hog88
Your ray of sunshine
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This isn’t a one size fits all issue, not every scenario is the same. Also, maintaining that Sharpe is 100% correct because of his experience in the NFL doesn’t seem like a winning argument. Otherwise every former NFL player is right whenever they talk about football. And you can’t disagree.Sorry hogg but Sharpe's comment>yours. You are not a HOF NFL player. You dont have multiple SB rings. SS knows more about football then everyone on this board combined. He realizes its the ultimate team game. You dont. Hence why his facts trump your opinion.
This isn’t a one size fits all issue, not every scenario is the same. Also, maintaining that Sharpe is 100% correct because of his experience in the NFL doesn’t seem like a winning argument. Otherwise every former NFL player is right whenever they talk about football. And you can’t disagree.
I understand all of that and they are very valid points. The issue, at least in my opinion, is that CJP is unwilling to change. JG did well in some instances last year coming off the bench, but the writing is on the wall. Like most fans, I don’t understand why Pruitt isn’t willing to at least attempt to work through his biggest hinderance. This is the closest thing we’ll ever have to a throwaway season, it seems reasonable to use it to get the QB of the future (Whether it be HB or someone else) actual game experience.Maybe but SS isnt just some football player. He is a HOFer that has spent the better part of almost 30 years in football. You could consider him an expert. And on this issue he is right. There are things in football that just cannot be coached. Regardless of how good a coach is, he cannot make someone play up to their potential. A player has to want to. Tyler Bray is a perfect example. The guy had superior arm talent. He went to the Chiefs under Andy Reid. A man that is one of the most talented offensive minds the NFL has ever seen. Bray couldnt get it together. Now was that Reids fault? He shares some blame but most of us know that Bray didnt have the right attitude. Thats on him personally.
Personal accountability is real. We have seen players under Bill Belicheck not cut it. He is one of the GOATS of coaching. But even he cannot force a player to play up to his potential. At some point a person has to have the want, desire and drive to succeed. Hence, placing all the blame on coaching is weak.
Maybe but SS isnt just some football player. He is a HOFer that has spent the better part of almost 30 years in football. You could consider him an expert. And on this issue he is right. There are things in football that just cannot be coached. Regardless of how good a coach is, he cannot make someone play up to their potential. A player has to want to. Tyler Bray is a perfect example. The guy had superior arm talent. He went to the Chiefs under Andy Reid. A man that is one of the most talented offensive minds the NFL has ever seen. Bray couldnt get it together. Now was that Reids fault? He shares some blame but most of us know that Bray didnt have the right attitude. Thats on him personally.
Personal accountability is real. We have seen players under Bill Belicheck not cut it. He is one of the GOATS of coaching. But even he cannot force a player to play up to his potential. At some point a person has to have the want, desire and drive to succeed. Hence, placing all the blame on coaching is weak.
Well duh, obviously. That doesn't mean the managing of a major college football program is easy or everyone would be doing it...
Ridiculous analogy, by the way...
Peterman sucked when he was here. Using him as an example has a better chance of disproving your point and showing jones sucked at QB development. As far as the "couple of others", again they never saw the field here to prove your point.Peterman ran into some bad luck but had a record setting career at Pitt. Getting a second chance in the NFL with Gruden after his Bills debacle. Had a couple of others who transferred out and did well because of Dobbs the rubber man 's durabiity.
Forgive me, but WTF are you even talking about here Forrest?.... Exactly what part(s) of my two very brief comments was/were inaccurate?Your comment was ridiculous also, Jeremy. That’s why I made the statement. Maybe you should start by taking basic hiring and interview skills 101. How in the hell do you hire someone and “realize immediately it was a bad hire”?
Forgive me, but WTF are you even talking about here Forrest?.... Exactly what part(s) of my two very brief comments was/were inaccurate?
Players not executing the coach’s brilliant game plan still falls on the responsibility of the coach. That’s part of coaching, getting the players to execute when the lights come on.
