Jed York SF 49ers CEO Fires GM, Head Coach, Lacks Long Term Plan
Jed York SF 49ers CEO Fires GM, Head Coach, Lacks Long Term Plan Jed York, the San Francisco 49ers CEO and team owner, is someone I really like and enjoy talking to whenever and where-ever I see him. He's a gracious, thoughtful, smart, and engaging person to talk with. So, it's in that sprit that I write this, rather than the attack-dog, insulting style of a certain SF Bay Area columnist. But I digress. Jed York has a problem. If I were to walk into Mr. York's office, say, next week, and asked to see his five-year to ten-year plan for the San Francisco 49ers, he couldn't present it to me. Not because he didn't want me to see it, but because he does not have one. That, even though he started with the 49ers in their office of strategic planning. As one who's background is in urban planning, I don't need to see his office to know what is going on. There is no book. No understanding of football business dynamics. And no plan. How else to explain this: four head coaches in four years? Working backward, as now former San Francisco 49ers Head Coaches we have whoever Jed's going to hire next in 2017 (or his new general manager brings in), Chip Kelly in 2016, Jim Tomsula in 2015, and Jim Harbaugh in 2014. How can anyone claim to build anything that resembles organizational security with a track record like that? The Jed York-run SF 49ers organizationally look like The City of Alameda, California before my good friend John Russo was hired as city manager in 2011. In order to avoid being one more person going out of a yearly revolving door of city managers, Russo asked for, and was given, a five year contract. While he served four years of that five-year contract, he had enough time to solve a number of key organizational problems and in the process install his own policies and approaches. Russo was able to walk away from that job and go down to Riverside as its new city manager in 2015 having left behind a long list of accomplishments and a better ran city. Russo had a plan; Jed York does not have a plan. Because Jed York lacks an overall plan, he and his charges will go into a search for a head coach and a general manager without any really good, robust checklist to find and then evaluate potential candidates. Here's all that Jed York needs to consider not just in hiring a new general manager and a new head coach for the San Francisco 49ers, but for with respect to the future of the place that Bill Walsh built. For the General Manager role and scored on a scale of 1 to 10: 1. Does the general manager candidate have NFL budget and business operations experience? 2. Does the general manager candidate understand or have experience with the salary cap and capology? 3. Does the general manager candidate have NFL (or managerial) contract negotiation experience? 4. Is the general manager candidate known to NFL players (which helps in drawing free agents and building a roster of players). 5. Is the general manager candidate known to NFL agents (which helps in drawing free agents and building a roster of players). 6. Does the general manager know who's who in coaching and administration at the pro and college level (which helps in hiring coaches)? 7. Can the general manager actually draw-up and discuss a football play and talk about how football strategy has changed? 8. Can the general manager identify and discuss what innovations in football strategy have developed over the last 20 years? The person that Jed York hires should be given a free-path to seek out and hire the head coach that fits a criteria which includes player relationships, football strategy innovation, game management experience, and roster movement experience. Jed should also remember that the next GM can just as easily be a woman as a man, and black or Asian or Latino, as well as white – that's right. Talented female NFL professionals like Amy Trask and Katie Blackburn have established that a woman can do the job of general manager, president, or Jed's role, CEO, very well. Jed York has to use the criteria, and be flexible where he thinks that someone has enough of a strength in one area to overcome a weakness in another – and also be aware that the person being considered knows what their own shortcomings are. Then pull the trigger and bring that person in for a five-year contract - and then stick to it. The Dallas Cowboys first owner, the late Clint Murchison, Jr., did just that – ok, something like that. Clint Murchison, Jr knew that, in the young, innovative, head coach he hired Tom Landry, he had a person who formed a long term plan for the development of the Dallas Cowboys – he just needed time to make it work. So, when the Cowboys first year under Landry ended without a win, and the next five years without a winning season, in 1964, Murchison gave Landry a 10-year contract, then hired Tex Schramm to run the organization, and stepped out the way.
via YouTube http://youtu.be/Q-nRoX7Bdn8
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