• Follow us on Twitter @buckeyeplanet and @bp_recruiting, like us on Facebook! Enjoy a post or article, recommend it to others! BP is only as strong as its community, and we only promote by word of mouth, so share away!
  • Consider registering! Fewer and higher quality ads, no emails you don't want, access to all the forums, download game torrents, private messages, polls, Sportsbook, etc. Even if you just want to lurk, there are a lot of good reasons to register!

Former QB Coach Nick Siciliano (official thread)

There are only 2 who seem capable of running it, but one of them is a viking :wink:

I'm up for the debate...but somewhere this went above my head. I don't know how I contradicted myself?? Is UF running a more pro-style offense with Loeffler there? My opinion is no. I bet we see more of it next year though.

And one is a Viking?? Tavaris Jackson....I don't get it again. Is Leak a fifth string QB??
 
Upvote 0
jwinslow;1571866; said:
I meant UF's spread is pretty average without Harvin. The other stuff isn't worth it, it's really more of a half-contradiction anyway.

I don't know...they gashed tOSU with more of a pro-style spread in the Fiesta, and did throughout the season. They completely changed styles once Tebow became the starter. Next year, I expect more of a Leak type offense, which would make sense with the Loeffler hire.

Honest question....really not trying to be a jackass....but if Meyer were coaching Terrelle Pryor, do you think you'd see him running something similar in philosophy??
 
Upvote 0
Life's calling for Siciliano
A choice opportunity also is a high-wire act: Ohio State's new quarterbacks coach is charged with developing Terrelle Pryor
Thursday, October 22, 2009
By Tim May
THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH

qbcoach.jpg

PHOTO (top): Nick Siciliano, left, observes prize pupil Terrelle Pryor during pregame warmups against Wisconsin on Oct. 10. Pryor's struggles this season have swung the spotlight to Siciliano. (Neal C. Lauron, Dispatch)

Late on a summer night in 1999, minor-league baseball umpires Rob Healey and Nick Siciliano drove the roads outside Port Jervis, N.Y., searching for a place to eat.

"After the game, we didn't get any food provided to us, so we went driving around, and nothing was open," Healey said. "We ended up stopping at a gas station and buying Ben and Jerry's ice cream for dinner."

And?

"I had Cherry Garcia," Healey said.

Siciliano dined on Chunky Monkey.

"He's a little freaky like that," Healey said, laughing as he recalled the scene.

Such was life on the perpetual road for the two beginning, low-level umpires assigned to the New York-Penn League. They might have dreamt of the day they'd call a World Series, but they dealt with low pay, long days, arguments with managers and players, and obviously no guarantees of dinner.
They also got to know each other like brothers, sharing a car and a hotel room.

"It's like being married, but you don't get to go to work to get away from each other," Siciliano said. "In many ways, it was fun, and what a great experience. But it was a hard life."

Which is why in that summer of '99, Siciliano had grown restless. His father knew why.

"I'll be honest with you, I was surprised he went into baseball for a while," Nick Sr. said. "His heart was always in football."

Healey could tell that, too, although Siciliano had grown up in the Youngstown suburb of Austintown, and Healey was a native of Cranston, R.I. The conversations filled in the blanks.

"He's always been dedicated to football," Healey said. "I knew when he was in high school over at Austintown, he was the quarterback, and he's always had great success."

So when it came to pass this summer that Siciliano was named quarterbacks coach at Ohio State, "I wasn't surprised at all," Healey said.

That doesn't necessarily go for the masses, who have started to wonder just who this Siciliano is, now that prized sophomore quarterback Terrelle Pryor has been inconsistent in his second year as a starter.

Siciliano had worked closely with ailing quarterbacks coach Joe Daniels the previous two years, gaining an NCAA waiver to do much of the coaching last year as Daniels battled cancer. When Daniels moved into football administration in the summer, OSU coach Jim Tressel saw it as natural to make Siciliano the QB coach.

"I don't know if it's loyalty as much as it is knowing what a guy can do," Tressel said. "You've seen the guy do tasks, and teach concepts, and has gone out and grown on his own. It's sort of taking a known over an unknown.

"I guess you could go out and bring in an unknown. But a known entity who has been trained by people you know understand what needs to be done, that's a big plus."

GameDay+
 
Upvote 0
Buckskin86;1573907; said:

Nick Jr. tried to play college football, first for half a year at Marietta, then for a spring at Youngstown State -- coached by Tressel -- after transferring in 1995. It became apparent to him that he was not blessed with the physical gifts needed to play at a higher level.

Well, I'll be damned. Poor soul has been down to the bowels of Hades and lived. He's good in my book. :biggrin:
 
Upvote 0
OSU NOTES: QB coach Nick Siciliano is bad cop to Jim Tressel?s good cop
Published: Tuesday, November 23, 2010
By JOHN KAMPF
[email protected]

COLUMBUS ? Some might have taken the heated exchange between Terrelle Pryor and Ohio State quarterbacks coach Nick Siciliano as a troublesome point.

Coach Jim Tressel on Monday shrugged it off as a non-issue.

Just before halftime in the Buckeyes? 20-17 win at Iowa on Saturday, Pryor was intercepted. When Pryor went to the sideline, he was visibly upset and got into a heated, yet short, shouting match with Siciliano.

?A lot of times when those two are yelling at each other, I?m not sure, but that?s the love-hate (relationship),? Tressel said. ?There?s got to be a good guy and a bad guy. I?m usually the good guy and Sic is the bad guy, that?s the way I designed it. He knew that when I hired him.

?I told that to Terrelle when I hired Sic,? Tressel continued. ?I said, ?Hey, this guy is going to be on your fanny constantly. If you have six inches wrong on a step, if your hip?s not just right, he is going to be all over you. So get ready for it.? So it?s fine for three days and then they have a little tussle and then they?re fine in 15 minutes.?

http://morningjournal.com/articles/2010/11/23/sports/doc4ceb43e6dad4e685982080.txt
 
Upvote 0
I have a question for BPers. My scUM fan bro-in-law, who is enjoying our recent transgressions far too much, told me the other day that Siciliano was brought in specifically for Pryor, as if to indicate that it was something done special for TP. I just told him I never heard that. Any truth to this, or is it just more bullshit spewing from the mouths of some scUM fans?
 
Upvote 0
buckandguinfan;1967094; said:
I have a question for BPers. My scUM fan bro-in-law, who is enjoying our recent transgressions far too much, told me the other day that Siciliano was brought in specifically for Pryor, as if to indicate that it was something done special for TP. I just told him I never heard that. Any truth to this, or is it just more bull[Mark May] spewing from the mouths of some scUM fans?

None. Coach Siciliano joined Ohio State's staff before the 2005 season, years before Pryor stepped foot on campus. Tell your buddy he's full of shit.
 
Upvote 0
buckandguinfan;1967094; said:
I have a question for BPers. My scUM fan bro-in-law, who is enjoying our recent transgressions far too much, told me the other day that Siciliano was brought in specifically for Pryor, as if to indicate that it was something done special for TP. I just told him I never heard that. Any truth to this, or is it just more bullshit spewing from the mouths of some scUM fans?

Is your sister the black sheep in the family??

:osu2:

osu.edu ROCKS!!!
 
Upvote 0
Back
Top