A new perspective?

#1

blackmon

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#1
I was just rewatching the replay of the CA fumble as they cut to CPF on the sideline....and I noticed something that I don't think I had noticed before.....

CPF looked completely exasperated, befuddled, and confused....grimacing and then clapping......managing at best what I can only describe as a "doofus face"......

And then it dawned on me.

Fulmer does not know how to motivate and discipline his players.

In the old days, the old ways would work....and he could be the player's buddy.

It seems to me that many of the new recruits come from broken homes with rather dismal backgrounds....this is not a racial matter as it seems to be rather evenly divided across all socio-economic backgrounds (at least according to the info I could get from scout and the other recruiting sources).

In the old days old style football motivation and "big buddy" would work. It still works in recruiting because the dynamics are different there....so CPF is a first class recruiter.

But then they arrive on campus. The old style of self-discipline, self-motivation, and self-accountability does not work. Those are old days ways.

Those days are over. You can tell it in the disciple slide over the last half decade or so. You can see it in the lack of innovation. You can see it in the under-development of talent...as well as the development of talent where the old ways still work--players such as Manning, etc.....

The reality is CPF (as the person where the buck stops) cannot coach up the marginal players. He simply cannot develop talent. Why?

Look to the player development coaches that surround him.

Who has been a great success. Chief! Why? It seems obvious. Chief is as different from Sanders as they come.

Sanders does not have the depth of experience or ability to fill in the gap.

As long as changes are not made, we will win most of the games we are supposed to win (although some of those will "slip" away), some of the games we are not supposed to win, and lose far too many of those games where coaching and talent make the difference.

Welcome to the new reality of TN football.

It's not about being a fair weather fan. Fulmer says the buck stops with him on many occassions. It's about accountability, and Fulmer's inability to maintain it.
 
#2
#2
I have said it before. He needs to grab the facemask and say "no, it's not ok".
 
#4
#4
Originally posted by duckman398686@Oct 22, 2005 8:09 PM
please sign my petition blackmon
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What the hell is your petition gonna do??
 
#6
#6
Originally posted by smokedog#3@Oct 22, 2005 8:13 PM
nothing untill fulmer is gone sanders will remain.
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:crazy: :crazy: huh, a Sanders fan....Someone, grab Mikey before it get's ugly.
 
#7
#7
no no don't tag me as a sanders fan i'am not. i just think fulmer won't make any changes.
 
#8
#8
Originally posted by smokedog#3@Oct 22, 2005 8:23 PM
no no don't tag me as a sanders fan i'am not.  i just think fulmer won't make any changes.
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I am 50/50. Because CPF knows the plays that are called too. I don't know what the problem is. I am just like any random fan. Why are we losing??
 
#9
#9
there are alot of reasons why we are losing. the main one is our qb can't spread the field. our offenseive play calling stinks, special teams are ajoke, we can't run the ball because we can't spread the field because our qb can't throw the ball 30 yards. we stink on offense in general.
 
#10
#10
Originally posted by duckman398686@Oct 22, 2005 6:09 PM
please sign my petition blackmon
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Does your petition annually donate large sums of cash to the university?
 
#12
#12
Why can't these ultra-talented players develop THEMSELVES??
Maybe my teacher bias is showing, but I know CPF can only take these young men so far. Maybe if they started hanging out on the practice field more and the party bars less, we might see some REAL development.
 
#13
#13
Show me a game where some ball carrier doesn't fumble.

It sucks no doubt but everyone one on the team today played hard. Mistakes were made but it wasn't from lack of trying.

Anderson made great blocks throughout the game.
 
#14
#14
I just saw the replay on ESPN. Just think how unlucky it was for the ball to go through the endzone. If it stays on the field, at least there could have been a scramble for the ball and a possible TD. If it squirted 5 feet to the right and went out before the pylon, it would be 4th down and we would have had a chip shot FG attempt. That may have been one of the most unlucky plays that I've ever seen.
 
#15
#15
That was just a hard impact / helmet to ball hit that made him fumble. It hurt us, but he didn't lose this game for us all by himself. He looked destroyed on the sideline and he knows how big that was. I'm sure he is being plenty hard on himself. We don't need to add onto it.
 
#16
#16
They just put it in super slow motion on Sportcenter. It was an absolutely perfect hit by a 200 lb corner on a 275 lb fullback.
 
#17
#17
Originally posted by GAVol@Oct 22, 2005 9:38 PM
They just put it in super slow motion on Sportcenter.  It was an absolutely perfect hit by a 200 lb corner on a 275 lb fullback.
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Bet ESPN enjoyed showing that. It sure seemed that Verne and Todd enjoyed discussing the fact that the corner gave up so much weight and "didn't back down."

Am I bitter? Damn straight. But I'm not mad at Anderson.
 
#18
#18
GaVol, I agree. That play is 1 in 100. You could run that play a hundred times and it wouldn't happen that way more than once.
 
#22
#22
What are you laughing at?

Sincerely,
Tony Robinson and B.B. Cooper
 
#23
#23
Originally posted by GAVol@Oct 23, 2005 1:13 AM
Good post.

Sincerely,

Reggie Cobb
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:eek:lol: Thanks for the laugh, I needed that one.
 
#25
#25
:D I love the 4th line of your post: Fulmer does not know how to motivate and discipline his players.
Maybe that's why most of our players are allowed to play ball immediately after committing major crimes.
Originally posted by blackmon@Oct 22, 2005 8:06 PM
I was just rewatching the replay of the CA fumble as they cut to CPF on the sideline....and I noticed something that I don't think I had noticed before.....

CPF looked completely exasperated, befuddled, and confused....grimacing and then clapping......managing at best what I can only describe as a "doofus face"......

And then it dawned on me.

Fulmer does not know how to motivate and discipline his players.

In the old days, the old ways would work....and he could be the player's buddy.

It seems to me that many of the new recruits come from broken homes with rather dismal backgrounds....this is not a racial matter as it seems to be rather evenly divided across all socio-economic backgrounds (at least according to the info I could get from scout and the other recruiting sources).

In the old days old style football motivation and "big buddy" would work. It still works in recruiting because the dynamics are different there....so CPF is a first class recruiter.

But then they arrive on campus. The old style of self-discipline, self-motivation, and self-accountability does not work. Those are old days ways.

Those days are over. You can tell it in the disciple slide over the last half decade or so. You can see it in the lack of innovation. You can see it in the under-development of talent...as well as the development of talent where the old ways still work--players such as Manning, etc.....

The reality is CPF (as the person where the buck stops) cannot coach up the marginal players. He simply cannot develop talent. Why?

Look to the player development coaches that surround him.

Who has been a great success. Chief! Why? It seems obvious. Chief is as different from Sanders as they come.

Sanders does not have the depth of experience or ability to fill in the gap. 

As long as changes are not made, we will win most of the games we are supposed to win (although some of those will "slip" away), some of the games we are not supposed to win, and lose far too many of those games where coaching and talent make the difference.

Welcome to the new reality of TN football.

It's not about being a fair weather fan. Fulmer says the buck stops with him on many occassions.  It's about accountability, and Fulmer's inability to maintain it.
[snapback]171625[/snapback]​

 

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