Bill Kuharich
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10 hours of epic sax guy?
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We can do better.
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The answer is not in our past.
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The guy who's so great he's been unemployed for nearly 5 years?
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GL building a scout team and front office after being out of the league so long
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http://cornerstonesports.com/about-us/bill-kuharich |
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The fans really didn't like him down here when he was with the Saints. So I was kind of pissed when the Chiefs picked him up.
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we need to move FORWARD, not look back
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I want Haley back - get him a GM he can work with and throw $5M/y with a public apology from Chunt.
For GM, Russ Ball, Tom Gamble, or Scott McLohan would be great. But ideally, Reggie MacKenzie - he's the next Ozzie Newsome, imo. Flame away, but I think Haley could work with those guys. And no matter what happens, this team has done permanent damage to me as a fan...and the only way to completely fix that is to fire Pioli and bring back Haley. I know I'll get flamed, but in my heart that's how I really feel. |
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Interesting article from 2009: Underappreciated Kuharich deserved better from Chiefs By Clark Judge | CBSSports.com Senior Writer Jan. 13, 2009 Memo to Scott Pioli: Keep Bill Kuharich. Kuharich is Kansas City's vice president of player personnel, and to say he just got a raw deal is an understatement. Kuharich deserved to be part of the Chiefs' hunt for a general manager, but he wasn't ... and he wasn't because the Chiefs confined their search to applicants outside the club. So they landed the Patriots' Pioli, and hooray for them. With his proven track record, Bill Kuharich should be allowed to see his latest rebuilding project through. Now my question is: Where does that leave Kuharich? I suspect only Pioli knows. If he does what is best for him and his new employer keeps him, he trusts him and he relies on him. Kuharich not only is good at his job; he is so good he deserved to be a candidate for the position Pioli just filled. But he wasn't, and I'm still not sure why. Maybe the Chiefs considered him too old. He's 55. Maybe they wanted someone more telegenic. Kuharich is more at home in a sweater and khakis. Or maybe they just wanted a perspective from someone outside the organization, someone more removed from former president Carl Peterson. "He was collateral damage," one NFC general manager said. "The Chiefs didn't want to go anywhere near someone close to Carl. And that's unfortunate because Kuharich is outstanding." Well, whatever the reason it was apparent Kuharich didn't pass the physical and that owner Clark Hunt would be sold on someone outside the 816 area code. And that's OK if Hunt also understood that by doing that he eliminated one of his most qualified candidates. "I want somebody who's a shrewd evaluator of football talent," Hunt said last month. "(His) job will be to think 24/7 about the football team. That's the most important quality." Pardon me, but I think he just described Kuharich. Look, I don't know if he could have outpolled Pioli. I don't know that anyone could. But I do know he deserved a chance to make his case because, like Pioli, he knew how to build a football team. He did it when he was general manager with the Saints, and he has done in his nine years with the Chiefs. Let's start with New Orleans. I know what you're going to tell me: The Saints didn't rebound from their 1990s funk until Kuharich left, and you're right. But this just in: They got good with Kuharich's players. The foundation of the team that went to the 2000 playoffs was laid by Kuharich, and don't tell me how foolish it was for the Saints to trade away an entire draft class for Ricky Williams. First, that was an organizational decision, with the owner signing off on it. Second, of the draft picks they sacrificed, only one -- tackle Chris Samuels -- amounted to anything. Third, Williams became a marquee player for the Saints, rushing for 179 yards in a game as a rookie and 1,000 or more yards in two of his three seasons there. So, yeah, that move worked out. Like other drafts in New Orleans worked out, with four first-rounders under Kuharich going on to Pro Bowls. When he left after the 1999 season, the Saints were stocked with talent -- much as Tampa Bay was when Tony Dungy departed following the 2002 season. The Saints went from dead last (3-13) in their division in 1999 to first (10-6) a year later, a remarkable achievement that earned Kuharich's successor, Randy Mueller, the league's Executive of the Year. But the Saints won with many of the players Kuharich chose, which means he was as much Executive of the Year as Mueller. And let's not forget, it was Kuharich who brought free agent Jake Delhomme to the Saints in 1997. I once remember him telling me he thought the guy was good enough to start for the club. Only he never really had a chance. So he shuffled off to Carolina after Kuharich left ... and took the Panthers to the Super Bowl. Score another for Kuharich. Now fast forward to Kansas City. It was Kuharich who ran the pro personnel department that acquired starters like running back Priest Holmes, quarterback Trent Green and wide receiver Eddie Kennison and that swung the deal for tackle Willie Roaf. It was Kuharich who ran the past three drafts that delivered a raft of starters, including Tamba Hali, Dwayne Bowe, Bernard Pollard, Jarrad Page, Glenn Dorsey, Brandon Flowers and Branden Albert. And it was Kuharich who oversaw a 2008 draft that was universally acclaimed as one of the best anywhere. Four draft picks became starters, and all but one of the 11 choices played. Then there was quarterback Tyler Thigpen, whom Kuharich recommended after watching him in a preseason game with Minnesota. The Chiefs claimed him after he was waived, and he started 11 games this season. So the Chiefs went 2-14. Big deal. This is a tear-down long overdue. They served youth, with so many young players gaining experience that the foundation Kansas City needs to rebuild is firmly established. Too bad the guy who made it happen isn't. I don't know what happens to Kuharich now, and I bet he doesn't know, either. Essentially, management has just told him he's gone as far as he can in the organization, and that if he wants a promotion he can start by reaching for the yellow pages. That's a mistake. He has the Chiefs on the road to recovery; it just might be time to find the next patient to cure. Maybe he never becomes a general manager anywhere again, but he should at least go where he's appreciated -- and I can't believe that can't be Kansas City. "What I've always liked about him," one league source said, "is that he knows what a football player looks like. He doesn't need a stopwatch or a list of measureables. He can just look at a guy and tell." I remember when Kuharich once told me about an offensive lineman he admired and how he was sure he would be a perfect fit for New Orleans. Yeah, I said, I had heard of Willie Roaf, but I wasn't sure he was a can't-miss prospect. Kuharich was. Bill Kuharich knew what he was doing then, just as he knows what he's doing now. He deserves a chance to stay with the Chiefs. So give it to him, Scott Pioli. http://www.cbssports.com/nfl/story/11256515/2 |
Not my choice but not the worst choice out there.
