I hope everyone here at the forum is having a joyous Christmas season and looking forward to a new year. I thought it would be fun to post a little mini-series on the reasons why I think Kirby will have the success we all hope that he does at his time here.
I have been doing a lot of thinking, studying, and re-listening to a lot of the pundits over the last few days talk about the Kirby Smart hire. There's been a lot of talk on here about expectations and the sort, but I want to move away from expectations and talk more about the objective differences that CKS will bring to Georgia that I believe will translate into success.
First of all, if Georgia had made a bad hire, no matter how much I wanted to see Richt hit the bricks, I would have called it out as a bad hire. This was not a bad hire; let's just get that out there right now. This was far from a bad hire. There's been no shortage of chatter from the so-called experts about how Georgia could have done better, and how an elite program doesn't hire a coordinator to learn on the job at a program like Georgia. Normally, I would agree with this. However, there are exceptions to every rule, and Kirby is most certainly one of those exceptions. I don't need to go into the obvious nature of those exceptions, so let's just move forward and talk about why this hire was indeed the best move for Georgia and why Kirby will be successful.
Culture and Mindset
I've harped on this for eons now, and I think it is the #1 thing at Georgia inside the program that has needed a complete overhaul for a long time. This may sound harsh, but here it goes: there needs to be established a culture of high expectations and a demand that winning, not "competing," is the objective. This has been woefully absent for a very long time here. There needs to be, from the outset of spring practice, a standard laid down that the status quo is finished. If this program wants to win the SEC games it has so lacked in winning and make it to the playoffs to seriously make a run at a national championship, it starts with the culture and the mindset of winning. We heard this in Kirby's introductory presser, when he said:
"Now about our brand of football...Our teams will display great mental and physical toughness. we will work toward [this] with relentless energy and passion." Why do you think he was so adamant about laying that out in his first public address as head coach?
Relentless energy and passion, mental and physical toughness are not qualities I would, in all fairness, say that we've witnessed out of this team in a long time in any fashion. And it is the number one thing that absolutely must change if anything else is going to be built here. Those qualities are what it takes to win big in today's SEC and NCAA power 5 conferences as a whole, but particularly the SEC gauntlet. The fact that Kirby sees this and had the fortitude to lay that out there tells me that he gets it, right out of the gate.
One thing you'll see and come to know about Saban and his coaches if you study them is that they have an absolute conviction that football is first and foremost a mental game. Mindset, focus, attitude, energy, and commitment are the things they drive home day in and day out. Winning every play is a
culture that must envelop the program if you have any chance of winning it all. You'll see, in practice, Saban and his assistants up close, in faces, demanding relentless effort in pursuing perfection from players in what they're trying to impart.
If you want to get a look at the differences in culture that we're going to see, watch this little series about Bama's training camp. If you want a preview of coming attractions with Kirby, just watch:
If you want a comparison to our program, watch this one:
I'd be interested in hearing some comments from the knowledgable folks here in what their impressions of those two examples tell them.
One of the things I noticed in our camp video was the players were talking about the weather and how hot things were. In Bama's video, the players said afterwards that they weren't even allowed to say the word "hot" on the field. Might sounds small, but it's significant, as it's all part of that mental toughness Saban preaches.
In the previous "expectations" thread, we discussed sort of the numbers and x's and o's about our expectations. I agree with everything everyone wrote. This thread isn't about expectation, but about the objective changes we're going to see in day-to-day operations of this program that I know will make Kirby's tenure here a success. I argue that before we see our expectations fulfilled, first comes the culture change. Culture is the fertile soil that will allow the seed of x's and o's from the coaches to take root. Without that winning culture and all of its requisite components, you can drill x's and o's all day and it won't have the same impact or result on field if the mindset and focus of a winning culture isn't there.
This is the #1 reason that I know Kirby will be a success here.