Legendary - The Career of Porter Davis

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djp73
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Legendary - The Career of Porter Davis

Post by djp73 » Today, 06:37

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Air Force Hires Porter Davis as Defensive Quality Control Coach
After easing back into football at Hawaii, the former Arkansas coach is taking another step toward the game — this time in a more hands-on defensive role.
By Pete Thamel

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Porter Davis is not becoming a head coach again.

He is not taking over a defense. He is not returning to the SEC. He is not stepping back into the kind of job that once consumed nearly every waking hour of his life.

But he is moving closer to football.

Air Force announced Tuesday that Davis has been hired as a defensive quality control coach, giving the former Arkansas head coach his first official staff position since resigning from the Razorbacks amid health concerns and COVID uncertainty in 2020. The title is modest, and by design, the role does not make Davis one of the Falcons' full-time on-field assistants. Still, those familiar with the move described it as a meaningful step forward for a coach who spent the past year proving he could be around the game again without losing the balance he fought so hard to find.

Davis spent the 2021 season as a consultant at Hawaii, a loosely defined role that allowed him to assist with recruiting, defensive concepts, practice structure and game-planning ideas without returning to the day-to-day grind of coaching. The arrangement was supposed to be temporary and low-pressure. Instead, it became one of the quieter success stories of the season.

With Davis helping behind the scenes, Hawaii landed Louisiana graduate transfer quarterback Jordan McAlary, who had played for Davis during a record-setting 2017 season with the Cajuns. McAlary revived his career in Honolulu, throwing for more than 4,200 yards and 37 touchdowns while helping the Rainbow Warriors reach the Mountain West Championship Game before falling narrowly to Utah State. Hawaii later capped the season with a dramatic Hawaii Bowl win over Memphis, with McAlary playing the hero and embracing Davis on the field afterward.

For Davis, that season mattered.

It reminded him that football could still be part of his life. It also reminded others that his impact had not disappeared.

Air Force noticed.

"Being at Hawaii was important for me," Davis said. "It gave me a chance to be around the game again without jumping all the way back into it. I learned a lot about what I can handle, what I enjoy, and what I don't need in my life anymore."

The Air Force job offers a little more structure and a little more responsibility. Davis is expected to work closely with the defensive staff on film study, opponent tendencies, practice planning, scout-team preparation and weekly defensive organization. He will be allowed to spend more time in meetings and around players than he did at Hawaii, but he will not be responsible for running a position group, calling plays or carrying the recruiting load of a full-time assistant.

In other words, it is more than consulting, but less than a full return.

For now, that is exactly what Davis wants.

"I've been careful about this," Davis said. "I don't want to pretend I'm ready for something I'm not ready for. This gives me a chance to coach, to help, to be part of something, but also to do it in a way that still makes sense for my health and my family."

The football fit is obvious.

Air Force has long been built on discipline, development, toughness and defensive structure. Those are the same principles that defined Davis' best teams at Louisiana and Arkansas, where he built a reputation as one of the sport's sharpest defensive minds. His teams rarely overwhelmed opponents with recruiting rankings alone. They won through preparation, leverage, pressure, and an ability to make more talented teams uncomfortable.

That background made the Falcons an intriguing match.

But Davis said the pull went beyond football.

"This place means something," Davis said. "I come from a long line of military service. My grandfather served. My father served. I've got uncles who served. Those were the men I looked up to growing up."

He paused before continuing.

"When Air Force reached out, it wasn't just another job. It felt like a call. It felt like a chance to be around people who understand service, sacrifice and purpose. Football is part of it, but it's not the only part."

Those close to Davis say that piece of the decision mattered more than many might realize. After Arkansas, Davis spent months reevaluating the life he had built and the toll it had taken on him. Hawaii helped him rediscover the joy of football. Air Force, in his mind, offered something deeper: a way to attach football to a mission that felt larger than wins and losses.

Air Force head coach Troy Calhoun praised Davis' football background but emphasized that the hire was also about fit.

"Porter has an outstanding mind for defense and player development," Calhoun said. "But more than that, he understands what it means to be part of something bigger than yourself. That's important here. We think he'll be a tremendous resource for our staff and our players."

The hire has already generated attention throughout the coaching world, in part because Davis' name still carries weight. Before stepping away, he had authored one of the fastest rises in recent college football history. He helped rebuild Louisiana, won multiple conference championships, then took over a 2-10 Arkansas program and transformed it into a 12-2 SEC champion and Sugar Bowl winner in one season.

At the time, Davis seemed destined for one of the biggest jobs in the sport.

Then his health forced everything to stop.

The years since have changed him. The old version of Davis rarely sounded satisfied. Every win seemed to point toward the next game, the next opponent, the next challenge. The current version speaks more carefully. He talks about balance. He mentions family often. He seems far less interested in proving he belongs and far more interested in making sure whatever comes next is worth the cost.

That is why Tuesday's announcement felt important.

It was not the grand return many once imagined. It was not a press conference introducing Davis as the savior of another program. It was something smaller, quieter and perhaps more honest.

A coach who nearly lost football entirely has found his way back to the game, one step at a time.

First Hawaii.

Now Air Force.

What comes after that remains uncertain, and Davis does not sound especially eager to answer that question yet.

"I'm not looking too far ahead," he said. "I did that for a long time. Right now, I'm grateful for Hawaii giving me a chance last year, and I'm grateful Air Force believes I can help. That's enough for me."

For now, Porter Davis is coaching again.

