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NittanyCentral

NittanyCentral delivers expert analysis from veteran reporters and timely updates on Penn State sports, with in-depth coverage of Nittany Lions Football, Wrestling, Basketball, and more.

Penn State Football, Jim Knowles

Does James Franklin Have Buyer’s Remorse From the Jim Knowles Hire?

Penn State Football head coach James Franklin sounded like a desperate man losing patience and control of his program this past week.

Franklin‘s offense has been under fire for many years, but now he’s pointing the finger directly at his defense.

“We’re not playing as fast, as aggressive as we have in the past on the defensive side of the ball,” Franklin said this week.

“There’s been some adjustments to what we’re doing on defense and getting our guys to play confident within the system.”

Penn State Football, James Franklin
James Franklin is facing unprecedented pressure during his tenure at Penn State, after two consecutive losses. (Matthew O’Haren-Imagn Images)

Those comments were measured and deliberate, and throwing shade toward new defensive coordinator Jim Knowles, the same coach who helped Ohio State win a national championship just last season before coming to Happy Valley.

Franklin also delivered a telling comparison when asked about execution:

“If you’re making mistakes at linebacker and can’t run the defense, then it’s hard to execute, no different than at the quarterback position. So those positions, it’s a little bit more magnified.”

That’s as close as Franklin got to an open rebuke.

Translation: his players are thinking too much, and his coordinator’s system is slowing them down.

But, thinking is not uncommon for players in a new system. It takes time to understand assignments, tendencies, and philosophies if you are a defender. It’s not like backyard football – see the ball, pursue the ball.

A Player’s Admission

Penn State Football, King Mack
Penn State safety King Mack opened up about the struggles learning defensive coordinator Jim Knowles’ scheme. (Syndication: The Register Guard)

Franklin’s comments gained even more weight Monday night when safety King Mack spoke to reporters. As shared by Inside The Lions‘ Audrey Snyder, Mack revealed just how steep the learning curve under Knowles has been:

“What I started doing is going to the defensive staff meeting after practice,” Mack told reporters. “Hearing Coach Knowles’ critique helped me understand what he wants. Once I started going to all the D-staff meetings and seeing what he wants, it made everything easier for me.”

That’s a candid admission from a starter on a veteran unit.

It took extra, voluntary staff meetings for a player to grasp the scheme better. It also validates Franklin’s point that his defense isn’t playing fast because they’re still learning what to do, which again isn’t just common, it’s expected.

When one of your starting safeties essentially says he had to start sitting in on coaching meetings to decode the playbook, it underscores that the “adjustments” Franklin referenced aren’t just tweaks, they’re a fundamental overhaul that’s left some players swimming.


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A Sharp Learning Curve

Knowles’ defense has a reputation for complexity, disguised pressures, hybrid coverages, and terminology that can overwhelm even experienced players.

It worked at Ohio State because of continuity and talent depth. In Year one at Penn State, though, it’s looking more like friction than finesse.

Penn State Football, Jim Knowles
Penn State defensive coordinator Jim Knowles. (Mandatory Credit: Matthew O’Haren-Imagn Images)

Franklin’s words make it clear he sees that gap between whiteboard and field execution, and he’s not hiding behind coach-speak anymore. His tone Monday was deliberate and almost surgical.

But, I think it’s an example of pointing fingers and deflecting the blame from a catastrophic eight days that saw his team lose to a very good Oregon team and then lost to a not very good UCLA team.

If the system doesn’t click soon, the whispers about buyer’s remorse will get louder but only from Franklin, and they should fall on deaf ears.


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Knowles is a championship defensive coordinator for a reason and any disparaging comments about Penn State’s defense should be taken with a grain of salt.

Franklin hand-picked Knowles to replace Tom Allen, who spent one season in Happy Valley, in 2024, after Manny Diaz left for Duke, and immediately turned that team into an ACC contender.

Adding Knowles was a great acquisition for his Penn State defense, and if he feels the need to criticize his defensive coordinator because of the two early losses, then it seems that Franklin is just having trouble taking accountability for where the program is right now.

After Monday’s press conference, there’s no mistaking the overall vibe – the excuses are just that, and they don’t help you win football games.

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Joe Staszak
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  • Joe Staszak

    A proud graduate of Villanova University, Staszak’s first gig in the industry was with PRISM sports in 1989, covering the four local home teams, the Flyers, 76ers and Phillies while also covering the Randall Cunningham-led Philadelphia Eagles. It was at PRISM where Staszak produced live games and began his career as an on-air reporter. After a couple of brief stints with CBS-3, WB-17 and WGAL-8 in Lancaster, PA, Staszak began a 12 year stretch at FOX 29 where he became the lead sportscaster in 2007. It was there that Staszak found himself in the middle of Philadelphia Phillies World Series Championship coverage that earned him an Emmy nomination for best sports reporter in 2008. It was one of five Emmy nominations that Staszak earned over the course of his career. All told Staszak covered three World Series, two Stanley Cup Finals, an NBA Finals and one Super Bowl during his television run. Staszak left the TV business for 97.5 The Fanatic in 2013, where he enjoyed eight years bloviating his beliefs on how a professional football team should be run. In 2018 when he fortunate enough to be the first sports talk host in the city, along with cohort Zach Gelb, to provide post-game coverage of the first Super Bowl Championship for the city’s beloved Philadelphia Eagles. Staszak was also a writer for 97.5 The Fanatic along with 4 Philly Sports and now covers Penn State athletics for NittanyCentral.com.

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