SnyderSucks wrote:Fan experience. Not that it's too expensive. Not allowing the outside vendors like the old stadium, and like every other stadium I've ever been to. Obstructed view seats. Adding as many seats as he did means longer lines for everyone at the restrooms and for food because the stadium wasn't built for that many seats.
Listen, I'll agree with the obstructed view seats; I think that's horrible.
However, I also think he's saddled with a really crappy stadium, and if it made any financial sense whatsoever (and unfortunately, it doesn't), he'd build a different one.
Supporting your players. He does get huge credit for how he handled Sean Taylor. Ask Jason Campbell how supported he feels.
That's business. If Campbell played like a star QB, he wouldn't have had to undergo this offseason's shenanigans.
Or Arrington, who gave back money to get out.
Arrington was essentially at that point a team cancer. He didn't get along with either Gregg Williams and Joe Gibbs. Seriously...he didn't get along with Joe Gibbs? What the hell. Arrington plain and simple thought he was the big man on campus, and he simply couldn't take being ordered around by Joe Gibbs.
Or Antonio Pierce.
They offered Pierce a good contract; they just weren't willing to pay him more than Marcus Washington. The Giants offered him a better contract. Guess what? That happens.
L. Coles couldn't get out of here fast enough.
L. Coles refused to get surgery on his injured toe, and whined that he wasn't getting the ball thrown to him enough. Even though NFL stats showed he was thrown to the 3rd most of any WR. I'm not sad we lost that whiny douchebag for Santana Moss. That's a win any day of the week for us.
Or Jason Taylor who gave up $8 million to get away from here.
Taylor didn't want to be far from home; that's why he gave up the 8 million. Who is he playing with now, by the way? Miami...because he wanted to be back near his home.
He traded Champ Bailey (getting Portis in return, yes) rather than give him a second contract.
Bailey wanted monster money; you remember the contract he wanted? 9 million a year. Bailey isn't worth that...no corner (barring Deion Sanders or another TD-scoring corner) is worth that.
Yeah, he's friends with Portis but he's got a reputation for paying outside players (like Portis, B. Lloyd, Archuletta, Randle El, Fletcher, Washington) and not those drafted by the team(Bailey, Pierce, Ryan Clark, Dockery, Smoot).
He paid Smoot and Dockery, didn't he? He just didn't want to match their crazy contracts that...were so crazy, they ended up getting cut out of them anyways.
He constantly re-ups old Vet Redskins (see Samuels, and see Jansen, who had so many reworked contracts with guarenteed money that he soon underplayed his cost).
FYI - Neither Clark nor Pierce were drafted by the Redskins.
His friendship with Portis also empowers Portis to defy the coach, which is rumored to have happened on more than one occasion.
That goes exactly to what I said earlier. Too much support.
He let Dockery and Smoot get to free agency rather than extending them early at a lower cost than their eventual FA contracts. The same is going to happen soon with Campbell, Rogers, and McIntosh.
We'll see.
You bring up Schottenheimer to support your idea that coaches like it here? Schottenheimer came when people were saying working for Snyder would be a disaster, and he got fired after one season. Spurrier came to play golf and cash a check. Gibbs would never have worked for Snyder if not for a previous relationship with the team, and he came back to coaching because his son wanted to try it.
But, the plain truth is...he still hired Schottenheimer, he still hired Spurrier, and he still hired Gibbs, didn't he? You said:
Creating an environment in which top coaches want to work for you? Nope.
Plain and simple, he's gotten top coaches to work for him.
The last time Snyder tried to hire a coach, all the top candidates either refused an interview or turned him down.
Who? Cowher is the only one I can think of, and he was certainly not ready to coach yet...hell, he's not even coaching now.
Look at how he treated Gregg Williams when Gibbs left. Any doubt that impacted the other coaches decsions about accepting the job?
I don't get why everyone thinks Gregg Williams would have been a shoe-in. He was an absolute disaster of an NFL head coach in Buffalo, with a career winning percentage
lower than Steve Spurrier's. Perhaps Snyder interviewed him and thought he wasn't good enough. Maybe that had something to do with it?
If he gets a top candidate again, it will only be because he offered the largest check, not because he has a reputation as a good boss.
Duh. The top candidates will all demand the largest check from whomever signs them. That's pretty much a no-brainer.