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#1 |
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All Pro
Join Date: Apr 2010
Posts: 6,368
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Question about the Jets power structure...
If it's true that Rex has had the power for the last 4 years and Tanny was just a figure head, did Herman Edwards and Eric Mangini also have the majority of power?
And if so, how did they get fired? |
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#2 |
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"All Conked Up"
All League
Join Date: Jan 2006
Posts: 2,525
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My perspective is that Tanny was the type of GM who would defer quite a bit to the coach... Mangini was good at evaluating players in the draft and that served us well. I think Rex is more Xs and Os and doesn't fight per say for a particular player as much as wanting to get team needs filled. This is where a GM like Tanny would fail Rex because he is not a good talent evaluator... Rex and Tanny together are a recipe for disaster. Bring in a GM with strong scouting background and it will help... The issue will be who will have final say over taking BPA type vs. being forced to fill an area that Rex insists we must draft a player for?
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#3 |
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When you listen to the fans, you sit with the
fans!
Jets Insider VIP
Join Date: Jan 2006
Posts: 5,979
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My assumptions:
When Edwards was coach Terry Bradway was GM. Bradway is a personnel guy, my guess would be that Bradway made most personnel decisions. With Mangini & Ryan, Tannenbaum was GM. I assume both Mangini & Ryan had an increase say in personnel selection. |
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#4 | |
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Think outside the box.
Jets Insider VIP
Join Date: Jan 2006
Location: Warwick, New York
Posts: 15,818
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Quote:
These guys work tremendous hours and year round. The HC gives his input on personnel, draft selections etc. But he isn't running the show. He is in charge of the team, TC, OC,DC,ST game planning etc. |
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#5 | |
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Post Count Not Affected By Demise of Hotties Forum
All League
Join Date: Nov 2010
Location: NYC
Posts: 4,293
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#6 | |
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All League
Join Date: Aug 2005
Location: Portland Oregon
Posts: 4,568
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Quote:
Maybe, but less not forget Bradway and Clinkscales had/have a large roll in talent evaluation. My guess is Tanny, Rex, Bradway, and Clinkscales operated by committee and Tanny had the final say. |
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#7 |
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All League
Join Date: Apr 2003
Posts: 3,505
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Didn't Rex talk about how he always got to make 1 draft pick each year? I think tannenbaum ran the show.
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#8 |
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Think outside the box.
Jets Insider VIP
Join Date: Jan 2006
Location: Warwick, New York
Posts: 15,818
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#9 | |
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Undrafted Free Agent
Join Date: Aug 2012
Location: Amsterdam, NL
Posts: 128
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#10 |
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is full of status
All League
Join Date: Oct 2005
Location: Forked River, NJ
Posts: 4,503
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We could have the best talent evaluators in the NFL and never know it if Rex and Tanny weren't heeding their recommendations.
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#11 |
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Think outside the box.
Jets Insider VIP
Join Date: Jan 2006
Location: Warwick, New York
Posts: 15,818
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LOL
![]() My guess is that Rex knows more about football than Woody. On the football questions Rex has an evaluation but not complete say. When you interview for a multimillion dollar executive job it is more of a process. The guy spends some time with the HC. Maybe a few hours etc. He then goes to some Front Office guy, then back to Woodies consultants etc. The various parties give their weighted responses. Some type of algorithm is use to add up the scores of each candidate. Then Woodie turns to Res and says who would you pick. Woodie sees if it close to the candidate with the most points and says yay or nay. Anyway it is a process and Rex is only a piece of it. |
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#12 | |
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fan since 1978-root for the jersey!!!! 4get
everything else!!
All League
Join Date: Jan 2006
Posts: 2,556
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#13 | |
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All League
Join Date: Aug 2005
Location: Portland Oregon
Posts: 4,568
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Quote:
Exactly, regardless the traditional role of a GM in the NFL is to make the final choice, and thus I hold Tanny responsible for the good and bad picks during his reign. Not Rex, not Bradway, not Clink, or any one else. |
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#14 |
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Hall Of Fame
Join Date: Oct 2011
Location: New York
Posts: 12,568
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You are over simplifying a little. Tanny wasn't just a figure head. He was the GM. He oversaw the scouting dept as well as ran the cap and led contract negotiations. Those are huge responsibilities.
I think you are referring to picking players, which is probably the most important thing. Tanny had a role but since his background was not based in personnel, he relied heavily on his staff of scouts and coaches to make personnel decisions. Probably more so than other GMs. Rex pretty much got every player he ever wanted in the draft and FA as long as we could afford them. |
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#15 |
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"All Conked Up"
All League
Join Date: Jan 2006
Posts: 2,525
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I was thinking about this and the problem is that Tanny replaced Bradway... So if Rex and Bradway don't agree, I can't see Rex siding with Bradway, I figure he would appease the coach he choses as opposed to the GM he replaced... The dynamic of keeping Bradway around along with Tanny was fraught with peril from the start unless both are bigger men then i figure.
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#16 | ||
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Post Count Not Affected By Demise of Hotties Forum
All League
Join Date: Nov 2010
Location: NYC
Posts: 4,293
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#17 |
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All Pro
Join Date: Jun 2004
Posts: 9,671
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I think Herm/Bradway was more of the normal power structure you see in the NFL. There were players that Herm was going to recommend, primarily in free agency, that Bradway would agree to sign. I think thats normal to get a few of "your guys" in over time. Herm clearly had input but the final say went to the GM.
In Manginis case I think there was a committee structure. Mangini has say. Tannenbaum had say. Bradway had say. Clinkscales had say. And so on. I think there was alot of consensus building and I think Mangini probably made his points come across very well to help get the guys he most wanted. I think Rex began similar to Mangini. Consensus building and a tip of the hat to his guys (Bart Scott, Trevor Pryce, Jim Leonhard). As they got successful I think Rex got a louder voice in the room. In part its because I think he was the one guy that actually became loved by the owner. Woody saw the attention Rex brought, specifically via Hard Knocks and saw that as being a huge selling point for his team. So his power grew and guys began to capitulate to him because they knew he had Woodys ear. Thats more or less why Clinkscales left. Rex does have way more power than the other guys. I mean when was the last time you heard of a team that fired their GM, offensive coordinator, QB coach, and strength coach, and was more than happy to see their defensive coordinator and linebacker coach leave but at the same time maintain the head coach? Never. In a house cleaning like that the coach usually goes as well. |
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#18 | |
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Teh jobless idle spawn of wealth guy.
All Pro
Join Date: Mar 2006
Posts: 7,478
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Quote:
But for christ sake please get an avatar so I can identify your posts easier.
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#19 | |
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Rookie
Join Date: Jan 2006
Posts: 726
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#20 | |
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happy to be here
All Pro
Join Date: Apr 2003
Posts: 7,180
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Quote:
GMs acquire talent but they need to take the HC needs into consideration. If Rex says that he needs X and Tanny sees it different and drafts Y, he better be right or he looks bad to the owner. It is a lot easier to tell the owner that everyone seen the need and the solution the same way. Just like the sales and marketing teams at work. |
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