I'm still trying to wrap my head around what must have been Butch's coaching philosophy, which would have driven his recruiting and training styles.
This is purely speculation, but it seems the man was a showman, and had a showman's attitude toward the game of football. He seems to have viewed it as an entertainment industry--which from a business perspective, it is...but from a coach's perspective it has to be taken way more seriously if you want results at the highest levels of the game. So that may have been his fatal flaw, it seems. He was Barnum & Bailey when we needed Neyland and Fulmer.
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Butch "Barnum and Bailey" Jones---I LIKE IT! And believe that it's a very accurate description of Jones' approach.
I don't believe the vast majority of college coaches and players have ever approached the game as entertainment.
You'll never convince me that Neyland, Majors, Fulmer, and now Pruitt have ever approached the game that way.
You can bet your bottom dollar that Saban doesn't approach the game that way.
It takes plain 'ol HARD WORK, submission, discipline, and obedience every day as a TEAM to become excellent and win championships in football.
Many players may have the talent but NOT the commitment to the TEAM work ethic, attitude, discipline, and willingness to accept coaching required for the development of a championship TEAM!
It appears that CJP laid that message down after the Florida game--and this team has accepted it!
It takes time to establish those "intangibles" within a program as the cultural norm--especially in a program that has languished under extremely POOR DISCIPLINE and LEADERSHIP from the top down over the last 10 years.
I've said it before, and I will say it again---hiring Fulmer as AD was the best thing that UT could've done because he has the fire in his belly to return the program to elite status.
And Fulmer lived and breathed those "intangibles" for most of his playing and coaching career--except for the last 5 years or so of his coaching career when he lost his fundamental connection to those values.
But the fire in Fulmer's belly is redemption----redeeming those last 5 years or so of his legacy and UT Football in the shadow of General Neyland.
And FULMER was able to recognize CJP as a man with that same connection and fire in his belly.
CJP's advantage over KIffin, Dools, and Lyle is that he has LIVED hard work, submission, humility, discipline, and obedience as a WAY OF LIFE in order to earn his way to where he is now!
We LOVE JENNINGS and TREY SMITH because they are the embodiment of those principles!!
It's the reason CJP ran afoul of those goofs at UGA when he was there under Richt.
His mentality will always CLASH with those guys who have replaced those values with the complacency that accompanies thinking that the game of FOOTBALL is nothing more than entertainment.
GO VOLS!