Wilhelm16
Run through the T
- Joined
- Jan 29, 2011
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I take exception to this myth of the high school talent in TN. Is there some magical effing force that makes you a better athlete simply because you live in a different state? I'd say it's more likely that the talent gets overlooked, because TN doesn't send a bunch of rural kids from now defunct local small schools to centralized super-schools. Call me crazy, but I think Bama faired pretty well with Hightower, Notre Dame with Golden Tate, Ole Miss with Oher and Patrick Willis, Kentucky with Randall Cobb, USC with Patrick Turner, Marshall with Chad Pennington, the Vols with Witten, Leonard Little, Al Wilson, Travis Stephens, Tiny Richardson, etc etc etc
The only difference I've seen is the coaching process. In TN you can't be a head high school coach without being a teacher or having like 10 years as a volunteer coach. Other states have non-staff stipend positions....it's not the talent of the players. It's like saying players from Portland are naturally better than those from Cross Plains because they live 15 miles farther up the road. It's NOT the talent.
That's a myth and the myth is continuously perpetuated. The talent is there...bother to look for it. If Dooley wants to recruit "3 stars with character", at least get the ones that likely grew up bleeding orange.
The only difference I've seen is the coaching process. In TN you can't be a head high school coach without being a teacher or having like 10 years as a volunteer coach. Other states have non-staff stipend positions....it's not the talent of the players. It's like saying players from Portland are naturally better than those from Cross Plains because they live 15 miles farther up the road. It's NOT the talent.
That's a myth and the myth is continuously perpetuated. The talent is there...bother to look for it. If Dooley wants to recruit "3 stars with character", at least get the ones that likely grew up bleeding orange.
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