    • They’ve both gotten worse. I’ve seen enough games to know that. 
    • The only two transfers that Bearden has gotten that went on to play college football were a defensive back from Karnes, who transferred here way before the new coaching staff got here, and a running back from Carter, who went on to play at Maryville College. Both players received those offers while at Bearden, and both players got a diploma from Bearden High School. Therefore, they are Bearden kids, and you can’t do anything about that.   The transfer from Seymour didn’t win the job, what do you expect two quarterbacks to start at the same time? He played great on JV when he could stay healthy, and when he came in on varsity, he did great. The quarterback position is definitely going to be in good hands when the current starting quarterback leaves, but until then, they’re just going to be battling it out like every good quarterback competition does. The current starting quarterback has his flaws, and that is in the pass game, but what he doesn’t have flaws is running and scrambling, and if you go back and watch any game, which I’m sure you didn’t watch any, we used him very often, and when we needed a deep ball, we brought in the transfer from Seymour. The starting quarterback last year will be a senior this year, and the Seymour transfer will be a junior, so the Seymour transfer is definitely going to get his spotlight. He may even win the job this year. Football isn’t about who the newspaper thinks is the best kid. The best kid in the position will win the starting job, and I trust the coaching staff more than a newspaper or article to pick my starting QB.
    • I mean, we’ve only gotten two transfers that went on to play college football, one who went to UT Martin came his second semester junior year before the new coaching staff was here, and the other one went on to play at Maryville College, in which I don’t believe he had any interest prior to transferring.
×
  • Create New...