I did see this in this past Sunday's Montreal Gazette: "Turk Schonert remains the offensive coordinator, but will watch games from the spotter’s booth and no longer will specifically coach the quarterbacks. That goes to Anthony Calvillo, who had been the receivers coach. Then the new coach said this, "“I think (Calvillo) has too much experience in this league. Having him with Rakeem Cato and the young quarterbacks is the right thing to do. This lets Turk see the field better.”
Here's more from this past Monday's Montreal Gazette: Pointing out that Schonert was a more "in your face type of coach," the writer says this, "On the other hand, Cato quickly pointed out, his former OC and QB coach at Marshall, Bill Legg, never yelled, and that worked out pretty well." “I’ve been around all kinds of different coaches. I’ve been through guys who like to coach in a soft way, coach without screaming. I respect them a lot more,” Cato said, interestingly. “I respect every coach in their own way. If you come out firing or in an aggressive way to get your point across, I respect it.
“If I have to come across a coach like Turk, who’s aggressive and who’s going to tell you when you’re wrong, I love that also because he’s right. It’s a fact. You have to play better. I don’t have a problem with none of them. I’m a rookie. I have to hush my mouth and take it.”
On Sunday, Calvillo said he would work on Cato’s footwork and cleaning up some of the drops — the progressions, right reads, timing, getting the ball out faster and making smart decisions. Cato, if he’s smart, will pay attention, embracing the knowledge and experience.
“I think it was a very good move for our team. Coach A.C., he had a great career here, a huge resumé here,” Cato said. “I think it was a great move to put a young quarterback fresh out of the league with a young group of guys.”