Jump to content

Nick Sirianni: I have the utmost faith in DC Jonathan Gannon


time2rock
 Share

Recommended Posts

Nick Sirianni: I have the utmost faith in DC Jonathan Gannon

Posted by Myles Simmons on October 26, 2021, 10:22 AM EDT

simmons.JPG.c399383135528582c29bdb18d49d3db5.JPG

 

After Sunday’s loss to the Raiders, some of the Eagles veteran players lamented the passivity of Philadelphia’s new defensive scheme.

Defensive tackle Fletcher Cox and safety Rodney McLeod each said a version of, "We just play what’s called,” after Philadelphia surrendered 442 total yards and allowed quarterback Derek Carr to complete 31-of-34 passes in the 33-22 loss.

Head coach Nick Sirianni was critical of the defensive calls and philosophy in his postgame press conference, too, saying, "Anytime you’re not playing well, you have to make changes, you have to adapt, you have to move. I don’t want to say you have to make a completely different philosophy switch, but we have to do different things to help our players out, absolutely.”

But Sirianni also raised an eyebrow or two when asked about his level of communication with defensive coordinator Jonathan Gannon during games.

"Every product that’s on that field, is a product and my name is on it. I’m able to talk to them throughout the game, say my piece right there,” Sirianni said. "Again they’re the ones watching the tape all week. I get to watch a little defensive tape. Obviously, I’m doing my homework as an offensive coordinator. I’m making suggestions here and there, but they’re the ones watching the tape all week.”

While Sirianni noted that he’s ultimately responsible for everything on the field, and he is the offensive play-caller, he’s not a coordinator. Shane Steichen has that title. Sirianni is the head coach. And publicly pointing out that he’s not watching much defensive film may not have been advisable, especially when the team has fallen to 2-5.

Sirianni did some cleanup work in his Monday press conference, while also voicing his confidence in Gannon.

"I want to make it very clear, when I say the defense needs to tighten up, I’m looking at myself first,” Sirianni said, via Daye Zangaro of NBCSportsPhiladelphia.com. "Every product that’s on that field, special teams, defense, offense, has my name on it. I’m not just the offensive coordinator, I’m the head coach of this football team. So, everything that’s out there on that field is first my responsibility.

"When I say the defense needs to tighten up and needs to get the ball back to the offense, I’m saying that that’s my responsibility, right? That’s my responsibility to say, ‘Hey, on this one, I want to tighten up and play man coverage on this one.’ In no way, shape or form was I putting any blame on the defense or Jonathan Gannon at all.

"I have utmost faith in Jonathan Gannon. I have utmost faith in our defense. I’m putting that responsibility on me and nobody else.”

Whether that faith will be rewarded remains to be seen. But it’s clear the Eagles have to change some things up to have more success.

They’ll get the chance to do so against the winless Lions this week in Detroit.

https://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2021/10/26/nick-sirianni-i-have-the-utmost-faith-in-dc-jonathan-gannon/

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Quote

But Sirianni also raised an eyebrow or two when asked about his level of communication with defensive coordinator Jonathan Gannon during games.

"Every product that’s on that field, is a product and my name is on it. I’m able to talk to them throughout the game, say my piece right there,” Sirianni said. "Again they’re the ones watching the tape all week. I get to watch a little defensive tape. Obviously, I’m doing my homework as an offensive coordinator. I’m making suggestions here and there, but they’re the ones watching the tape all week.”

While Sirianni noted that he’s ultimately responsible for everything on the field, and he is the offensive play-caller, he’s not a coordinator. Shane Steichen has that title. Sirianni is the head coach. And publicly pointing out that he’s not watching much defensive film may not have been advisable, especially when the team has fallen to 2-5.

The very first two things that came to mind when reading that earlier comment he made.  He really should delegate the play-calling duties to Steichen ... not because I think that will solve the offensive issues we've been experiencing but because I think as someone new to being a HC, he has way too much on his plate trying to oversee the whole team.  He isn't going to be able to be accountable for the full product on the field by being stretched too thin and not having the time to dedicate to the other units (other than offense).  

Link to comment
Share on other sites

2 hours ago, time2rock said:

The very first two things that came to mind when reading that earlier comment he made.  He really should delegate the play-calling duties to Steichen ... not because I think that will solve the offensive issues we've been experiencing but because I think as someone new to being a HC, he has way too much on his plate trying to oversee the whole team.  He isn't going to be able to be accountable for the full product on the field by being stretched too thin and not having the time to dedicate to the other units (other than offense).  

The way I see it, he is always accountable for the full product as the HC. That is his job. If a unit is a mess and he neglects it, he is not doing his job and must suffer the consequences of not doing his job. If he neglects those areas of the team because he isn't capable of correcting whatever the issue is, then he isn't ready to be a HC. That's how I see Sirianni. He's nowhere near ready to take over. It's tantamount to handing over the operations a complex business to a teenager and his hand picked friends. He and they are not ready. They're years away and the reality is they may never be ready for those jobs. Sirianni may end up being at his best as a WR's coach. 

That's a major problem with advancing someone too fast and skipping developmental phases. They have areas of ineptitude that only experience and a ton of mistakes will fix. Sirianni was never a fully empowered and therefore fully accountable Offensive Coordinator. He didn't game plan and call plays in Indy. He observed and maybe added an idea or two to the guy who was game planning and calling plays, Frank Reich. 

Whatever, Sirianni is as ready to be a game planning and play calling HC as Howie is to be a talent evaluator. They both suck at their jobs but because they have autonomy, they stamp their feet like little children, and serve themselves instead of the team, by taking on those responsibilities. they do it because that's what they want to do and they suffer no consequences for failure. The whole thing is unbelievable and there's no end in sight. 

 

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

You can have utmost faith Siri. You're both probably going to be looking for jobs in the off season if you don't find an answer and improve things the next 10 games. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
 Share

×
×
  • Create New...