Credit where credit is due (from someone who thought he absolutely should have been let go after the 48 point season): I am under the belief that he did a lot behind the scenes to improve himself as a coach. SOME of the vets he lost weren't his fault, necessarily (again, as it has been explained to me in the past), but there were others who, well I can't blame them for tuning him out so quickly.
Again, credit where credit is due--he seemingly took a good, long, hard, look at himself after the season and worked to correct the missteps he had in his first, and that's a great thing. He's had some good success. But Henchy has a point when it comes to a coach's life: even though it really doesn't seem that long ago, Bednar is already one of the longest tenured coaches in the league. If we don't start seeing results with a team that should be better off in the standings than they are, then we absolutely have to move on and find someone who can hopefully get more out of them.