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One of the guests on 810 yesterday mentioned Kuharich.
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This doesn't move the needle for me.
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The Parcells/Belichick GOBN is the one still most fashionable. |
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Can we get out of this endless cycle of hiring all these broke dick ****ing NFL retreads from the past 30 years?
These guys are fired/available for hiring for a reason. They are too ****ing old, too set in the past and don't have shit to bring to the table in terms of advancing the state of football to the point of modernization. Let's bring in some new blood. I am totally sick of these ****ing broke dick halfwits. GM: Marc Ross - Current Director of College Scouting for the NY Giants. 39, smart as hell and has proven he's got an eye for talent. HC: Brian Kelly - Current HC at Notre Dame who's done wonders with both the Golden Domers and Cincy. OC: Bobby Petrino, former Arkansas HC - While I wouldn't want Bobby anywhere near a HC job, the guy can call a kick ass offense than wins and pushes the ball up and down the field. DC: Dick Bumpus, TCU - One of the most innovative and successful people on the defensive side of the ball at any level. There you go. Wasn't that easy? |
I am probably in the minority here, but I would definitely be on board if Kuharich were looked at.
I think he was under appreciated for the job he did here. My only real concern in retaining and promting him back in'09 was that he'd keep Herman ****ing Edwards on as HC. But I liked hm a hell of a lot more even then than Pioli. |
No to a college staff.
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I don't think there's a chance in hell that Brian Kelley leaves ND. I'd take David Shaw as an option, and a guy that really intrigues me that no one talks about is Marc Trestman. |
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I just HOPE the debate is Kuharich versus Ross versus Polian, and NOT why the hell didn't Clark fire Pioli.
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Your point? |
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Actually, the guy wouldn't be a bad choice at all. He's been a pretty good/really good OC from what I remember and he's showing he can be a good coach up in Canada. I wouldn't mind Trestman one single bit, especially with a new QB such as Geno Smith. |
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He's already well on his way to being a legend there. Do you really think he has a realistic chance of building a dynasty with the Chiefs? Really? |
Kelly is a good coach but let's not act like winning at Notre Dame is hard to do. I havent really seen anything that screams "NFL" with Brian Kelly and he has no NFL background.
Shaw would be a great hire. He coached Andrew Luck and Stanford has actually gotten a bit better since Harbaugh left. Shaw also runs a pro style offense. I would love to hire Shaw but it will be hard to get him from his alma mater. |
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And as bad as Notre Dame was record wise under Charlie Weis, it's not like he stepped into a perfect transition at Notre Dame. And I think he did an excellent job at Cincinnati. And let's face facts - nobody knew this guy before this past year. One good year at Notre Dame and now he's "the dynasty?" |
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And even though Kelly doesn't have NFL experience, I don't think that's a negative. The guy can coach football. And the NFL is simply littered with ****ing halfwit retreads that get jobs just because "they've worked in the NFL before" - your exact reasoning why Kelly shouldn't be hired. Guys like Crennel and Daboll can continue to get high level coaching jobs in the NFL simply because GM's and owners are terrified of going outside the system and can't imagine innovation and modernization. Because most of the owners are old, crusty ****ers who've lived the past 30 years in the NFL. I mean, because of the logic you've given, Brian Daboll continues to have a job in the NFL. That's some seriously ****ed up, dipshit, closeminded logic. |
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People are so caught up in doing things the same way that they've always been done that they can't see what is right in front of them. With son many NFL teams incorporating so many of the spread and option concepts into their system, a successful college DC is a guy that just might bring the fresh defensive system that most successfully defends these new concepts. |
Ross' draft record is not very good.
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Nah, no one watches BCS Bowl games. Never heard of him. |
No. If Kuharich was any good, don't you think he'd have an NFL job right now? He's been out of the NFL since 2009. Something doesn't smell right there...
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Oh, I see what you mean. (Still think Todd will be good somewhere) |
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If I'm going the new HC route I'm going with a guy like Mike McCoy who's had success with Quarterbacks and is a disciplinarian. I think him and Ross could be a great pairing. |
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I'm saying that most people (and by "most people" I mean most people - the same people who think that Geno Smith is a running quarterback who should be passed over for a OT from a spread system - which, I would argue, is a more difficult transition to make position wise than a QB from a spread type system) probably don't know that he was even the coach at Cincy. |
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I'm scared that Ross is Pioli 2.0. Look at the similaries. Would we even know who Ross was if it wasn't for Coughlin and Manning? Just like Pioli wouldn't be anything without Billichick and Brady.
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Reggie McKenzie is the GM of the Raiders. And Todd Haley ****ing sucked as a head coach and even with a talented QB and skill position players in Pittsburgh, has been less than impressive. |
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Off the top of my head since he's been there... Bradshaw Nicks Cruz udfa Joseph Manningham Boss Williams JPP Webster Phillips Beatty Terrell Thomas - stud before injuries. Helped win super bowl Steve Smith - stud before injuries. Helped win super bowl. Wilson and Randle are looking good from this years class. Andre Brown and Barden both contributed this year as well when injuries hit. Dunno what the hell you are talking about. |
Chip Kelly
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