UTVolinExile
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Feb 9, 2009
- Messages
- 4,909
- Likes
- 8,353
The boosters have offered to pay the buyout...
Currie doesn't want Gruden, doesn't want to relinquish power, exactly like Hart.
This is all playing out exactly like it did in 2012.
Except this time the boosters have had time to cover all of their bases.
The boosters have everything covered, including the academic side.
The 20 million dollar question in my mind is this...
WHO is backing Currie? WHO hired Currie?
Many boosters wanted another candidate for AD, one of which most of them played for.
Have yall seen this?
Neyland Stadium renovation: $340 million project to start in summer 2018
Edit: my apologies for the redundancy since it has already been mentioned.
The article discusses some of the revisions, such as shifting the order of construction. Apparently the revisions upped the cost of some phases of construction, but resulted in a net savings of about $10mill. from the original plans. I was looking for any hint of involvement of boosters but didn't see any.
I am of the opinion that he is not. JMO from what I have been told. That being said, no one has ever said directly to me "Haslam isn't for Gruden." It would just be reading between lines.
Morning.
MIT-It seems you and others are implying that the Boosters have gained a stronger hand in the deal, but what about Gruden? Does anything going on-potential lawsuits, additional players leaving the team, Davis resigning, etc, affect Grudens desire to take over the program?
Besides all the well-publicized family ties, and the ESPN stuff, here's why I think he would want to come here:
He is a driven man. A self-described egomaniac. He looks out on the college football landscape and tries to figure out who can beat Saban. Who can beat Saban? Who can bring Alabama and Saban down a notch?
and he thinks........"I alone can beat Saban. I alone can save Tennessee."
And that's why he comes here.
The challenge of it all.
The only thing giving me hope on this is if everything is having to go according to Gruden's timeline. If that's the case, he's essentially holding everything hostage.
MIT is the one that tossed out BATNA, and seems to represent a new unified booster faction. While he has indicated they want Gruden he has never expressed that they were completely non-negotiable. IF Currie magically procured a great option like John Harbaugh, as a hypothetical example I could see Currie getting booster support. Does not mean I believe it would happen.If Currie (+ influencer) was lobbying for more time for his counteroffer, he would have to account for the loss of funding for the academic side. Based on the scope of the academic $ rumored to be in play as part of the original deal, an alternative deal seems implausible, but not completely unlikely with the right backing. Especially if there are players who don't take kindly to the loss of control (ie Haslam) who are scrambling to put something together that can come close.
The only thing giving me hope on this is if everything is having to go according to Gruden's timeline. If that's the case, he's essentially holding everything hostage.
People with power never want to relinquish it.
You get used to always having your way and enjoy others bowing to you.
Human nature.
People keep power until they die or someone else takes it from them.