The old “they are and expert, so you shut up” mindset. Thats like someone getting a bullsh*t degree and acting like he’s superior to “non educated” people. The funny part about it is most of the time the “educated” person in this example is usually way further behind the guy with real world experience. The knowledge, thats essentially mimicking the professors that never worked in the real world as well, usually doesn’t hold up. But who am I, I mean shutting up and listening to people who are superior to others hasn’t failed before.Sorry hogg but Sharpe's comment>yours. You are not a HOF NFL player. You dont have multiple SB rings. SS knows more about football then everyone on this board combined. He realizes its the ultimate team game. You dont. Hence why his facts trump your opinion.
I agree for the most part and I'm definitely not happy with the product but I'm going to cut Pruitt a tiny bit of slack this year. Can't blame everything on this covid BS, but I think it threw a big wrench in the works for UT football..You took the brain surgery comment way too serious. Just like a coach tries to talk down to people with their “21 Formation” and “Star” positions BS. Motivating people, being accountable and hiring good people happen every day in numerous businesses in Tennessee. It’s a rarity in the UTAD. That’s the problem. We have Forrest as head coach.
So if he was a backetball coach and chose to play a midget against shaq in the post, while not allowing the 7 footer on the bench to practice...its the player fault????He absolutely deserves blame. But blame has to go to the other QBs for not looking deep inside themselves and pushing themselves to separate and supplant JG.
I've been in situations, leadership situations, where there was no winning formula. All I could do was minimize the negative. Fighting for a neutral result. The absolute best possible outcome. If I'd served 26 years in the Hollywood version of the military, there would have been some magical formula each time things got desperate, some one-in-a-thousand miracle finish. But I didn't work for Hollywood, didn't have their scriptwriters.
I only mention this because some folks with no experience in a particular field, whether the military or professional / college sports, may be forgiven for thinking there's "always a way if you are good enough and work hard enough." That's their education via the movie theater. And that's a bad education. Sometimes there's just no good option.
And yes, bad or neutral outcomes are always on the leader. Buck stops here. Command responsibility. Lonely at the top. All true.
And yet, if you really want to understand what happened, you're going to have to push beyond that simplistic view, and see which specific parts failed, and in what ways.
I assure you, on a team of 100 lads with 11 coaches, when something fails, it will be because there are multiple specific points of failure. One bad piece, even if it's the key piece (head coach, QB, whatever you pick as the key) even the key piece can not alone cause a meltdown of the sort we saw in 2nd half of the UGa game or throughout the Kentucky match. That kind of outcome is invariably the result of multiple points of failure.
I personally believe it started--both weeks, both games--in three or four places: quarterback, offensive line (including TEs and RBs when given blocking/protection roles), and offensive coordinator. Perhaps receivers as well. Could be four places. Which came first? Or did they all fail more or less simultaneously? Impossible for us outsiders to know. But almost for sure, all three or four of those elements broke down at roughly the same time, both weeks. And then, like a house of cards, the rest came apart, ultimately even the defense (which is the strongest part of the team). Even the defense failed toward the end. Lads were giving up. Even on the defense.
So is all that on the head coach? Maybe. Certainly, he has command responsibility, but maybe it is actually something he directly did or failed to do. Then again, maybe not. We outsiders can't know for sure.
Absolutely, the responsibility for fixing whatever failed (every part of whatever failed, however many parts there are) that responsibility rests with the head coach. He drives the leadership team, the other coaches, to get fixes going. He has to have the vision to show them a new and better destination.
But it might be true that, at the point of failure, Jeremy Pruitt simply didn't have any winning hand to play. He may have been stuck, at that point.
*shrug* We are outsiders, looking in. Yes, we're all Volunteers, loyal fans, but we're still outside the day-to-day of the team. We have no idea what happens 164 of the 168 hours in each week. We don't know hardly anything. Almost nothing. We can only see outcomes, on the field, for a few hours. And then it goes dark again on us.
So I"m gonna hope Jeremy's the right head coach to figure this out and find a good path forward, toward the kind of football he and we want Tennessee to play. I'm gonna hope he has assistant coaches who are able to be part of forging that path. I'm gonna hope he has mostly the right players to take that path.
There's nothing else I can do. Just gotta hope for the best. And give them support as they try.
Go Vols!