Pair of comments I lifted from Jerry Sullivan’s chat today in Bflo News. SPOT ON man. What do you think?
Sully: I called Jauron a lame duck in today's column. I don't know what Ralph Wilson is thinking, but I hear he was furious after the Browns game. He was embarrassed on Monday Night Football and he doesn't take those things well. Jauron is wearing thin with me. I wanted to give him the benefit of the doubt. It actually gets tiresome, calling for coaches to be fired. I did it with Phillips, with Williams, with Mularkey. I wanted Jauron to succeed. And I know management desperately wanted it. But he's just not good enough. His game day decisions are as bad as I've ever seen. I don't care if he went to Yale. He's not nearly as smart as people have been led to believe.
Sully: Edwards is having his problems, yes. He's having a crisis of confidence and he's not as far along as I thought. But the bigger problem is Jauron's inadequacy as a head coach. The squandered timeouts, the blown challenges, the lack of adjustments, the players saying they weren't prepared for certain things, the wishy-washy way he speaks in public -- it's all very alarming. NFL coaches are supposed to be sharp and decisive in the moment. It comes with the territory, and few coaches are good at it. I'm convinced he's not one of them.
Sully: I called Jauron a lame duck in today's column. I don't know what Ralph Wilson is thinking, but I hear he was furious after the Browns game. He was embarrassed on Monday Night Football and he doesn't take those things well. Jauron is wearing thin with me. I wanted to give him the benefit of the doubt. It actually gets tiresome, calling for coaches to be fired. I did it with Phillips, with Williams, with Mularkey. I wanted Jauron to succeed. And I know management desperately wanted it. But he's just not good enough. His game day decisions are as bad as I've ever seen. I don't care if he went to Yale. He's not nearly as smart as people have been led to believe.
Sully: Edwards is having his problems, yes. He's having a crisis of confidence and he's not as far along as I thought. But the bigger problem is Jauron's inadequacy as a head coach. The squandered timeouts, the blown challenges, the lack of adjustments, the players saying they weren't prepared for certain things, the wishy-washy way he speaks in public -- it's all very alarming. NFL coaches are supposed to be sharp and decisive in the moment. It comes with the territory, and few coaches are good at it. I'm convinced he's not one of them.
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