Really, SJT? Not while he was at Florida (which is when Fulmer played him).
Spurrier had at least as good a win rate against everyone else* as he did against Fulmer, with one exception: Bobby Bowden at FSU.
Spurrier @ Florida was 12-0 against Kentucky, 10-0 vs USCe, and 10-0 against Vandy, of course. But he was also perfect against Arkansas (3-0), and here's how the rest of Spurrier's regular opponents stack up in W/L %:
Georgia - 11-1 (92%)
LSU - 11-1 (92%)
Auburn - 10-3 (84%)
Miss St - 4-2 (67%)
Alabama - 6-3 (67%)
Tennessee - 8-4 (67%)
FSU - 5-8-1 (39%)
Bottom line is, Spurrier wasn't so much inside Fulmer's head (though he sure tried to be, and constantly) as he was just a very, very good coach who won a heck of a lot of games.
Fulmer actually did pretty well against him, compared to most everyone else.
Go Vols!
*Among teams he played two or more times. Notre Dame (Lou Holtz), Nebraska (Tom Osborne), Miami (Butch Davis), and a Nick Saban-led Michigan State squad were all able to beat Spurrier once. Then again, if the Fulmer-Spurrier series ended after just one game, Fulmer would've been 1-0 against the man, too.
If you've been a Vol Football fan before 1992.
I... actually watched highlights of the UT - Florida games from 1993- 1997.
My God in Heaven...
I swear, it was the same game every year. Not the final scores but the feel and tone of the games were a the same.
I was like... "this was our glory years?"
Seriously, even these past 11 years didnt seem as bad as what a I was watching. How can we play so badly against the same team every year.
That was agony watching that. Graham fumbling, Peyton getting sacked, throwing picks right and left. DBs getting toasted!!
I know Fulmer is a legend, but I swear ive never seen Butch's Vols quit and play terrified like that.
I applaud all of you who endured that.
I hope we can beat them this year. They have some nice weapons in their 2017 class so far.
One year at a time. I'll go ahead and say it... some of you all are better fans than I ever will be. I hope to never see Tennessee take that type of abuse again.
Those 90s games are the reason my hatred for Florida runs deeper than my hatred for Bama ever will.If you've been a Vol Football fan before 1992.
I... actually watched highlights of the UT - Florida games from 1993- 1997.
My God in Heaven...
I swear, it was the same game every year. Not the final scores but the feel and tone of the games were a the same.
I was like... "this was our glory years?"
Seriously, even these past 11 years didnt seem as bad as what a I was watching. How can we play so badly against the same team every year.
That was agony watching that. Graham fumbling, Peyton getting sacked, throwing picks right and left. DBs getting toasted!!
I know Fulmer is a legend, but I swear ive never seen Butch's Vols quit and play terrified like that.
I applaud all of you who endured that.
I hope we can beat them this year. They have some nice weapons in their 2017 class so far.
One year at a time. I'll go ahead and say it... some of you all are better fans than I ever will be. I hope to never see Tennessee take that type of abuse again.
You don't win a national championship without being able to do all parts of your job well.
Fulmer was a very good coach...a very good trainer...a very good recruiter...and a very good leader and manager. He did all parts of his job well, some a bit better than others.
By this logic Chizik is a great coach who did all parts of his job well.
The 1998 national championship team was loaded with talent, and had several lucky breaks. Fulmer was a great recruiter, and had good coordinators. As far as I am concerned he was a mediocre coach that was handed a team on the rise.
Go watch the UT - Alabama starting in 1995 and you will see a completely different team than what played UF those same seasons.
Spurrier lived inside Fulmer's head. It was both incredible to watch and frustrating in the extreme. It was a pretty classic clash of leaderships styles.
Fulmer wanted to be the "game manager". He was cautious.... predictable... deliberate.
Spurrier was aggressive and the more conservative an opponent was.... the more aggressive he instinctively became. Fulmer's tendency of course was to become even more conservative when he sensed things getting out of hand.
Recipe for exactly what we saw.
Other coaches with no more talent than UT did better against Spurrier.
By this logic Chizik is a great coach who did all parts of his job well.
The 1998 national championship team was loaded with talent, and had several lucky breaks. Fulmer was a great recruiter, and had good coordinators. As far as I am concerned he was a mediocre coach that was handed a team on the rise.
Fulmer's only one of several Tennessee coaches who have been "owned" by a Gators head coach.
