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-   -   Chiefs Herm: You're welcome, Kansas City (https://chiefsplanet.com/BB/showthread.php?t=239611)

Hammock Parties 01-04-2011 01:26 AM

Herm: You're welcome, Kansas City
 
Wow.

http://www.kansascity.com/2011/01/03...e-players.html

Quote:

Shortly before the start of what would be his final season coaching the Chiefs, Herm Edwards called a meeting for many of his best young players: Tamba Hali, Dwayne Bowe, Jamaal Charles, Glenn Dorsey, Brandon Flowers and others.

Perhaps sensing he wouldn’t be their coach much longer, Edwards told those players that the Chiefs eventually would be built around them.

“They were going to be the foundation of this football team down the road, and I told them that,” said Edwards, now an analyst on ESPN. “They didn’t understand what I was telling them. A lot of those guys were too young to think about it. A lot of them looked at me kind of funny”

Edwards, sure enough, was fired after that 2-14 season in 2008. But he was right in what he told those players that day — and his legacy lives on with the Chiefs.

The Chiefs won the AFC West championship and will play Baltimore on Sunday in a first-round playoff game at Arrowhead Stadium with many players acquired by Edwards filling key roles.

Charles and Bowe are Pro Bowlers. Hali led the AFC with 14 1/2 sacks. Dorsey, Flowers and Brandon Carr are fulfilling the vision Edwards had when they were acquired in his final draft. Branden Albert, Barry Richardson and Ron Edwards are starters.

Although the Chiefs won just 15 games in Edwards’ three seasons, he can take some pride that the youth movement he initiated has finally paid off.

“I’m happy for what’s going on there,” Edwards said. “I’m happy for the fans. They had to suffer for three years.

“I tried to leave the team better than when I got here. We didn’t win enough games. I get that part. But I always sensed we had the right kind of guys and they would give us a chance eventually.

“I knew the Chiefs had a chance (after Edwards left) because the cupboard wasn’t bare. You’ve got to give Todd Haley a lot of credit. You’ve got to give Romeo Crennel a lot of credit. Charlie Weis, too. They came in and they had a plan and they were very good with the players. They acquired a quarterback. They’ve done some good things, too, along with having some pieces there.”

Edwards used many of the Chiefs’ best young players as immediate starters. They developed the necessary experience but couldn’t win enough for Edwards to keep his job.

“We weren’t afraid to let them play,” Edwards said. “We knew there was going to be some heartbreak. We knew there were going to be some things they didn’t get because they didn’t have experience. That’s the hardest thing. You want them to have experience, but the only way to get it is to let them play.

“Some of the guys we drafted were really young. We suffered through all of that. We were so young, and we had no veterans to hold on to. We lost some games in the fourth quarter because we just ran out of gas.

“Now all of a sudden a lot of those guys are in their third season and they’ve figured this football thing out. When you’re young and you’re asked to play right away, that’s a burden. A lot of those guys had to mature as they played. They made errors. It wasn’t because of (a lack of) talent. It was because of inexperience.”

Hali was Edwards’ first draft pick. He was selected as a defensive end to be a complementary pass rusher to Jared Allen but had to become the No. 1 rusher in 2008 after the Chiefs traded Allen to Minnesota.

Only this season, under Haley and after being moved to outside linebacker, did Hali flourish.

“He had a great upside,” Edwards said. “Tamba was still learning how to play football and how to be a professional when we had him. Sometimes it takes guys a little bit longer to acquire a pass-rush move. The way they use him now helps him. They stand him up, they move him around.”

Charles was a part-time player behind Larry Johnson in his only season playing for Edwards. But he averaged a healthy 5.3 yards per carry and caught 27 passes. Edwards indicated Charles would have played more the next season had he remained as coach.

Charles finished this season as the NFL’s second leading rusher with 1,467 yards. He came close to setting an NFL record with 6.4 yards per carry.

“Jamaal Charles was 21 when we drafted him,” Edwards said. “He was an immature guy. But you could tell he was going to be a great player. He was a home-run hitter in college. He doesn’t have a big frame, but he’s not afraid to run inside.”

