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Jerry Glanville

viking1985

Active member
I posted this on the O-live forum of course I only got one poster to reply. These are my feelings agree or disagree I love to talk Viking football.

This my view on Jerry. Jerry isn't going to be a Mike Bellotti, Joe Paterno or a Vince Lombardi. Jerry has lot of "Music" left in him though. I look at what he has done so far and clearly it isn't dominate. He has gotten the Vikings name out into the Portland media. For example, he has a regular spot Tuesdays on the only radio station worth listening to on FM in Portland which is of course KUFO. My hope is that in three or four years when Jerry is done he has a winning percentage of 70 percent or better. I want him to leave with the Buzz still around PSU football. When he he is done (which I can assure everyone will be within five years) that he leaves such a Buzz that we can land a great set of coaches in his wake. I don't hate the guy I just know that his tenure is going to have to be one that sets PSU up for the future. The good thing is attendance and awareness are up. I just hope that when he is done here that his jokes weren't on us PSU fans. I hope his good humor and people skills set PSU up to become the most dominant team in the BCS.
 
It has been a struggle through the first 3 games. I'll make more of a judgment at the end of the season. I also want to see his first recruiting class. I can forgive McNeese State. Cal Davis is not forgivable. Sac State was scary but they pulled it out. SDSU is not winnable. EWU is the next game to make a real judgment call.
 
I want to see his recruiting class but like I said it takes 4 years to graduate. Is he going to be around that long? I'm not jumping ship and I don't think we should sack him. But we have to look at the situation for what it is. Is Jerry going to be around long enough to see that recruiting class mature?
 
I think the time frame for a college coach should be three years. Three years to get the new systems in place and three years to get the recruits into the system and start to see what they can do.

As well as coaching, JG was also tasked with assistance in marketing the program. At this point he's done a fine job doing that. We're averaging 10k per game after two games and that does not include an UM or MSU game. PSU is on the radar for the local media, corporate sponsors are up, and good things are happening on that side of things. Case in point: Every Oregonian for over a month had a PSU contest form in it. Now go into a Chevron, most every station has a "Go Big Sky" contest advertisement pasted all over the place. We're on the map, and people are starting to care.

What we need this year on the field is progress.

Recruits and transfers will bring the talent. WRs who want to play in a pass happy offense. Linebackers and safetys that want to thrive in a hard hitting fly to the ball 3-4 defense.
 
This morning I listened to Coach Glanville on the Marconi show. What a natural entertainer he is. Now just keep on winning coach, and PGE park will really be rockin'. The noise after Kirkland's catch and Senn's interception are only small samples of what could be an incredible ride with the man in black. Let's hope it all works out.
 
forestgreen said:
This morning I listened to Coach Glanville on the Marconi show. What a natural entertainer he is. Now just keep on winning coach, and PGE park will really be rockin'. The noise after Kirkland's catch and Senn's interception are only small samples of what could be an incredible ride with the man in black. Let's hope it all works out.

JG's weekly visit on the Marconi Show is pretty darn funny. Like you said, a natural entertainer.
 
In his own right. I don't have to say much because I summed it up in my analysis. I just know that I am going to live for a long time. And when PSU is the Boise State of the Northwest I will be able to say I was there through it all and that I am a DIE HARD. PSU needs DIE HARDS and I am one of those.
 
http://media.www.dailyvanguard.com/media/storage/paper941/news/2007/10/16/Sports/Born-To.Coach-3034852.shtml

Jerry Glanville's desire to be a head football coach stretches back to his days at Perrysburg (Ohio) High School in the 1950s when he was a scrawny middle linebacker who liked to hit hard.

An English teacher asked Glanville to write an essay on what profession he wanted to pursue, and he wrote that he would like to become head coach of the Detroit Lions. His friend and fellow Perrysburg alumni Jim Leyland wrote about a career managing the Detroit Tigers.

Almost a half-century later, both Ohio natives have lived experiences most people only dream of. Leyland has been to the World Series as the Tigers' manager, and while Glanville was never the Lions' head coach, his first NFL coaching job was in Detroit.