Majors was 1-4 vs Florida....Dickey, Charley Pell and Galen Hall all beat him. And of course, since Fulmer left, Kiffin, Dooley and now Butch are 0-7 vs any coach Florida can come up with. There's no doubt that Spurrier owned Fulmer....but that's no different than any other Tennessee coach has been owned since Bill Battle was our coach in the early 70s.
Ah, see, yes, that's the Larry Coker / Gene Chizik argument.
The problem with it is, it works best with coaches who can call a good game but are (1) terrible recruiters, or (2) terrible leader/managers.
Yes, the guy who inherits a team loaded with talent, and then immediately wins a NC, that guy didn't have to prove he can recruit, or even lead/manage well over time. He only had to get the talent already on hand ready (good training/development), and call good games (good "coaching", though all of this is really part of coaching).
So that counter-argument doesn't work well when you're trying to say a guy isn't a good gameday coach. It works best when you're saying a guy can't recruit, or can't lead.
I think you misunderstood what I was saying. I was not compairing Fulmer to Chizik, I only brought up Chizik to show the false logic that any coach who wins a national championship is a good all around coach.
My main point (from an earlier post) was that Fulmer often lost (badly) to teams of equal talent. That is just plain getting out coached.
Oh, it was also an early indication of what would eventually sink Fulmer IMO.
He was VERY resistant to change. He didn't change playbooks. He didn't change methods. He allowed personal loyalties to trump loyalty to the team by having a steady standard for discipline. Even Kiffin recognized how big this problem was when he arrived.
Really, SJT? Not while he was at Florida (which is when Fulmer played him).
Spurrier had at least as good a win rate against everyone else* as he did against Fulmer, with one exception: Bobby Bowden at FSU.
Spurrier @ Florida was 12-0 against Kentucky, 10-0 vs USCe, and 10-0 against Vandy, of course. But he was also perfect against Arkansas (3-0), and here's how the rest of Spurrier's regular opponents stack up in W/L %:
Georgia - 11-1 (92%)
LSU - 11-1 (92%)
Auburn - 10-3 (84%)
Miss St - 4-2 (67%)
Alabama - 6-3 (67%)
Tennessee - 8-4 (67%)
FSU - 5-8-1 (39%)
Bottom line is, Spurrier wasn't so much inside Fulmer's head (though he sure tried to be, and constantly) as he was just a very, very good coach who won a heck of a lot of games.
Fulmer actually did pretty well against him, compared to most everyone else.
Go Vols!
*Among teams he played two or more times. Notre Dame (Lou Holtz), Nebraska (Tom Osborne), Miami (Butch Davis), and a Nick Saban-led Michigan State squad were all able to beat Spurrier once. Then again, if the Fulmer-Spurrier series ended after just one game, Fulmer would've been 1-0 against the man, too.
Mediocre... Your good post turned into hot garbage with that last statement.By this logic Chizik is a great coach who did all parts of his job well.
The 1998 national championship team was loaded with talent, and had several lucky breaks. Fulmer was a great recruiter, and had good coordinators. As far as I am concerned he was a mediocre coach that was handed a team on the rise.
Your statistics have to be deeper than that. You'd have to break it down by coach and year.Really, SJT? Not while he was at Florida (which is when Fulmer played him).
Spurrier had at least as good a win rate against everyone else* as he did against Fulmer, with one exception: Bobby Bowden at FSU.
Spurrier @ Florida was 12-0 against Kentucky, 10-0 vs USCe, and 10-0 against Vandy, of course. But he was also perfect against Arkansas (3-0), and here's how the rest of Spurrier's regular opponents stack up in W/L %:
Georgia - 11-1 (92%)
LSU - 11-1 (92%)
Auburn - 10-3 (84%)
Miss St - 4-2 (67%)
Alabama - 6-3 (67%)
Tennessee - 8-4 (67%)
FSU - 5-8-1 (39%)
Bottom line is, Spurrier wasn't so much inside Fulmer's head (though he sure tried to be, and constantly) as he was just a very, very good coach who won a heck of a lot of games.
Fulmer actually did pretty well against him, compared to most everyone else.
Go Vols!
*Among teams he played two or more times. Notre Dame (Lou Holtz), Nebraska (Tom Osborne), Miami (Butch Davis), and a Nick Saban-led Michigan State squad were all able to beat Spurrier once. Then again, if the Fulmer-Spurrier series ended after just one game, Fulmer would've been 1-0 against the man, too.