"I actually did discuss with them whether the timing was the right thing or not, and they assured me that they felt it was the right thing," Fulmer said before the game Saturday. "It takes a while to validate yourself. I've been way under the radar. You don't want to be interfering or anything."
Fulmers statement about the university being bricks and mortar was absolutley absurd,if this is what he feels when he thinks about the UNIVERSITY OF TENNESSEE . He needs to move on.
"You can love a university," he said, "but a university cannot love you back. It's brick and mortar, so it gets back to relationships and people. Tennessee people have been great to me before and after this happened. It gets back to a couple of people making a decision that they think was right."
Quote:
"You can love a university," he said, "but a university cannot love you back. It's brick and mortar, so it gets back to relationships and people. Tennessee people have been great to me before and after this happened. It gets back to a couple of people making a decision that they think was right."
Being under radar to Fulmer = Being on ESPN, staying in the headlines with consulting fiasco job that would have paid him an additional $12,500 per month (on top of the $125k for his buyout), and having a state funded secretary
Not interfering to Fulmer = maintaining an office on campus and getting on ESPN on National Signing Day and taking a subtle swipe at the new coaching staff's recruitment of Marlon Brown (alluding that if he had still been the coach, Brown would have stayed in Tennessee)
Being under radar to Fulmer = Being on ESPN, staying in the headlines with consulting fiasco job that would have paid him an additional $12,500 per month (on top of the $125k for his buyout), and having a state funded secretary
Not interfering to Fulmer = maintaining an office on campus and getting on ESPN on National Signing Day and taking a subtle swipe at the new coaching staff's recruitment of Marlon Brown (alluding that if he had still been the coach, Brown would have stayed in Tennessee)