In Florida Atlantic and coach Charlie Partridge's world, a panic button doesn't exist. It didn't pop up after a program-worst loss to Kansas State or a Shula Bowl loss to FIU. It remained absent after a last-second loss to Charlotte and now after Saturday's 27-21 loss at Marshall.
Mired in a six-game losing streak, Partridge stressed Monday morning that the program would not make wholesale changes, whether it be drastic personnel decisions or changes for in-game coaching.
"To throw everything you've worked to the wind and say 'You know what, we haven't won these close games,' that's a sign of panic, and we don't need to do that right now because we're in a good place," Partridge said.