There are human beings, there are great NFL coaches, and there are braying asses.
All of us are at least one of the three, and in the case of CHFF Trolls it's mostly the last one. Some of us are two of those things, and since there are only 32 NFL head coaching jobs in the world it's safe to say you know which two we're talking about.
In the case of Jets head coach Rex Ryan he might be all three. But great NFL coach is still the unknown part.
It's a conclusion that doesn't involve a biological sample or expensive sociological study. Where there is bread there is usually butter. Where there is smoke there is fire. Where there is booze ingested in great quantities there is the Chief Troll. And where there's great NFL head coaches (key word here: great) there's a decided absence of loudmouth donkeys.
Hell, look at
CHFF's list of the 10 greatest coaches in history. Landry? Walsh? Shula? Gibbs? They were more like professors than punks. Lombardi? Yeah, he had a rough edge. But he was a task master who celebrated his style after his great victories, not before. Then there's the most successful coaches of recent vintage here in the Look-at-Me Era, guys like Belichick and Dungy. The former avoids the spotlight better than
Whitey Bulger. The latter is so soft-spoken they should name a hearing aid in his honor.
With that said, the NFL's had its share of colorful character coaches. Joining the ranks last year was Ryan, the Jets' "brash head coach," which seems to be the only label the media can come up with to describe him.
The ink on Ryan's contract was barely dry before he started talking about how the Jets wouldn't back down from anyone. Then he directed smack talk at Bill Belichick and flipped people the bird. This summer he guaranteed a Super Bowl and, more recently, got a little misty over comments Tony Dungy made about his potty mouth.
If Ryan was smart he'd take stock of his actions and decide what he wants to be. If his goal is to deliver a Super Bowl title for the Jets and join the ranks of great NFL head coaches — a goal he'd no doubt aspires to — he'd best stop acting like someone out trying to prove how tough he is. By making one bold statement after another, Ryan sounds like a guy desperately trying to get himself to believe them.
Hey, we're all for individualism. Rex seems like a fun guy to drink with (though even his friends probably have a snoot full of him by beer three). And thumbing our nose at authority is what CHFF does best. But his style isn't conducive to long term NFL head coaching success.
Ryan's loud, boastful style works when the good times roll, good times like New York's impressive playoff run last year. Whether the Jets were lucky or whether his skill as a coach accomplished it, or a little of both, the team's late-season run bought him an Act-Like-an-Ass-For-Another-Year card.
But when things don't go so well, Ryan's style is going to grate on his players like soft pine on a new rasp. You won't see a lot of guys wearing green and white following him around with a pan helping sweep up the dust, either. That's the way it usually works: Big act. Big fall.
A chip off the old block, it's fitting that Ryan is similar to another guy who coached a few years ago: his pop, Buddy. The elder Ryan was a great defensive coach who helped craft one of the most dominating teams of all time, the 1985 Bears. The dude could design a defense. He was quite a character, too.
But he was a poor head coach, more famous for fostering team divisiveness than winning. After one of his Eagles' early playoff exits, a 21-7 loss to the L.A. Rams in Philadelphia in 1989, the clueless Ryan boasted how the Rams "beat us with a junior high defense." Satisfied his team played a more macho style of football, Buddy forgot the goal was to win the game.
Sound familiar? Between trying to prove he's not here to kiss Belichick's rings and insisting that the Jets won't back down from anybody, you wonder if the little Ryan gets the big picture.
As if anyone needed more convincing, Ryan appeared on a list recently published by a top scientific magazine, the Cold, Hard Football FactsJournal of Pigskin Psychology. Here's a summary of the journal's findings in four key categories.