GophersInIowa
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Is that the same guy that almost killed some players a few years ago.
Followed that link and reading a few of the comments on this, and on the coaches reply, will not help Iowa recruiting. Ones that talk about needing to join the Iowa culture, get tough, "that is not racist", stupid dumbass guys, NDH signs in the weight room, just because Iowa encourages them to act like decent people, grow the fck up, etc.... There are quite a few comments condemning the actions, but many like these that show the root of the real problems.
Are we going to see a "Me Too" movement in college football/sports in general that unmask years of mistreatment not necessarily on racial lines?
The 13 player rhabdo incident alone should have been enough to fire Doyle. I agree he probably won’t survive this no matter the veracity of the newer claims and obviously if true he should be fired. Opinion seems split on Kirk Ferentz but emotions are so high right now who knows?
In checking out the Iowa forums on this, they're mostly blaming the players, calling them soft, claiming they just don't get it, Kirk is being persecuted and all the usual knee-jerk, protect the program at-all costs nonsense you see from a fanbase. It's basically your stereotypical response to being informed their precious program actually doesn't do things "the right way."
Naturally, the truth is nobody knows for sure. But considering this is Iowa we're talking about, I wouldn't be the least bit surprised.
Like I said most of the stuff outside of the Doyle allegations seem like routine program culture stuff. No tweeting during the season, dress code, behavior codes. Change my mind.
We weren’t there to witness the context and tone of the incidents but some of it sounds more like intergenerational differences or culture clash than outright racism but I’m open to someone convincing me otherwise. Clearly abuse, harassment is not ok but where that line is seems to differ for different people. If coaches cannot enforce their culture or rules or attempt to prepare their guys in their particular way for life after school then I’m not sure where athletics as we currently understand it goes, or going further where society goes. Respect should always predominate every interaction particularly when there is a power difference. That said, players need to understand the methods and rationale of the culture, preferably before signing day, and like PJF expectations and culture should be clearly laid down on paper so any misunderstandings can be discussed beforehand. We could all be more thoughtful with our words - here is an example linked below. Was the following a subtle racist incident or a bad joke in poor taste? Clearly the player was insulted and we should respect that.
I don't need to change your mind on anything. And asking me to do so really isn't the point here since I don't necessarily disagree with you. It's a question of whether the racism brought by Doyle is accepted and encouraged as part of the greater football culture at Iowa. The fact that he's been there for 21 years along with Ferentz isn't exactly a glowing endorsement of the overall football culture at Iowa.
With that said, if Ferentz didn't know about these things, then firing Doyle is the only step that needs to be taken. But it seems there at least needs to be some questions asked.
Despite all this recruiting is going well for them in my opinion. Also no one has de committed that I'm aware of. I suppose Kirk will say, yea, some people don't want to work as hard etc., to be successful blowing it off.
Will be interesting to see what happens in the next couple weeks. Doubt if Fleck will blast another program rather to focus on the positives of coming here instead in my opinion the right thing to do. Things have a way of back firing eventually if you take the negative route.
Coaching in general has undergone a major shift in what kind of behavior is accepted and I would bet some of the old guard have a tough time with that. Have to be careful about labeling someone as a racist but there certainly seem to be enough examples of Doyle's behavior to say there is an issue there as long as it can be proven that he actually said what he is being accused of saying. Will be surprised if these allegations that are being made by former players don't lead to him being fired.
For Ferentz's part, I hope at the very least he listens to these former players and takes a good hard look at how they are doing things down there. I also think there is a very good chance this could end up hurting them in recruiting if former black players keep on speaking out about the treatment they received while they were at Iowa. Will be interesting to see where it goes from here.
Agreed. Iowa is old school and is slow to adapt to generational changes. Are there racial biases? Abuse of authority or power? Socioeconomic/Cultural differences? Don't know for sure on the first one. It sounds like there is truth to abusiveness. There always has been disparities with poor vs well off, rural vs urban, etc... of kids committing to play college football.
These are seventeen, eighteen, nineteen year-old impressionable kids. Like PJ Fleck have said, each kid is unique and you have to learn to talk to them individually with empathy in order to motivate them. Some kids are more fragile than others.
Iowa has a system that is proven successful for years and they have stuck with it. They probably are slow to recognize or "listen" to the changes with the new decade of kids.
Coaches have to increasingly learn to listen, adapt, cater, and talk to these new generation kids.
I ran ran across this Generational Differences Chart some time ago. This is a little dated, but you can see the point. I don't remember where I got it. Material culture has changed. My grand kids have no clue what a dial telephone or typewriter is. Young kids are digitally connected.
Like I said most of the stuff outside of the Doyle allegations seem like routine program culture stuff. No tweeting during the season, dress code, behavior codes. Change my mind.
It really only matters what the players' perception and opinions are. If black players feel stifled in the culture, that's all that some other black players need to hear. But they give two shits what Iowa's or any fans think is "normal".
It really only matters what the players' perception and opinions are. If black players feel stifled in the culture, that's all that some other black players need to hear. But they give two shits what Iowa's or any fans think is "normal".
I'm thinking no. Way too much loyalty there.Would Sullivan flip to another school?