Not all the way back.

Not the way he once did.

But closer than he has been.
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Legendary - The Career of Porter Davis

Post by djp73 » Today, 06:37

Captain Canada wrote:
Yesterday, 16:50
I'm so lost, but do your ting.
working on the map
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Legendary - The Career of Porter Davis

Post by djp73 » Today, 09:21

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Air Force Defense Becomes National Story
The Falcons were already one of college football's most consistent winners. Then one quiet offseason addition helped transform their defense into the nation's best.
By Pete Thamel

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For years, Air Force had been known for one thing.

The triple option.

The Falcons routinely frustrated opponents with long, clock-draining drives, disciplined execution, and one of the nation's premier rushing attacks. Under Troy Calhoun, Air Force had quietly become one of the most consistent programs in college football, winning at least ten games in each of the previous two full seasons while capturing bowl victories over Power Five opponents.

The offense was never the question.

The defense, however, became the story of 2022.

Air Force finished 10-3, claimed its record 21st Commander-in-Chief's Trophy, defeated Baylor in the Armed Forces Bowl, and finished the season as the nation's top-ranked defense, allowing just 254.4 yards per game. The Falcons surrendered only 13.4 points per contest, held 12 of 13 opponents to 21 points or fewer, and became just the second non-Power Five program in more than three decades to finish first nationally in total defense.

By season's end, opposing coaches were asking the same question.

What changed?

The answer wasn't a new coordinator.

It wasn't a radical schematic overhaul.

Instead, it was the arrival of one of college football's most respected defensive minds in perhaps the most unassuming role imaginable.

Porter Davis never called defensive plays.

He never stood on the sideline with a headset.

He wasn't introduced before games or interviewed at halftime.

Officially, Davis served as Air Force's Defensive Quality Control Coach, working behind the scenes on opponent breakdowns, practice organization, personnel evaluation and weekly defensive planning. But those inside the program describe his influence as far greater than his title suggested.

"Porter has a unique way of seeing defensive football," head coach Troy Calhoun said following the Armed Forces Bowl. "He's constantly asking questions that make you think differently. Every week he'd find one or two tendencies that completely changed how we approached an opponent."

Several defensive players echoed that sentiment.

"Coach Davis never tried to come in and reinvent everything," senior linebacker Vince Sanford said. "He just cleaned things up. He simplified some things. He'd notice little details nobody else was talking about. You'd leave meetings thinking, 'How did we miss that?'"

That attention to detail became evident almost immediately.

Air Force led the nation in total defense while finishing second nationally against the pass and sixth against the run. The Falcons also ranked fourth nationally on third down, holding opponents below a 28 percent conversion rate.

The improvement became even more dramatic down the stretch.

During a five-game winning streak to end the season, Air Force allowed just 40 total points. Opponents averaged fewer than 200 yards of offense during that stretch, and neither San Diego State nor Baylor converted a single third down against the Falcons. Combined, the two teams finished 0-for-21 on third down.

The defensive dominance complemented an offense that continued to overwhelm opponents on the ground.

Air Force captured its third consecutive national rushing title, averaging 326.7 rushing yards per game while senior fullback Brad Roberts rushed for a school-record 1,728 yards to lead the nation. Quarterback Haaziq Daniels continued to operate one of the country's most efficient option attacks, helping the Falcons control possession for more than 36 minutes per game for the second straight season.

The formula was suffocating.

Run the football.

Control the clock.

Play elite defense.

Repeat.

The result was one of the finest seasons in school history.

Air Force won another Commander-in-Chief's Trophy, defeated Colorado and Baylor by convincing margins, extended its winning streak against Power Five opponents to five games, and finished with its third consecutive ten-win season—a feat matched over that stretch by only Alabama, Clemson, Georgia, Ohio State, Oregon and Utah.

As the season progressed, Davis' name quietly began resurfacing in coaching circles.

It wasn't because he was seeking attention.

In fact, he remained largely out of the spotlight, rarely speaking publicly and intentionally avoiding interviews during the season. Yet coaches around the country noticed the same thing everyone else did.

Everywhere Porter Davis went, defenses seemed to improve.

Louisiana.

Arkansas.

Hawaii, where he spent 2021 as a consultant helping guide the Rainbow Warriors to a Mountain West Championship Game appearance.

Now Air Force.

"I don't think it's a coincidence anymore," one Mountain West assistant coach said. "You can call it consulting, quality control, analyst, whatever title you want. The guy changes defenses."

Davis, as always, refused to take much credit.

"This was already a really good football program before I got here," he said after the Armed Forces Bowl. "Coach Calhoun and his staff deserve every bit of the credit they've earned. I was fortunate enough to contribute in a small way."

Few around the sport seem to believe his role was that small.

With Air Force finishing atop nearly every major defensive category, speculation has already begun regarding Davis' future. Programs across the country are expected to have openings once again this offseason, and many athletic directors have quietly begun wondering whether one of the game's brightest defensive minds is finally ready to return to a larger role.

For now, Davis insists he isn't thinking about any of that.

"I'm exactly where I'm supposed to be," he said. "A year ago, I wasn't sure I'd ever coach again. Today I'm standing in a locker room celebrating with a great group of players. That's enough for me."

Maybe it is.

But after watching Air Force field the nation's best defense, much of college football is beginning to wonder how long that answer will remain true.
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redsox907
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Legendary - The Career of Porter Davis

Post by redsox907 » 13 minutes ago

boy just a mercenary at this point eh
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