Bowe had solid statistics in his two seasons under Edwards. He caught 70 passes for 995 yards as a rookie.

His numbers this season, 72 catches for 1,162 yards, aren’t significantly better. But he had 15 receiving touchdowns, leading the league.

Haley held Bowe to a high work standard, even to the point of benching him in the preseason last year. Bowe was more consistent this year.

“He didn’t have to work real hard because he’s so big and so strong,” Edwards said. “He could get away with that in college, and it took him a while to figure it out. Even still, his rookie year, he almost had a thousand yards in receptions.

“Todd’s done a great job with him. But I also think a lot of it is on Dwayne. He understood where he was in his career.”

007 01-04-2011 01:30 AM

I don't see where he is saying "You're welcome."

FD 01-04-2011 01:31 AM

Too bad he couldnt coach them worth a crap.

Rain Man 01-04-2011 01:32 AM

I'll let Herm take a bow for that good draft in '08. But when he told a bunch of first-round picks that the team would eventually be built around them, they 'looked at him funny'? Most of those guys were first-round picks. They know the team is going to be built around them. I bet Herm started rambling about stuff like how a punt is good and they were looking at him funny for that reason.

Chiefs Rool 01-04-2011 01:54 AM

the guy should be hired just to draft, he can do that well. But don't ask him to do anything else.

BigRock 01-04-2011 01:58 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by ClayWhit (Post 7319539)
“He didn’t have to work real hard because he’s so big and so strong,” Edwards said. “He could get away with that in college"

BUT NOT ON HERM'S WATCH, BY GOD

stevieray 01-04-2011 02:01 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by BigRock (Post 7319553)
BUT NOT ON HERM'S WATCH, BY GOD

quality.

HemiEd 01-04-2011 02:26 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Forward Dante (Post 7319541)
Too bad he couldnt coach them worth a crap.

He didn't have time to ruin these guys, if he would have had a couple more years he could have accomplished it.

As many said, he should have been a personnel guy, and not a coach.

zonachief 01-04-2011 02:27 AM

Not a bad read. Nice to see humility from Herm. Herm was a Great talent evaluator, but a trainwreck of a coach.

HoneyBadger 01-04-2011 02:33 AM

Maybe we can bring him back, as a scout.

kchero 01-04-2011 02:37 AM

I dont find much of a problem with this article. Herm did bring in a significant amount of talent on this team.

Fritz88 01-04-2011 02:38 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Guru (Post 7319540)
I don't see where he is saying "You're welcome."

It is implizit.
Posted via Mobile Device

big nasty kcnut 01-04-2011 02:44 AM

**** herm!

runnercyclist 01-04-2011 03:58 AM

This article is flustrating

MichaelH 01-04-2011 04:40 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by fire_lm (Post 7319575)
Maybe we can bring him back, as a scout.

Yeah, with that EGO of his. I don't like him talking about the Chiefs let alone working for them.

Norman Einstein 01-04-2011 05:54 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by HemiEd (Post 7319572)
He didn't have time to ruin these guys, if he would have had a couple more years he could have accomplished it.

As many said, he should have been a personnel guy, and not a coach.

I think he would be a great stocker at Price Chopper, maybe a grocery bagger.

Norman Einstein 01-04-2011 05:55 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by big nasty kcnut (Post 7319583)
**** herm!


^^^^This^^^^

threebag 01-04-2011 05:58 AM

You play to win the game

Sweet Daddy Hate 01-04-2011 06:21 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by zonachief (Post 7319573)
Not a bad read. Nice to see humility from Herm. Herm was a Great talent evaluator, but a trainwreck of a coach.

This.

Fritz88 01-04-2011 07:16 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by zonachief (Post 7319573)
Not a bad read. Nice to see humility from Herm. Herm was a Great talent evaluator, but a trainwreck of a coach.

