Nov 9, 2010

Rick Barnes 2010 = Mack Brown 2011

If the heading of this post confuses, allow me to clarify: Rick Barnes faces the same challenge this season that Mack Brown will face next year. And what exactly is this challenge? It is a test of adaptability. The challenge is one of adjustment: can Rick Barnes make the personal and stylistic coaching adjustments required of him after last year's debacle? Can Mack Brown admit any failure and make real changes?

After running out to a 17-0 record and #1 ranking (UT's first ever top billing) last season, Barnes saw fit to put his uber-talented freshmen (particularly Jordan Hamilton and J'Covan Brown) through "boot camp" because he wasn't happy with their decision-making and commitment to defense. A team that thrived in the first half of the season playing loose, full-court, trapping defense suddenly was asked to become a disciplined half court team focused on few turnovers and only "good" shots. Unfortunately, Barnes completely misread his team and failed to recognize that this unit could not succeed in a slow-tempo, conservative, half-court strategy. They would have been much better in an up-tempo, carefree, positively reinforced environment, one where "bad" shots and turnovers did not result in being sent to the bench. Barnes squashed that team's identity and spirit, transforming an aggressive team into a tentative one with players afraid to make mistakes and always looking over their shoulders. The end-results were damning, to put it mildly. Now we arrive at a pivotal moment in the Rick Barnes era: did he learn from his mistakes and will he allow the enigmatic sophomores Hamilton and Brown (the keys to this team, even more so than the star freshmen recruits Tristan Thompson and Corey Joseph) to play aggressive and unafraid? After one game against seminal roundball powerhouse Navy, the early returns suggest Barnes may well have learned not to ride his talent as if he's Bobby Knight, but it's definitely too early to issue a verdict.

As for Mack Brown, the 2010 football season merits a similar critique as last year's basketball season: catastrophic collapse due to coaching. However, there are distinct differences at play. The biggest difference is that this season's football team is woefully lacking in offensive talent, whereas last year's hoops squad was stacked in offensive playmakers. Mack's crime is the four year flight from recruiting dual-threat athletic QBs, aka "the next Vince Young." The Colt era mercifully disguised the endemic problem in recruiting and offensive philosophy, and due frankly to Colt, Jamaal Charles, Jordan Shipley and Quan Cosby, Texas was able to succeed in spite of their flawed approach to offensive football. Barnes' crime was destroying the existing talent by trying to force them to play 'his way" as opposed to adapting to what he had on the floor. It can be argued that Greg Davis and Mack Brown (who successfully adapted to Vince Young) have likewise chosen to do it "their way" by running away from the zone-read option spread that produced the greatest offense in UT history in 2005. After receiving what amounted to the "Colt McCoy bailout" for four years, the tab has now come due for them, and there are no more bailouts on the horizon (certainly not in the name of Garrett Gilbert, Case McCoy, Connor Wood, David Ash, etc). Texas is finally being allowed to fail in 2010, and is essentially entering its bankruptcy proceedings this offseason. How will the Horns emerge from football Chapter 11?

Mack - like Barnes hopefully has - must learn from his mistakes and recommit to recruiting the freak athletes who are dual threat run/pass and who can thrive in a zone-read option attack a la Auburn and Oregon. Texas has plenty of running backs (particularly DJ Monroe, but I'm tired of advocating for his playing time) who can thrive in a zone-read attack with a dynamic QB. This style of offense, which is predicated on putting athletes in space, both simplifies and improves the offense overnight. But you have to get the right QB. That Mack has wholesale gone away from recruiting this type of QB may be a bridge too far for him to overcome, but he has to try, otherwise he will either choose to step down or be forced out after 2011. But if he shows good faith in recommitting to this style (something that would even allow him to keep Greg Davis on, although at this point I am with the overwhelming majority who want Davis sacked), he will exhibit the type of honest reality-assessment of which so many Texas fans believe he deficient.

So 2010 Rick Barnes and 2011 Mack Brown each face a moment of truth. Can these talented recruiters, exemplary UT representatives and quality program builders prove once and for all their ability to adapt and adjust in the glaringly obvious ways necessary to regain success?

It will be interesting to follow....

Burnt Orange Radio Ep. 20



Nov 3, 2010

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