Do we really want a guy who trolls Donald Trump on Twitter?
Do we really want a guy who trolls Donald Trump on Twitter?
How can you be sure?Wrong Ryan Carty.
That actually makes him more likable!Do we really want a guy who trolls Donald Trump on Twitter?
Did not know he is a librarian on the side. :stuck_out_tongue_winking_eye:That actually makes him more likable!
that's a damned shameFrom Rutgers Facebook comment from Dunleavy, Mazzone is out.
How can you be sure?Wrong Ryan Carty.
Turn on your sarcasm meter.
It was too soon. Do not want to derail the thread.I should have known. My bad...
He never coached under Kelly. He was hired by Kelly, then he left right after to take the Oregon job.Carty gives us a true Jersey guy with experience in the Kelly mold... quarterback coach and recruiting experience... if it’s him then so be it.
I like Carty better than DM but still not enthused with him as a singular OC. As a co-OC and person to groom the way I've mentioned Graham Harrell or Frank Ponce I think he's perfectly fine but as THE MAN on his own not as excited. I'm a little disappointed some of the more established names like Wright or Mazzone seem out of the picture when they seem available.For anyone questioning this potential hire:
New Jersey football guy from a New Jersey football family. Father and two brothers with deep roots in NJ high school football.
Strong track record of success.
Hired by Chip Kelly.
Chip Kelly started as OC at UNH. OC from 1999-2006. He seemed to do OK at Oregon. Same number of years Chip Kelly was OC.
Lots of coaches graduate from lower ranks. Art Briles came straight from high school, 2 years at RB coach, and then Houston Head Coach.
Here's a bunch of more reasons:
Ryan Carty is in his 10th season on the UNH coaching staff, and the 2016 campaign marks his fifth year as the offensive coordinator/quarterbacks coach.
In 2015, Carty oversaw an offense that averaged 358.8 yards/game (fifth in CAA), which included 211.8 passing yards/game (fourth) and 146.9 rushing yards/game. The Wildcats scored 23.9 points/game (fourth) and totaled 35 TDs (fourth). Senior signal caller Sean Goldrich passed for 1,867 yards and nine TDs while rushing for 210 yards and three touchdowns in only nine games. Under Carty’s tutelage, Goldrich graduated among New Hampshire’s all-time great QBs; he’s ranked third in completions (654), fifth in passing yards (7,536) and fifth in attempts (1,068).
The 2014 Wildcats ranked second in the CAA in scoring offense (36.0 points/game), third in rushing offense (169.5 yards/game), and third in passing offense (269.0 yards/game). The QB tandem of senior Andy Vailas and junior Sean Goldrich combined for a 147.0 pass efficiency (No. 2 in CAA), and senior wideout R.J. Harris led the league in receptions/game (7.14), receiving yards/game (110.8) and TD receptions (15). Senior RB Nico Steriti paced the CAA in overall TDs (18).
In 2013, the ‘Cats ranked third in the CAA in scoring (30.8 points/game) and rushing offense (192.9 yards/game); UNH boasted a pair of 1,000-yard receivers for the first time in program history, and had both a 1000-yard rusher and receiver for only the second time.
In 2012, his first year as coordinator, the Wildcats' offense flourished. UNH ranked second in the CAA in scoring offense (34.1 points/game), total offense (451.5 yards/game) and first downs (22.1/game) while placing third in rushing offense (220.8 yards/game) and passing offense (230.8 yards/game). The 'Cats registered the league's most prolific red-zone offense (94%), scoring on 47 of 50 trips with 36 TDs and a perfect 11-for-11 in field-goal attemps.
The QB duo of Andy Vailas and Sean Goldrich finished ninth and 10th, respectively, in passing average, making the Wildcats the only team with two signal callers in the Top 10. Sophomore wide receiver R.J. Harris earned a spot on the All-CAA First Team and the All-New England Team after ranking second in the league iin receptions (7.0/game) and receiving yards (88.2/game).
Carty spent two seasons (2010-11) as the Wildcats’ WR coach. In 2011, he mentored a pair of All-CAA WRs in sophomore R.J. Harris (Second Team) and junior Joey Orlando (Third Team). Harris tied for the league lead with seven scoring receptions en route to earning a berth on the College Sports Journal All-Freshman Team. The ‘Cats ranked first in the CAA in passing offense (274.7 yards/game) and third in scoring offense (32.8 ppg).
In 2010, senior wideout Terrance Fox earned All-CAA First Team honors and a place on the FCS All-New England Team after pacing the league in receptions per game (6.2). The Wildcats’ passing offense ranked second in the conference with 220.1 yards per game.
Carty coached running backs in 2008-09, helping an offense that ranked No. 1 in the CAA in scoring in ’09 and led the league in scoring offense in ‘08. Also in ’09, senior RB Chad Kackert was the CAA’s fourth-leading all-purpose runner, later signing a free agent contract with the Jacksonville Jaguars.
In 2007, Carty spent his first season at UNH coaching tight ends. That season, sophomore TE Scott Sicko was voted an All-Conference and All-America player. After graduating in 2010, Sicko signed a free agent contract with the Dallas Cowboys.
Carty began his coaching career at UNH after playing quarterback at the University of Delaware. He was voted captain in his 2006 senior campaign and played on the National Championship squad in 2003.
A 2007 graduate with honors from the University of Delaware in Business Management, Carty recruits the northern portion of his home state of New Jersey, Essex County in Mass. and the western portion of New Hampshire.