That is why I dont mind seeing him back in a non coaching capacity. Heck, I dont mind him coaching DBs.
Posted via Mobile Device

ShortRoundChief 01-04-2011 07:25 AM

I am laughing my ass off at "clay whit"

Deberg_1990 01-04-2011 07:37 AM

:facepalm:

Who gives a crap what Herm says? For real. Why does the Star continue to interview him? Should they interview Vermeil next for some talk he had with Waters back in 2001?

Dave Lane 01-04-2011 07:37 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by zonachief (Post 7319573)
Not a bad read. Nice to see humility from Herm. Herm was a Great talent evaluator, but a trainwreck of a coach.

He isn't worth shit as a scout, Bill Kuharich deserves way more credit for the 2008 draft than Herm.

Bwana 01-04-2011 07:40 AM

Herm, thanks for leaving!

Carl, see above.

XOXOXO

The Fans

http://www.gifsoup.com/webroot/animatedgifs/30604_o.gif

ShortRoundChief 01-04-2011 07:45 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Deberg_1990 (Post 7319659)
:facepalm:

Who gives a crap what Herm says? For real. Why does the Star continue to interview him? Should they interview Vermeil next for some talk he had with Waters back in 2001?

big difference.
Haley to Waters: **** you 22 guys off the street, bitch.
Vermeil to Waters: Let me hug you until you become a probowler. (tears in his eyes)

Sweet Daddy Hate 01-04-2011 08:00 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by J Diddy (Post 7319666)
big difference.
Haley to Waters: **** you 22 guys off the street, bitch.
Vermeil to Waters: Let me hug you until you become a probowler. (tears in his eyes)

Me to Waters:

"Bret Fah-vuh-rah called, and he's looking for a full-time golf buddy"!

HMc 01-04-2011 08:10 AM

so a bunch of consensus first round picks became the foundations of a franchise that had lou from concessions playing 2nd team DL? shocking

Hog's Gone Fishin 01-04-2011 08:24 AM

Not hard to bring in talent when you're drafting top 5 every year

Pushead2 01-04-2011 08:28 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Hog Farmer (Post 7319740)
Not hard to bring in talent when you're drafting top 5 every year

this

FAX 01-04-2011 08:29 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Dave Lane (Post 7319660)
He isn't worth shit as a scout, Bill Kuharich deserves way more credit for the 2008 draft than Herm.

Me. Personally. I've given up on this fight. It just isn't worth it, Mr. Dave Lane.

Often, the myth supersedes all evidence to the contrary.

I once asked who Herm actually "scouted" while he was with the Chiefs in that capacity. After some time (and, no doubt, much googling), Mr. Mecca responded with "Dale Carter". Apparently, Dale Carter was an overlooked player from an unknown school when Herm scouted his ass and gave him a chance in the bigs.

I occasionally worry about the future of our country.

FAX

Hammock Parties 01-04-2011 08:29 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Hog Farmer (Post 7319740)
Not hard to bring in talent when you're drafting top 5 every year

Herm only had one top 5 draft.

Royal Fanatic 01-04-2011 08:48 AM

This tells me all I need to know about Herm Edwards:

Year 1: 9-7
Year 2: 4-12
Year 3: 2-14

Not only that, but in the 2-14 season, after every loss he seemed very happy and satisfied in his post-game press conferences. If he had melted down after a loss like Dennis Green or Jim Mora I would have respected him a lot more. At least it would have looked like he cared.

Fish 01-04-2011 09:08 AM

Not surprising seeing the Herm hate stoked in this thread. He never did get a fair shake from the majority of the fans. But the truth is that he supplied this team with today's leaders. He put the young guys out there, knowing they would make rookie mistakes. And now that experience is really paying off. Everyone saying "F Herm" should stop and think about what this team would be like without Charles, Bowe, Flowers, Hali, Carr, etc.

Sweet Daddy Hate 01-04-2011 09:11 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by KC Fish (Post 7319805)
Not surprising seeing the Herm hate stoked in this thread. He never did get a fair shake from the majority of the fans. But the truth is that he supplied this team with today's leaders. He put the young guys out there, knowing they would make rookie mistakes. And now that experience is really paying off. Everyone saying "F Herm" should stop and think about what this team would be like without Charles, Bowe, Flowers, Hali, Carr, etc.

