VOLanooga
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Now what if a Tennessee coaching staff knows their subject better than you and I do? What if they know a bit more about college football than us? About recruiting kids, developing them, forming a team out of them, and winning games and championships with them? What if they know every piece of that better than us?
When did we start assuming they don't?
Where did we lose the ability to wait and see? Where did we lose the ability to give a subject matter expert some leeway, some rope? Sure, they might just hang themselves, but...given that they're probably smarter on the topic than we are...they might just see further ahead to a brighter outcome than we can.
When did we lose patience, as a fan base?
Because I can assure you, we have zero of that now.
END NOTE: no,, this isn't about Pruitt. This is just as much about how we treat the coach after Pruitt, or the coach after that, as it is about how we treat him. This is about US, and a serious flaw we've developed as a community.
The has been major improvement in the most important area, the roster. The roster is much bigger, faster and more talented than it was three years ago.
The biggest problem this season was the virus and the fact that every team had differen protcols. Tennessee lost much more practice time than many other schools due to their strict Covid protocol. I don't think many concrete conclusions as to what the state of the team can be made in this crazy year. One thing is for sure the overall talent is much better and recruiting has been very good and that is the life blood of a team.so.....then what, or better yet, who is the excuse for under performing if talent is there?
Provide the evidence that they had stricter protocols. I’ll give you a hint, there ain’t any.The biggest problem this season was the virus and the fact that every team had differen protcols. Tennessee lost much more practice time than many other schools due to their strict Covid protocol. I don't think many concrete conclusions as to what the state of the team can be made in this crazy year. One thing is for sure the overall talent is much better and recruiting has been very good and that is the life blood of a team.
The biggest problem this season was the virus and the fact that every team had differen protcols. Tennessee lost much more practice time than many other schools due to their strict Covid protocol. I don't think many concrete conclusions as to what the state of the team can be made in this crazy year. One thing is for sure the overall talent is much better and recruiting has been very good and that is the life blood of a team.
Okay, here's how predictable some folks are on VN.com. Folks who believe they're witty. Bearded, for example. At some point, even though he's fighting it right now because I can predict his every move, at some point he's going to post in this thread. And what he intended to say, before I called his shot, is "oh, here we go, it's today's installment of JP's defense of Pruitt." He'll probably shift his message just to "prove me wrong," but we all know that's where he would've gone. Heh.
Patience.
This thread is not about Pruitt. It's not about Chaney. Not about Fulmer. Not about Butch. Not about any specific person or event. Not about any specific time frame.
It's about you. You and me.
There's a fictional movie about one year's NFL draft. It's called Draft Day. Has Kevin Costner in the lead role. A lot of us have seen it. For those who haven't, I do recommend it; far better than any movie about such a constrained topic should be. Here's the first of a series of 10 short youtube clips leading up to the climactic scene:
I'll summarize. Costner, the general manager of one NFL team, takes a series of seemingly nonsensical decisions in preparation for draft day. Then, over the course of the day, he seems to double down on the bad choices until, at the end, all the weirdly-shaped pieces of his plan suddenly fall into perspective and his genius is revealed.
Okay, so what? That's just Hollywood making up a feel-good story.
Well, here's what. Costner's character was smarter than the folks around him. The folks trying to give him advice. He knew exactly what he was doing. He had a plan, and he executed it. Even if they couldn't see how it would work until near the end, even if the team gathered no fruits of their labors until the very last minute, he knew what he was doing. He was smarter than everyone around him on his business, his job.
Now what if a Tennessee coaching staff knows their subject better than you and I do? What if they know a bit more about college football than us? About recruiting kids, developing them, forming a team out of them, and winning games and championships with them? What if they know every piece of that better than us?
When did we start assuming they don't?
Where did we lose the ability to wait and see? Where did we lose the ability to give a subject matter expert some leeway, some rope? Sure, they might just hang themselves, but...given that they're probably smarter on the topic than we are...they might just see further ahead to a brighter outcome than we can.
When did we lose patience, as a fan base?
Because I can assure you, we have zero of that now.
END NOTE: no,, this isn't about Pruitt. This is just as much about how we treat the coach after Pruitt, or the coach after that, as it is about how we treat him. This is about US, and a serious flaw we've developed as a community.
The biggest problem this season was the virus and the fact that every team had differen protcols. Tennessee lost much more practice time than many other schools due to their strict Covid protocol. I don't think many concrete conclusions as to what the state of the team can be made in this crazy year. One thing is for sure the overall talent is much better and recruiting has been very good and that is the life blood of a team.
As I stated in another post the real problem this season was the virus and the disruption, particularly as it pertains to practice. Tennesse's protocol was very strict and many other schools were not. I know there a lot of people who are sick of hearing this "covid excuse" but just because one is sick of the truth does not mean it is not the truth.If the measuring stick is 0-8 then yes it has improved, but if the measuring stick is actual wins and losses vs competent teams then it hasn't really improved. However, if you seriously believe the roster has improved that dramatically, then why hasn't the record? Wouldn't that further indicate poor coaching and development?
2017 2018 2019 2020
UGA 41-0 47-21 43-14 44-21
UF 26-20 38-12 34-3 31-19
UA 45-7 58-21 35-13 48-17
Average 37-9 47-18 37-10 41-19
28 points 29 points 27 points 22 points
As I stated in another post the real problem this season was the virus and the disruption, particularly as it pertains to practice. Tennesse's protocol was very strict and many other schools were not. I know there a lot of people who are sick of hearing this "covid excuse" but just because one is sick of the truth does not mean it is not the truth.
The Vols do not have the roster talent to be competitive in the SEC.so.....then what, or better yet, who is the excuse for under performing if talent is there?
As I stated in another post the real problem this season was the virus and the disruption, particularly as it pertains to practice. Tennesse's protocol was very strict and many other schools were not. I know there a lot of people who are sick of hearing this "covid excuse" but just because one is sick of the truth does not mean it is not the truth.
How many key players were out this season for Alabama? Heck their coach tests positive and is on the sideline two days later. If Tennessee had a three negative test and your back policy a lot less time would have been missed.There simply is no proof to back that claim up other than a few random posts by others on here, fact is all schools lost practice time due to Covid as well as reduced rosters due to quarantines. UT got to play all 10 of their games, many teams had their schedules reduced dramatically due to Covid and UT played with greater roster numbers as compared to other teams. It's odd how other programs were able to make "concrete conclusions" about the direction of their football team
Listen, alligator. Fan of some other school.
They need you over at gatorzrulez.com or wherever you come from. You know, to talk about stuff like this:
"Oklahoma is a good matchup but they're not on our level. They're not SEC. They're not the Florida Gators. So we should put on a good show."
-- Florida LB James Houston IV on playing Oklahoma in the Goodyear Cotton Bowl Classic.
How many key players were out this season for Alabama? Heck their coach tests positive and is on the sideline two days later. If Tennessee had a three negative test and your back policy a lot less time would have been missed.
You're also assuming that we played completely terrible all the time which is not the case. I would say the opposite is true, the team played well most of the time. Yes there were some bad bad plays and mistakes, mostly due to youth and inexperience but had it not been for some obnoxously bad qb play this season would look completely diffferent.The University of Tennessee followed the same guidelines put forward by the state of Tennessee. Quit pretending like the state put forth guidelines similar to those of California or New York. EVERY team dealt with quarantines and limited practices but still found ways to field a competent team on game days.
See, this is where there is a genuine disagreement. You're apparently happy with an "improved" roster while others want an improved win/loss record and to be more competitive in losses to upper level teams.The has been major improvement in the most important area, the roster. The roster is much bigger, faster and more talented than it was three years ago.
