UT "self reports" NCAA violations

#51
#51
One can't help but wonder why people who make silly posts don't bother to read the article. It would have told you that Fulmer turned himself in.
At the time, I didn't have time to read the whole article and didn't care to. I only wanted to watch the video. So later I decided to come back to the post and decided to ask instead of reading it. Then eventually I decided to read the article.

There ya go. Now ya don't have to wonder anymore
 
#53
#53
I think the most embarrassing aspect of this is revealing that the OL got extra coaching and were still as bad as they were...
 
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#54
#54
It seems you're the one with animosity. Because some don't hate Fulmer you label them "worshippers" and call them fragile. Haha. One of the many reasons I Love this place.
They do like them some Fulmer, me not so much. Still waiting on people to tell me what a good coach he IS. Would you like to make the case that Fulmer would be a great OL coach today to refute my opinion that the game passed him by?
 
#58
#58
They do like them some Fulmer, me not so much. Still waiting on people to tell me what a good coach he IS. Would you like to make the case that Fulmer would be a great OL coach today to refute my opinion that the game passed him by?

I've never been a big fan of Fulmer, for reasons I've posted many many times and don't care to this time. But, I don't and have never hated him or disrespected him and I think those that do are the ones filled with animosity and are the fragile ones.

Funny if you think about it.
 
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#59
#59
Not even as a former head coach, but a former college lineman, I am sure it pissed Fulmer off at the play this year. Hell, he had every right to get down there.
Yea, nothing builds team/staff confidence more than your boss' boss coming in and interfering in how you do your job.

If I was a head coach I'd politely ask the AD to stay out of the coaching and go AD.
 
#61
#61
They do like them some Fulmer, me not so much. Still waiting on people to tell me what a good coach he IS. Would you like to make the case that Fulmer would be a great OL coach today to refute my opinion that the game passed him by?
Wtf are you even talking about? 30 secs of coaching proves nothing none way or the other. The only thing it shows is that the AD actually gives a damn about the performance of the football program.
 
#64
#64
Damn, PF got busted. Hopefully he stuff that cat with the video in a dumpster. haha.
 
#68
#68
I'm going to just assume you're too young to know that at one time, say '80-'93, Phillip Fulmer was considered the best offensive line coaching walking around on this big ball of rock and mud we call earth. I will gladly argue to this day, that if Fulmer had kept coaching the offensive line (while HC) that his coaching tenure would have concluded much differently. Not only did we suffer through a few OL coaches infinitely his inferior, but he would have been more involved in the football and less in the admin/politics of running the program. Without our decline, both UF and Bama would have had different trajectories '02 - present day.

I'm looking at you, Jimmy Ray Stephens...
 
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#73
#73
Being a violation involving Fulmer I would have put my money on it being being the fact he's let Holly Warlick remain as 'coach' of the Lady Vols. But I guess that is more of a major violation than a minor one.
 
#74
#74
The game changed and passed him by. It's that simple. The straight ahead blocking of the 80's is gone. There is a reason he is not a coach.
The game hasn't changed in the trenches. Blocking schemes came and went and then resurfaced all within the 30 years he spent playing and coaching lines and those same techniques and schemes will continue to cycle. The game passing him by wasn't the problem for CPF. He simply got too far removed from the pure football side of it and for whatever reason as he did, the attention to detail and the accountability within the program waned. He didn't forget how to drive, he just took his foot off the gas without realizing it or meaning to.
 
#75
#75
I'm looking at you, Jimmy Ray Stephens...
And don't forget Steve Marshall. How many times in those first few years would we look up and see that Fulmer wasn't on the edge of the sidelines watching the game, but rather back in the OL huddle trying to get the linemens' heads extracted from their posterior...
 
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