"In high school, I knew then I was probably going to be a football coach. I really think the start of it was the mental breakdown, the knowledge of knowing what was happening before the ball was ever snapped. I think that was the driving force, initially," Glanville said.

Glanville's coaching pedigree first emerged when he was playing almost three full games a week under Perrysburg coach Jack Donaldson, who later coached 26 years in the NFL.

"In those days they didn't count your quarters so you could play four quarters of freshman, four quarters of JV and a couple quarters of varsity. By the time I got to be a senior, I had played a lot of games," Glanville said.

Playing all those games helped Glanville develop his keen ability to read offenses and defenses, a skill that wasn't lost on Donaldson as he observed his young linebacker constantly adjusting his position to best expose the offense.

"He finally said, 'Why do you get up and move over to a different spot?' I said as a 17-year-old senior, 'I know where the ball is going.' He said, 'why don't you just go where you want to go,'" Glanville said.

Glanville's high school team lost the second game of his junior year. It was the last loss he would experience as a high school player before graduating in 1959.Once at Northern Michigan University, Glanville struck up another friendship with his head coach, this time a man named Rolly Dodge, who would also coach more than 20 years in the NFL.

"Unfortunately, I got a really bad knee injury when I played for Rolly. I got hurt, in all things, in a spring game. He said, 'I want you to go off and scout the enemy,'" Glanville said. "I came back with the scouting report and he said, 'You saw all that? They do all that?' He realized I could see things most people didn't see. He got me into coaching before I got out of school."

Glanville graduated from Northern Michigan and spent three years coaching high school football before signing on as defensive coordinator at Western Kentucky University. By 1968, Glanville had been recruited to coordinate the Georgia Tech defense and just six years later, he had his first NFL job with the Detroit Lions as linebackers coach.

From there, football's "Man in Black" has amassed an impressive resume. He moved on to the Atlanta Falcons, took a job with the Buffalo Bills, eventually became the head coach of the Houston Oilers and the Falcons, and spent 11 years doing color commentary for Fox, HBO and CBS.

Glanville then spent two years as defensive coordinator for the University of Hawaii before landing in the South Park Blocks for the 2007 season. Through all those changes, Glanville said his coaching philosophy remains mostly the same.

"We try to teach our players when they [the opponents] do this, we line up this way. We more or less digest what's going to happen before the ball is snapped and our whole defense is set that way," he said.

Glanville said the thing that keeps him coaching at 66 years old (he just celebrated a birthday Sunday) is the opportunity to continue teaching the game to another generation of players.

"You have to be the best professor on campus or you won't be successful. If you told me I could coach but couldn't teach, I'd leave tomorrow," he said. "Watching a guy grow into a better and better player, that's fun."Unlike some head coaches, Glanville isn't one for intimidation. He rarely screams, doesn't allow swearing during practices and said he won't coach a player for the rest of the day if he cusses.

"It's all about exchanging knowledge. I question you a lot. After I teach you, I question and question you," Glanville said. "You are always in a final exam. I will know the answer to a question, but I'll act like I don't.

"Even if you give me the right answer, I will challenge you to make sure you believe in the right answer."

Sometimes, even coaches don't have the right answer. Many Vikings fans questioned Glanville's decision to go for the win against Northern Arizona (a 44-43 Vikings loss) instead of kicking an extra point, but he said it never crossed his mind to try and tie the game.

"I would never coach players, young men, to try and get even. This whole thing is about getting ahead. If we kicked the extra point, at best we would have gotten even," Glanville said.

As much as Glanville still finds thrills coaching football, the losses eat at him, though not because he spends hours second-guessing himself.

"When you lose a game, a little piece of you dies every single time. It means so much to so many people, and your players have worked so hard and your players have tried so hard," he said. "The reward when you win only feels that good because losing is so hard. When we win, I may not sleep for three days. I never want that feeling to leave my body."
 

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