Hidden Video: Harrington Makes Sure Coaches Have All the Film They Need

#2
#2
that guy has one heck of a tough (but fun) job. 40TB is quite a bit of game footage to have sitting over there.

on a side note, wasn't he in Spinal Tap? :p

2980438.jpeg
 
#3
#3
that guy has one heck of a tough (but fun) job. 40TB is quite a bit of game footage to have sitting over there.

on a side note, wasn't he in Spinal Tap? :p

2980438.jpeg
:lolabove:...............Laverne and Shirley?
 
#7
#7
Good read...nice to have someone with that much experience and knowledge on our side. I'm sure he has been an enormous asset to CLK and staff...more than anyone outside the program even realizes.
 
#9
#9
The day after Tennessee's 63-7 victory over Western Kentucky, Harrington pulled into the parking lot outside the football complex at 6:05 a.m. to begin loading UCLA's game from the night before into the system.

"I was thinking, `Surely I'm the first one here,'" Harrington said. "I was the sixth person here on Sunday morning at 6:05. Half the staff was up here grading (film), working on the next thing, getting ready to go. I get in here and I get that stuff going, and as soon as I get that game posted, they start working on it."


Says alot right there.
 
#10
#10
Interesting...

Each week, Harrington downloads footage from every SEC opponent via a peer-to-peer video sharing system that each conference school has access to. That's different than the NFL, which ships game film via airline because pro franchises lack the bandwidth to send those massive video files over the Internet.

Still seems odd that the NFL wouldn't invest in updating their infrastructure to avoid having to ship these game videos.
 
#11
#11
Harrington is one of the best.

In the change of administration, there were two people that were guaranteed to have jobs if they wanted them, Roger Fraizer and Joe Harrington.
 
#12
#12
The day after Tennessee's 63-7 victory over Western Kentucky, Harrington pulled into the parking lot outside the football complex at 6:05 a.m. to begin loading UCLA's game from the night before into the system.

"I was thinking, `Surely I'm the first one here,'" Harrington said. "I was the sixth person here on Sunday morning at 6:05. Half the staff was up here grading (film), working on the next thing, getting ready to go. I get in here and I get that stuff going, and as soon as I get that game posted, they start working on it."


Says alot right there.

No kidding. I bet he was first one in every Sunday last season - and probably since 2001!
 
#16
#16
Wow, interesting story. It's nice that he is so dedicated, but like he said, he does get a good offseason to justify the 16-18 hours a day that he works during the season.
 
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