Dano564
Fleck Superfan
- Joined
- Feb 26, 2013
- Messages
- 10,135
- Reaction score
- 2,906
- Points
- 113
First segment - PJ talked about Michigan loss. Conversation rolled into doing the right thing. Didn't mention anyone specifically, but did remind us again he won't substitute the culture for wins. He won't EVER do it.
He wants to win, but he was brought here in January to move the team out from what it was dealing with in January.
He cited that was a key reason he was hired.
He painted the picture very clearly in my mind that the coaching change was all about the off-the-field issues that occurred.
If you listen to the segment later, you can draw your own conclusions, but I never heard him point to that this strongly.
He then went on to praise Mark Coyle. Said he's the best boss in college football. Mark and him are on the same page about not sacrificing the culture for wins.
This tells me that Fleck is going to have a long leash here. (I'd say 4 years minimum despite any results).
Second segment they talked about Nebraska and JUCO transfers.
PJ said he will do only a very small amount of JUCOs. Maybe 2 a class. Really wants to grow kids from freshman level. That's how other programs who succeed do it.
He wants to win, but he was brought here in January to move the team out from what it was dealing with in January.
He cited that was a key reason he was hired.
He painted the picture very clearly in my mind that the coaching change was all about the off-the-field issues that occurred.
If you listen to the segment later, you can draw your own conclusions, but I never heard him point to that this strongly.
He then went on to praise Mark Coyle. Said he's the best boss in college football. Mark and him are on the same page about not sacrificing the culture for wins.
This tells me that Fleck is going to have a long leash here. (I'd say 4 years minimum despite any results).
Second segment they talked about Nebraska and JUCO transfers.
PJ said he will do only a very small amount of JUCOs. Maybe 2 a class. Really wants to grow kids from freshman level. That's how other programs who succeed do it.