I like Carty better than DM but still not enthused with him as a singular OC. As a co-OC and person to groom the way I've mentioned Graham Harrell or Frank Ponce I think he's perfectly fine but as THE MAN on his own not as excited. I'm a little disappointed some of the more established names like Wright or Mazzone seem out of the picture when they seem available.
Those stats are ok but I'd like to see rankings where the offense is ranked high in all the FCS not just the CAA. If we're going to go down there why not Cramsey at SHSU or even both of them if we went the co-OC route.
Maybe my sarcasm meter is broken. There are multiple Ryan Carty accounts on Twitter. The Trump troller is a librarian, not the football coach from UNH.Are we going to find out that the Trump tweets are just the tip of the ice berg of his tweets and other social media stuff? Its not that Trump isn't worthy of ridicule.. its about the type of person who uses social media for that sort of thing.
If that is all this is.. I can see ridiculing Trump as being a net positive to recruiting.
Well if I had to guess who recruits sympathized with, it probably wouldn't be Trump. That's just the way the majority of their age demographic lean.Do we really want a guy who trolls Donald Trump on Twitter?
I don't mind pulling from the lower levels like the FCS but if we do, I'd like strong stats to back it up. I looked up the offensive stats for the last 5 years for New Hampshire. The first couple years were ok but the last 3 not so much. When Gundy pulled up Mike Yurcich from Shippenberg their offense was right at the top, that vicinity is what I'd like to see if we go down to that level. Cramsey to me seems a better option than Carty. Carty is a good option to have on board to groom for continuity in the future IMO if you really like him.He's middle of the pack for FCS. Their offense is in the 60's. The numbers aren't good but they aren't bad.
No issue with hiring a FCS coach and I always mention looking for coaches who have demonstrated doing more with less is something I try look at, it something I've mentioned when talking about Aranda in the past.https://www.whittierdailynews.com/2009/12/22/lucky-and-good-the-chip-kelly-story/
2009 article on Chip Kelly, with quotes from his former HC:
“It probably seemed bold” to hire Kelly, said Bellotti, himself a Division II alumnus, coaching at Cal State Chico and UC Davis. “But it was borne out of the fact that I came from Division II. I know there were a lot people out there who said, ‘Who’s this guy?’
“But I knew he could coach. I think there’s a lot of snobbery in Division I football. But I always look at who can do more with less and to me, coaching is coaching. Chip was the best coach who understood our style of football and could make us better.”
No issue with hiring a FCS coach and I always mention looking for coaches who have demonstrated doing more with less is something I try look at, it something I've mentioned when talking about Aranda in the past.
Since everyone seems to be bringing up Chip Kelly as comparison I looked up New Hampshire's offensive rankings during his time as OC there. Look at the numbers and overall they are better than Carty's and you also see a trend of improvement from the start of his tenure as OC towards the end where as in Carty's you see the numbers decline from the start towards the latter years. Also you see when he left the FCS, the rankings were right near the top of all of the FCS, that's exactly what I said I was looking for if we go down there. Again something like Cramsey at SHSU. Going to the FCS isn't the issue for me, it's what has he been doing down there and how good is it.
I'm not psychic there's no way to know how he'll do if he steps up and I do like him better than DM when he was hired but I have reservations. To me he's a good candidate for "junior" co-OC.
Chip Kelly's New Hampshire OC rankings.
Year - YPG- PPG
1999 - 16 - 41
2000 - 31 - 60
2001 - 9 - 37
2002 - 76 - 102
2003 - 20 - 12
2004 - 18 - 21
2005 - 2 - 3
2006 - 7 - 2
I try to be dispassionate and unbiased. None of these coaches are anyone to me. Sometimes people are like FCS ech, no HC experience ech, mid major ech...etc...I'm not that because I know good coaches can come from anywhere and I never like to narrow the pool down unless given good reason.Nice post, well researched. You stuck to the facts, sometimes that doesn’t go over well on this board.
Playing devils advocate, if he is good as a coordinator, why hasn't he moved on and up from UNH?
Playing devils advocate, if he is good as a coordinator, why hasn't he moved on and up from UNH?
Because daddy’s friends aren’t on staff anywhere else but here: mantz!
Statistics in a vacuum can be dispassionate, but sometimes it helps to look behind the statistics. Do you know who played QB for UNH 2004-2007? Ricky Santos, who went to the NFL from UNH. How often does that happen from a FCS school?No issue with hiring a FCS coach and I always mention looking for coaches who have demonstrated doing more with less is something I try look at, it something I've mentioned when talking about Aranda in the past.
Since everyone seems to be bringing up Chip Kelly as comparison I looked up New Hampshire's offensive rankings during his time as OC there. Look at the numbers and overall they are better than Carty's and you also see a trend of improvement from the start of his tenure as OC towards the end where as in Carty's you see the numbers decline from the start towards the latter years. Also you see when he left the FCS, the rankings were right near the top of all of the FCS, that's exactly what I said I was looking for if we go down there. Again something like Cramsey at SHSU. Going to the FCS isn't the issue for me, it's what has he been doing down there and how good is it.
I'm not psychic there's no way to know how he'll do if he steps up and I do like him better than DM when he was hired but I have reservations. To me he's a good candidate for "junior" co-OC.
Chip Kelly's New Hampshire OC rankings.
Year - YPG- PPG
1999 - 16 - 41
2000 - 31 - 60
2001 - 9 - 37
2002 - 76 - 102
2003 - 20 - 12
2004 - 18 - 21
2005 - 2 - 3
2006 - 7 - 2