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What history tells us about Rhule-Thomas partnership


Matt Rhule has been in this situation before. Not exactly the same, but similar.

Flashback to 2014 in Philadelphia. Quarterback P.J. Walker, after having a statistically dominant freshman campaign in Rhule’s first year at Temple, had just wrapped up his sophomore step back. Not a slump, necessarily, but a less accurate, more turnover-prone year with fewer touchdowns than the season before. Some of that, of course, could be attributed to a nagging ankle injury that he played through, but a step back nonetheless.

In the 2015 offseason, Rhule went out and found Glenn Thomas — the recently let-go Atlanta Falcons quarterback coach — and brought him in to help both guide Walker and teach the young, inexperienced quarterbacks.

Rhule hadn’t worked with Thomas before, instead relying on input from his offensive coordinator Marcus Satterfield and linebackers coach Mike Siravo, who had overlapped with Falcons quarterback Matt Ryan during his college days at Boston College. Ryan, apparently, gave a ringing endorsement for Thomas.

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“To have one of the best quarterbacks in the NFL give you a strong recommendation is impressive,” Rhule said in 2015, according to the Philadelphia Inquirer. “Behind P.J. we have nobody who played before and several young quarterbacks we have to develop. Glenn is a great addition.”

Sure, Heinrich Haarberg doesn’t have two years of starting experience, but neither of the other two scholarship quarterbacks — true freshmen Dylan Raiola and Daniel Kaelin — have even gone through a spring practice yet, let alone get a single rep of game action.

How’d it work out for Temple in 2015?

Temple beat Penn State for the first time since 1941 to kick off the season and went 10-4 with a 7-1 record in the American Athletic Conference. Granted, that team had three defensive guys go on to be drafted following that year, and Walker righted the ship in some areas — throwing for nearly 3,000 yards with 19 touchdowns and just eight interceptions in Satterfield’s offense. No other Temple QB attempted more than five passes.

How much credit did Rhule give Thomas for that? A “significant” amount, according to an October 2015 article in the Philadelphia Inquirer.

“He came in — I’d never use the word ‘simplify,’ because we didn’t simplify. He just cleaned it up,” Rhule said of Thomas and Walker. “He just allowed P.J.’s thought process to be clean … as opposed to P.J. playing with sort of a cloud mind — ‘Am I supposed to go here, here?’ … Things being real complex. We just cleaned it up.”

Walker added in a January 2016 interview, according to the Inquirer: “Coach Thomas really helped me last year in terms of understanding my role. He has incredible knowledge of the offense and an ease in being able to share it.”







Nebraska quarterbacks coach Glenn Thomas speaks during a news conference Monday at Hawks Championship Center.




There’s no telling just how this will work for Nebraska. Just because it was a rousing success for Temple doesn’t mean it will translate here.

But I’d like to think it will because, on paper, this looks like a way better setup than Nebraska had last year.

Partly because — and zero offense to Satterfield here — the quarterbacks will have someone totally and fully dedicated to them. And that someone has been there, done that, coached up young guys and has also worked with a potential future Hall of Famer in Matt Ryan.

With Thomas running the QB room, Satterfield can shift his focus to a tight ends room that is stocked with veterans and also more up his alley considering he was a wide receiver in his playing days and coached receivers, tight ends and offensive linemen in his career.

And partly because Thomas said last week that he, Satterfield and Rhule will use some of what worked for them in 2015 and adapt it here.

“You definitely draw upon it,” Thomas said. “I think that’s part of why this transition was so appealing for both sides, to be quite honest. Satt and I have known each other for 20-plus years. We’ve got a great relationship and I have the utmost respect for him. He’s a great football guy, has got great insight. And it really worked well in 2015.

“We even started some of those conversations as far as schematics and some of the foundational stuff (Monday morning) and we just kind of hit the ground running. It was very smooth. We talked the same language, so that expedites that process as far as getting us ahead from a schematic standpoint faster.”

One thing Thomas won’t be able to rush, though, is building relationships with these quarterbacks. That takes time.

You look at a guy like Haarberg, and he’s already had four different quarterbacks coaches — Mario Verduzco, Mark Whipple, Satterfield and now Thomas — and three offensive coordinators — Matt Lubick, Whipple and Satterfield — since he’s been here. That’s a lot of learning from his perspective.

With Raiola and Kaelin, they’re more of a fresh slate. But they still need to be built up.

Luckily for them, Thomas takes a “coach quarterbacks from the ground up” approach.

“Something unique from my background, if you will, I’ve been in Division II ball and I’ve been in the NFL probably half my career,” Thomas said. “So I’ve seen both ends of the highest level of quarterback coach and then coaching 18-year-old freshmen. I think you’ve got to find that line of where they are at and try to meet them at that line, and then raise the ceiling from there.

“I think that has benefited me through my career. And that’s what we’re going to try and start to do as we start this process moving forward. And that starts this week, really.”

Less than 200 days until Nebraska’s season opener against UTEP.

Plenty of time to get situated, dive into the Temple archives and adapt those lessons here.

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