This.

ChiTown 01-04-2011 09:16 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by FAX (Post 7319752)
Me. Personally. I've given up on this fight. It just isn't worth it, Mr. Dave Lane.

Often, the myth supersedes all evidence to the contrary.

I once asked who Herm actually "scouted" while he was with the Chiefs in that capacity. After some time (and, no doubt, much googling), Mr. Mecca responded with "Dale Carter". Apparently, Dale Carter was an overlooked player from an unknown school when Herm scouted his ass and gave him a chance in the bigs.

I occasionally worry about the future of our country.

FAX

:LOL:

alpha_omega 01-04-2011 09:17 AM

Whew...sure glad we had Herm. :rolleyes:

milkman 01-04-2011 09:55 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by KC Fish (Post 7319805)
Not surprising seeing the Herm hate stoked in this thread. He never did get a fair shake from the majority of the fans. But the truth is that he supplied this team with today's leaders. He put the young guys out there, knowing they would make rookie mistakes. And now that experience is really paying off. Everyone saying "F Herm" should stop and think about what this team would be like without Charles, Bowe, Flowers, Hali, Carr, etc.

I think Herman ****ing Edwards deserves credit for getting Clark Hunt to buy into the idea of rebuilding this team through the draft, a plan I wholeheartedly agree with.

I also agree that he deserves credit for getting those young guys on the field and getting them that experience.

But, at the end of the day, the guy was a mediocre coach who didn't prepare his team, who couldn't coach a pop warner team on game day, and never held anyone accountable.

Had Lamar Hunt actually cared, we might not have ever had to go through the shit we've had to go through over the years.

HemiEd 01-04-2011 10:17 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Norman Einstein (Post 7319617)
I think he would be a great stocker at Price Chopper, maybe a grocery bagger.

Toll booth change collector. He clearly has the demeanor for it.

2112 01-04-2011 10:24 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by milkman (Post 7319876)
I think Herman ****ing Edwards deserves credit for getting Clark Hunt to buy into the idea of rebuilding this team through the draft, a plan I wholeheartedly agree with.

I also agree that he deserves credit for getting those young guys on the field and getting them that experience.

But, at the end of the day, the guy was a mediocre coach who didn't prepare his team, who couldn't coach a pop warner team on game day, and never held anyone accountable.

Had Lamar Hunt actually cared, we might not have ever had to go through the shit we've had to go through over the years.

Herm left the Jets in shambles right after he left. as he did with the Chiefs. the man is a douche and a fraud, he shouldn't get any ****ing credit.

On the flip side, Haley has made the Chiefs a respectable organization again. he should get all the credit.

zonachief 01-04-2011 10:28 AM

Wasnt there talk that herm wanted to blow the thing up after his first year? The team was old and needed to be rebuilded but Carl wouldnt let him do it? Not defending Herm as a coach but he inherted an abomantion of a team that was old as ****.

2112 01-04-2011 10:33 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by zonachief (Post 7319936)
Wasnt there talk that herm wanted to blow the thing up after his first year? The team was old and needed to be rebuilded but Carl wouldnt let him do it? Not defending Herm as a coach but he inherted an abomantion of a team that was old as ****.

What I dont get is Herm being credited for bringing in talent in the draft. did he really tell Peterson what to do on draft day? was Peterson that dumb too?

Farzin 01-04-2011 10:34 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Chiefs Rool (Post 7319551)
the guy should be hired just to draft, he can do that well. But don't ask him to do anything else.

Strongly agree. He was a scout as a Chief before being the NYJ head coach. I really thought he did a great job of bringing in player. Just couldn't coach them.

OnTheWarpath15 01-04-2011 10:44 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by D2112 (Post 7319942)
What I dont get is Herm being credited for bringing in talent in the draft. did he really tell Peterson what to do on draft day? was Peterson that dumb too?

Peterson always deferred to his coaches regarding the draft.

That's why our drafts sucked so hard while DV was the coach.

milkman 01-04-2011 11:30 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by D2112 (Post 7319942)
What I dont get is Herm being credited for bringing in talent in the draft. did he really tell Peterson what to do on draft day? was Peterson that dumb too?

