fair enough. but it does stand to reason that one of the reasons coaches come under fire in the first place is simply the fact that these kids get in trouble to begin with. there is no active "prevention" of this behavior....the player bears the responsibility for the action, but the coach shoulders the responsibility of properly responding to said action. My gripe is the coaches turning a blind eye, or effectively condoning poor behavior.
This is kind of funny because this is how everyone always acts when some player from another team gets into trouble. Not only does your team have to beat them on the field but it has to have much better discipline and be morally sound. And then someone on your team gets in trouble and the other side starts saying the same things you were saying. Tennessee has had plenty of discipline problems and I can guarantee you there will be some in the future, its inevitable. Its always ok to give guys from your team a second chance but if they are from some other team they have to be kicked off the team immediately or the coach is not disciplining strong enough. Give me a break.
Anyone remember Vincent McClure? He was a big tight end we had a couple of years ago. Anyway, he beat up his girlfriend and then only got suspended for like one game. That really rubbed me the wrong way. Then, when Fulmer drops the hammer on a couple of guys in 2006 for doing basically nothing it seems pretty hypocritical.
If everyone (meaning every school) agreed to a verifiable system of enforcement and an objective set of disciplinary criteria, of course you are right. But neither will happen. Its not a bad idea. Its just an impossible one.
I have no problems with the coach for his recruits doing stupid things. I have a problem with the coach when he fails to act accordingly. I only want the coach to respond in the way that the university would respond if the individual were on academic scholarship.fair enough. but it does stand to reason that one of the reasons coaches come under fire in the first place is simply the fact that these kids get in trouble to begin with. there is no active "prevention" of this behavior....
the only thing the coach can do at that point is react to the situation, so, in that regard, i agree with you. if you want to bash the coach, bash the coach for how he handles the disciplinary action, not simply because the kid got in to trouble.
which i think happens far too often.
I have no problems with the coach for his recruits doing stupid things. I have a problem with the coach when he fails to act accordingly. I only want the coach to respond in the way that the university would respond if the individual were on academic scholarship.
Not that it matters, but I'm still going to have a problem with it and hereby reserve the right to continue grousing about it (even when the Vols are the problem).