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Bill Lazor to Seattle

Lazor holding a gigantic football.
That's what the Times is reporting. Here's what we know:
  • He played at Cornell, Alma Mater of my favorite author, Thomas Pynchon.
  • He has a Wikipedia page.
  • That page is 32 words long.
What anyone but his mother and God truly know about Lazor dignifies the length of his Wikipedia entry. He served for three seasons w/ the Washington Redskins in a largely ceremonial position before being elevated to quarterbacks coach in 2007. His job: Nothing short of developing the Skins' quarterback of the future, Jason Campbell. How'd he do? Good, it would seem. In 2006, Campbell completed just 53% of his 206 non-garbage time passes. In 2007, that number vaulted to 61% in 435 attempts. His DVOA and DPAR jumped, too. Campbell was 17th in the league in DPAR and 20th in DVOA. Impressive numbers for the recently 26 year old quarterback. A couple confounding factors exist, though. Campbell was considered a Pro Bowl level talent by David Lewin's projection system. Forcing the question: Was Campbell developed by Lazor, or was his improvement simply natural progression? Campbell was also severely outplayed by journeyman nonentity Todd Collins. Do we give Lazor credit for Collins' late season emergence, or offer Collins as as proof that Campbell was underperforming in a can't miss offense?

Regarding the former, I think whether Campbell was destined for success or not, a quarterback's coach deserves some credit for facilitating that growth. Whatever facilitating means. The later, I think two separate quarterbacks playing very well in an offense with some, but by no means an abundance of talent should be a credit to Lazor, Al Saunders and the Skins' entire offensive coaching staff.

Lazor is just 3 years older than Hasselbeck. A fact that makes for an interesting power dynamic. What we can know about this potential signing is minimal. Young blood is always exciting. Lazor is a disciple of the so called "Air Coryell" offense that was employed by the Gibbs era Skins and Jimmy Johnson era Cowboys. It's currently employed by Norv Turner. I hate Norv Turner's offense. Like the West Coast, its passing patterns are timing based, but unlike the West Coast with its emphasis on short and intermediate routes, the AC is built around deep routes. Matt Hasselbeck's deep ball kind of sucks. The AC also favors a power rushing attack, the same system employed by recently hired line coach Mike Solari.

Here's, I guess, what this all means. Tim Ruskell is creating the foundation of an Air Coryell offense. Matt Hasselbeck would not fit very well within said offense. Nor, for that matter, would Seneca Wallace or Charlie Frye. If Ruskell wants a power rushing attack/deep passing attack, he'd likely need to invest in a power rusher (like Chauncey Washington) and a big armed quarterback. Plus, a deep threat receiver. A legitimate tight end and a top run blocking guard. If not, we have a square peg/round hole situation in the works where the Hawks personnel doesn't match the offense's goals. It's too early to know how this'll all play out, but something kind of curious is in the works. Something a little scary, honestly. The Hawks are staring down considerable turnover in their offensive talent over the next few years, heaped atop an already sizable amount of turnover the past two seasons. Who they pick to replace it will tell us much about where this offense is going. The early indications are...interesting. I hope that Lazor, if he becomes the offensive coordinator, or whoever becomes the offensive coordinator, runs something less archaic then the Air Coryell. Maybe a modified West Coach with elements of the Air Coryell. A short, spread style offense, like is run in New England, seems to best fit the current climate of the NFL. Deemphasizing premiere receivers, but taking advantage of the recent liberalization of the passing game. A player like Wes Welker can excel in such an offense, but would be lost in an AC - in fact, he was. Working under Mike Mularkey in 2006, Welker wasn't nearly as productive as he was in New England. Ruskell has never been known for his offensive acumen, and the signing of Lazor (should he sign) coupled with the signing of Solari has me a little worried. Anyway, nothing to get too worked up about now, but something to track in the coming months.

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Air Coryell offense
Remember that Lazor just spent two years under O-Coordinator Al Saunders, who really is the Coryell disciple (he replaced the legendary coach at San Diego for a time), starting with him at San Diego State in the 70s.

Anyways, I think Bill Lazor did a fine job developing Jason Campbell. He improved his completion %, and his int %, and his YPA last year over his first year, which is precisely what a young quarterback should be doing. Best of luck with Lazor.

by Skin Patrol on Feb 9, 2008 10:13 AM PST   0 recs

At least Mora
comes from the West Coast coaching tree
Coach Owens = Scruffy's spell check

by Scruffy Lefty on Feb 9, 2008 10:21 AM PST   0 recs

Cue the "laser-rocket arm" jokes.
And the Strong Bad jokes.

"Ah, man, why didn't I pick guitars and lazor hands?"

I reject your reality and substitute my own!

by Phildopip on Feb 9, 2008 10:37 AM PST   0 recs

yep.

he's got that nifty HE-Man bad guy name. LA-ZOR.

by SpokaneSHAWK on Feb 11, 2008 9:46 AM PST to parent up   0 recs

Coaching dynamics
I will be interested to observe how the coaching dynamics work next year.  I am sure it's happened, but I cannot think of an instance in which a successor was officially appointed with a year to go for the current head coach.  It is difficult to imagine Mora not having a role that essentially has him sharing some of the head coaching duties, not withstanding all assurances to the contrary from the brass.  How will this work between Mora and Holmgren?  That has everything to do with their personalities and little to do with football strategy, etc.

Lots of change for our beloved team lately.  More in store.

On an unrelated note: MOVE WALLACE TO WR THIS OFFSEASON, PLEASE.  

by jeager on Feb 9, 2008 3:04 PM PST   0 recs

Taco Wallace?
I reject your reality and substitute my own!

by Phildopip on Feb 9, 2008 3:37 PM PST to parent up   0 recs

so the Hawks will need:
  1. a QB with a strong arm
  2. a legit TE
  3. a power rushing RB
  4. strong run blocking on the Offensive Line
  5. a deep threat receiver
for this hypothetical offense to work. They currently have none of these.

I suppose we'll be privileged to witness Ruskell's master plan for the offense as time goes on. It starts to make more sense why the Hawks let Jim Zorn go, though.

by Will Kier on Feb 9, 2008 3:29 PM PST   0 recs

HOLY CRAP
the skins just named Zorn their head coach, saw it on ESPN.
Josh Brown is better than you. The Rest of the team is worse.

by MFAN on Feb 9, 2008 4:05 PM PST   0 recs

n/s
http://sports.espn.go.com/nfl/news/story?id=3238678
Josh Brown is better than you. The Rest of the team is worse.

by MFAN on Feb 9, 2008 4:18 PM PST to parent up   0 recs

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