Those are goals and somewhat vague b/c he didn't predict when.I heard PJ say B1G title, Rosebowl, Natty...
Sure, most coaches believe that those contribute to success. But coaches are evaluated on wins, not GPA alone. I'm not arguing that.You mean having a program with exceptional STUDENT athletes? Things like GPA and graduation?
Sure, most coaches believe that those contribute to success. But coaches are evaluated on wins, not GPA alone. I'm not arguing that.
Player conduct also contributes to wins. Moral leadership as well. Lots of things contribute to a winning program
Wow, minimizing the significance of moral leadership. You're one of thoooooose people.OOOOOOOOOOOOOH back to the a few freshman (basically still kids) made a mistake before school even started for most of them. And the coach and culture of the team is to blame. We can just ignore all the positives of the culture surrounding the team and focus on the mistake of 4% of the players. Gotcha. You are one of thoooooooooooooose people.
Those are goals and somewhat vague b/c he didn't predict when.
Wow, minimizing the significance of moral leadership. You're one of thoooooose people.
We were 3 plays from having 10-11 regular season wins last season, just as an example.
Nooooooo! Not this, please stop!
Sure, most coaches believe that those contribute to success. But coaches are evaluated on wins, not GPA alone. I'm not arguing that.
Player conduct also contributes to wins. Moral leadership as well. Lots of things contribute to a winning program
I'm not going to argue the sexual allegations b/c that's a very nuanced situation that has lots of complicated circumstances, much of which I believe the players were unfairly treated.OOOOOOOOOOOOOH back to the a few freshman (basically still kids) made a mistake before school even started for most of them. And the coach and culture of the team is to blame. We can just ignore all the positives of the culture surrounding the team and focus on the mistake of 4% of the players. Gotcha. You are one of thoooooooooooooose people.
BS! If a coach doesn't lay the law down when players walk on campus, that's on him.How much impact can you have on kids in just a few months? It takes time to change.
Beat Wisconsin.
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I'm not going to argue the sexual allegations b/c that's a very nuanced situation that has lots of complicated circumstances, much of which I believe the players were unfairly treated.
But, I also remember when Coach Kill kicked a player off the team for stealing another athlete's iPhone. Sexual misconduct>iPhone theft. Admittedly more complicated.
That set a standard that was good IMO. And lots of Gopher fans applauded it.
BS! If a coach doesn't lay the law down when players walk on campus, that's on him.
If they violate that law, they should be gone. Then future freshman will understand what the law is and means.
He doesn't have to offer a specific win total. His exact words were "build on last years record". That means his expectation is we will improve on last years record. Pretty simple. His expectation is 9+ wins. That is where mine is as well.
No one outside of the program knows what Brian Smith did outside of the fact that the fight was the last straw. It was clearly stated that it wasn't this one event. And, it was after the events of Sept.Do you remember when Claeys kicked a WR off the team for fighting?
Ridiculous question. This obviously was a highly questionable circumstance. So much so that several players didn't get involved and the player in charge of the recruit got him out as soon as he found out about it. Just not soon enough.So if you were in charge of a football team of young men your law would be they can't have sex while they are on the team? Or just after games?
And, as I have said before, I talked to my own sons before they left for college. I told them to treat women with respect, even if they don't respect themselves. To not get into situations that could flip on them b/c it can get them in a load of trouble. Be careful! That's as a parent.So if you were in charge of a football team of young men your law would be they can't have sex while they are on the team? Or just after games?
So if you were in charge of a football team of young men your law would be they can't have sex while they are on the team? Or just after games?
Actions speak louder than words.So the assumption here is TC never warned the kids about these situations? Get real.
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And, as I have said before, I talked to my own sons before they left for college. I told them to treat women with respect, even if they don't respect themselves. To not get into situations that could flip on them b/c it can get them in a load of trouble. Be careful! That's as a parent.
As a coach, if the player violates that kind of moral and rational sense, I'm going to tell them that there is very little that I'm going to be able to do to defend you, so don't expect it.
Actions speak louder than words.
Heck, I made mistakes as a college kid and part of the reason I point this out to my sons.Your sons are lucky. Not every teenager has a father like you. The coach has to deal with a lot of those teenagers and like I said before you can't change them in a couple months. The goal is to take the kids and graduate the men. A lot of the kids think of the coach as their father. I'm sure your sons made mistakes. Every college age kid will make mistakes. Mistakes are what we learn from. Can you imagine a world where people can't even make one mistake? That's what you want out of a football team of 18-23 year olds? You aren't living in reality.
Actions speak louder than words.
Heck, I made mistakes as a college kid and part of the reason I point this out to my sons.
Getting kicked out of the program isn't a death sentence for a CFB player. As the expelled have done, they're moving on to a different school. Hopefully the lesson is learned.
And no, you can't stop some mistakes from happening, but you can set standards and consequences along with regular reminders. And when any of those standards are violated, you hold players accountable. If you do that with smaller infractions, you minimize bigger lapses of judgment. If not, they're gone and have a lesser chance to start somewhere else. That's life. Try not to F up.
I would only evaluate each on a case by case situation. As I suggested above, people deserve second chances. Probably not as good as their first. But they'd certainly be on a short leash.You mean like accepting walk-ons with criminal pasts?
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I would only evaluate each on a case by case situation. As I suggested above, people deserve second chances. Probably not as good as their first. But they'd certainly be on a short leash.
And PJF may have different standards than I would, but it's his program to succeed or fail with.