5- I like gsvol's #5. Booing hurts the team's future regardless of who the coach is. Fulmer will succeed/fail own his own. The decision on his job won't be very dependent on boos. Recruits have been and will be effected by poor fan behavior. Giles specifically mentioned it. He, Nunes, and Stokes talked often and had worked together recruiting other players.
1. Ditch the Yoga and go with a martial arts study in conjunction with the strength and conditioning program.
Picture Overstreet rushing th passer with the opposing OT slowing him down with an arm bar. he's pumping his arms and moving right along but not in time to disrupt the play, now picture him knocking that arm bar out of the way and sacking the QB, which would have happened with the right kind of training.
Picture Foster in the Florida game making nine yards and getting tackled by an all SEC LB, but now picture the same play if the blocker had taken out the LB, Arian would still be running.
My conjecture is that if the blocker had been studying a MA disipline instead of yoga, he wouldn't have stumbled and missed the block.
I could give a thousand examples, those are two that happen to stick out in my mind right now.
Another thing is that with MA training a presence of mind and quickness is attained that would probably would have prevented our fumbles that have cost us a couple of games or more, just this year.
2. Rearrange the coaching staff to include a special teams coordinator that is responsible for special teams play.
Case in point, our first punt went for 29 yds in the Auburn game. Why, because we used exactly the same formation as used when Florida blocked a punt and scored a TD (that was the Florida game, right?) and Auburn used exactly the same rush play and only missed a blocked punt and TD because Cunningham awkwardly moved to his left when punting resulting in getting the punt off but a poor one at best. We are not a total disaster with our special teams but we could be so soooo much better if we had an innovative ST coordinator.
4. Revive school spirit, have more avid fan support, actually be the 12th man for a change, in a positive way, not negative. (the music has a lot to do with the mood of any group btw)
There are some students that really get into it but overall school spirit is nothing like it was 40 years ago, imo.
How about some leadership there. How about the student section does an orange out but puts a white power T in the center of their section????
There are those who think we can sprinkle the magic dust of a new coaching staff and wallah, we're dominating the SEC, beating everyone on a regular basis, etc.
I'll believe that when I see it, I doubt all that will happen even if part of it happens.
It's all relative. Define what YOU mean by "jazz up" and "Lawrence Welk." The POTSB has played Led Zeppelin's "Immigrant Song" & "Rock and Roll" for years, and while they may not be new, they sure ain't Lawrence Welk, either.
Good points.
They also play "Iron Man"; Black Sabbath was never played by LW, and Ozzie never made a guest appearance on his show.
Point taken.
I'm also dismayed they quit playing Earth, Wind & Fire's "Rock That," which LITERALLY is as jazz-rock fusiony as you can get.
Wish they would pick that back up.
The theme from "Gladiator" is not only newer, but kinda kewl, if I do say so myself.
Not bad.
IMHO, we don't need to turn college football into the NFL by marrying it w/heavy metal, a lot of which I even like. For example, before the UAB game, they were playing Saliva's "Ladies and Gentlemen" over the stadium sound system. :rock: Absurd.
Agreed.
The NFL is new age, cutting edge, etc., but the college game should be mostly about tradition.
OTOH, "When it's Iris Time Down in Tennessee," "Jeepers, Creepers," and the old "Country Hits Medley" they used to play can die with dignity, and would have indeed made 'ol Lawrence proud. " . . . and a one, and a two . . . ."
Sure, but listen to a little Sam Bush, et al.
Flash back to the 2001 SECC game.
They needed to play "it's great to be a Vol" about two or three more times in order to build to a higher fever pitch for the Vol fan segment of the crowd.
We were sluggish as a fan group and
NOT ON TIME with our cheering, we could have easily disrupted some of the LSU audibles but the cheering only got that loud after the ball was snapped, which hurt us not them.
Listen to that LSU brass section that really gave their team a boost to help their 2nd half comeback, particularly when the play was on that end of the field.
OTOH, our band played (and did so very well) something that sounded like it would be a good number for a waltz.
I admit a lot of people thought we would just waltz into the Rose Bowl and repeat the '86 Sugar Bowl performance vs Miami but as we see now that just didn't happen.