Mudcat
U. S. American
- Joined
- Sep 15, 2007
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Apparently one has to be on the other side of the state have the audacity to call for a change.
Today, Ron Higgins of the Memphis Commercial Appeal published an article entitled "If Fulmer won't change philosophy, UT should change coaches":
If Fulmer won't change philosophy, UT should change coaches : Columnists : Commercial Appeal
The article includes another telling CPF stat: "since 2000, 14 new coaches have come into the SEC, and of the 13 coaches Fulmer has faced, he's lost at least once to nine of them."
Meanwhile, with the exception of Basilio and Beano on 1180, the Knoxville media remains a nauseating Fulmerite monolith. Vol Calls was ludicrous on Monday night, the Sports Animal guys are in lock-step with the "let's let the season play out" mantra (with the possible exclusion of Mickey Dearstone, who said, "I'm not ready to jump ship, but I've got my life jacket on." Even Johns Adams, who has never been shy about being critical, has yet to say it's time for CPF to go.
It's obvious that retaining access to the coaches and players for interviews is of more importance to 98% of the local media than speaking the truth is. There may be some negavols in sheep's clothing among them, but those guys are still sellouts. They're not going to openly agree with Fulmer going until after it's a done deal.
Today, Ron Higgins of the Memphis Commercial Appeal published an article entitled "If Fulmer won't change philosophy, UT should change coaches":
If Fulmer won't change philosophy, UT should change coaches : Columnists : Commercial Appeal
The article includes another telling CPF stat: "since 2000, 14 new coaches have come into the SEC, and of the 13 coaches Fulmer has faced, he's lost at least once to nine of them."
Meanwhile, with the exception of Basilio and Beano on 1180, the Knoxville media remains a nauseating Fulmerite monolith. Vol Calls was ludicrous on Monday night, the Sports Animal guys are in lock-step with the "let's let the season play out" mantra (with the possible exclusion of Mickey Dearstone, who said, "I'm not ready to jump ship, but I've got my life jacket on." Even Johns Adams, who has never been shy about being critical, has yet to say it's time for CPF to go.
It's obvious that retaining access to the coaches and players for interviews is of more importance to 98% of the local media than speaking the truth is. There may be some negavols in sheep's clothing among them, but those guys are still sellouts. They're not going to openly agree with Fulmer going until after it's a done deal.