What we heard is that Clark Hunt took the final say in the draft out of Carl's hands and gave Kuharich that responsibility, though no source would confirm this.

milkman 01-04-2011 11:33 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Farzin (Post 7319945)
Strongly agree. He was a scout as a Chief before being the NYJ head coach. I really thought he did a great job of bringing in player. Just couldn't coach them.

None of Carl's drafts, including those that involved Herman ****ing Edwards as a scout, wre worth a damn.

That's not to say that we didn't get some good players through the years, but each indivdual overall draft was mediocre, at besst, until the last draft, the one that rumors had Kuharich responsible for.

LaChapelle 01-04-2011 11:34 AM

Herm took over an ancient team and made it young
but he still practiced and trained like an old team -slacked off for old frames
Gonzo and Waters knew that was going to change and wanted the hell out
considering LSU players seem to be soft Herm was just all wrong

Deberg_1990 01-04-2011 11:34 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by zonachief (Post 7319936)
Wasnt there talk that herm wanted to blow the thing up after his first year? The team was old and needed to be rebuilded but Carl wouldnt let him do it?

There was always talk of that but who knows? That might have been fueled some by the "Hard Knocks" stuff showing Peterson favoring Huard and Herm favoring Croyle in 07.

FAX 01-04-2011 11:38 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by milkman (Post 7320080)
What we heard is that Clark Hunt took the final say in the draft out of Carl's hands and gave Kuharich that responsibility, though no source would confirm this.

Actually, there was an article by somebody (Gretz, maybe?) that discussed this in some detail. And another article about how Herm used to fall asleep watching film on kids. I wish I'd saved them when the subject reemerges about how great a drafter Herm is/was.

Personally, I'm unconvinced that someone as inept as Herm in every other conceivable category of existence could possess the savant-like ability to draft well. It's far more likely that Bill Kuharich had vastly more input and gave Herm a short-list of players. Certainly, in his interviews, Kuharich was extremely knowledgeable when it came to each selection.

FAX

milkman 01-04-2011 11:42 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by D2112 (Post 7319928)
Herm left the Jets in shambles right after he left. as he did with the Chiefs. the man is a douche and a fraud, he shouldn't get any ****ing credit.

On the flip side, Haley has made the Chiefs a respectable organization again. he should get all the credit.

I hated Herman ****ing Edwards, as you well know, but I like to think that I can be fair and objective.

Royal Fanatic 01-04-2011 11:47 AM

I remember Herm Edwards saying that he never watches the Super Bowl, and that he prefers to go see a movie instead. I guess he figured there was nothing he could ever learn by watching the two best teams play each other.

He may not be the worst coach ever. He may not even be the worst Chiefs coach ever. But he was fucking horrible.

Sweet Daddy Hate 01-04-2011 04:09 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Royal Fanatic (Post 7320125)
I remember Herm Edwards saying that he never watches the Super Bowl, and that he prefers to go see a movie instead. I guess he figured there was nothing he could ever learn by watching the two best teams play each other.

He may not be the worst coach ever. He may not even be the worst Chiefs coach ever. But he was fucking horrible.


Wow. Just...wow. I bet he gets bummed watching SB highlights for his broadcasting career. Oh wait; he spends his prep time coming up with great stuff like "Herminated".

Yeah.

ChiefaRoo 01-04-2011 04:43 PM

Dear Herm,

Results talk and your bullshit walks.

Sincerely,

Everyone

BIG_DADDY 01-04-2011 04:52 PM

Herm takes credit for the sun rising every morning.

Norman Einstein 01-04-2011 07:16 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Fritz88 (Post 7319644)
That is why I dont mind seeing him back in a non coaching capacity. Heck, I dont mind him coaching DBs.
Posted via Mobile Device

I'd rather that Herman never step foot in Missouri, Kansas, Oklahoma, Arkansas, Nebraska or Iowa.

It would be nice if we could even block the air waves so his image couldn't even get back in.


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