orangebloodgmc
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The fanbase wanted it. Not everybody of course, but Volnation walked off the plank voluntarily. Hamilton gave the people what they wanted.Coach Phillip Fulmer did not retire. He was disrespectfully, unceremoniously, and wrongly fired by a punk named Mike Hamilton. That is what started all this mess and Heup is fixing it.
Yes. He knew BEFORE the Wyoming game. It appeared he did nothing to prepare the team. It was the worst game Iāve ever attended. Regrettably, it was the first and last game we attended as a family.That would be an inaccurate take.
Fulmer was informed that he wouldnt be the coach after the season finished, the week of the Wyoming game.
Tennessee did Fulmer a favor by firing him. Without Cutcliffe he wasn't much. He tried to bury this program twice, as coach and athletic directorHasn't been 20 years. In 2007 we played for the SEC championship. Didn't win it, no, but we were in the hunt. A 10-win season.
Folks who like to hate on Fulmer love to take away his last four years, as if they were all losing seasons. Or his last eight years. Or everything after the national championship. But that's just haters being haters.
We were relevant right up until 2008.
And Josh arrived in 2021 to begin righting the ship.
So it's not 20 years. It is 13: 2008 to 2020, inclusive.
Go Vols!
Now that's hilariousShould have given him a sabbatical. He would have come back fresh and led us to another NC!
If he had 10 years left in him, we would have been in really bad shape. I was glad when he got firedI was always of the mindset that firing Fulmer was the wrong thing to do. He had at least another 10 years left in him. Had he been able to leave with the dignity he deserved, the replacement and the ensuing years would have likely have seen us remain at the top.
TN unnecessarily sacrificed a ton of goodwill that ultimate hurt the program.
Fulmer wasn't much without Cutcliffe.. factI loved Fulmer as a coach. He provided some of the greatest moments in my life from a UT football perspective. That being said, the problem with keeping Fulmer is that Cutcliffe wasn't staying regardless of offers because he wanted to be a HC. Fulmer struggled with other OCs when Cut wasn't there. Clawson didn't really get a fair shake as OC with only one season, but the offense clearly wasn't the same without Cut.
No doubt Hamilton and Co screwed the pooch during and after his tenure. That seemed inevitable because he was almost completely inept as an AD.
And as another example of Fulmer's bad decision making, he advocated and fought for Mike Hamilton to be the AD and is a primary reason why he was selected. If Fulmer has said no, Hamilton would not be the AD.Coach Phillip Fulmer did not retire. He was disrespectfully, unceremoniously, and wrongly fired by a punk named Mike Hamilton. That is what started all this mess and Heup is fixing it.
I was always told Schumaker was going on vacation and didnāt want the AD selection hanging over him so that Thursday/Friday before he left, he just phoned Hamilton and told him he had it. Now, Fulmer may have made it known he wanted Hamilton and that played a role in it. However, without Dickey and Johnson in administration, he was done for. Also, who were the boosters who gave Hamilton the go ahead?And as another example of Fulmer's bad decision making, he advocated and fought for Mike Hamilton to be the AD and is a primary reason why he was selected. If Fulmer has said no, Hamilton would not be the AD.
This is a fair take ā¦. I remember thinking he didnāt look good physically during the 2008 seasonā¦. As if stress had gotten to him and he was tired and worn down.I was always of the mindset that firing Fulmer was the wrong thing to do. He had at least another 10 years left in him. Had he been able to leave with the dignity he deserved, the replacement and the ensuing years would have likely have seen us remain at the top.
TN unnecessarily sacrificed a ton of goodwill that ultimate hurt the program.
Exactly. And there were a couple of 9-win seasons mixed into those 13 years. It actually wasnāt much different from Alabamaās bad stretch from 1997-2006 (10 seasons) before Saban arrived in 2007 to start righting the ship. Ours was 3 seasons longer, but both were overall awful stretches for historically blueblood programs, with a couple of good seasons mixed in.Hasn't been 20 years. In 2007 we played for the SEC championship. Didn't win it, no, but we were in the hunt. A 10-win season.
Folks who like to hate on Fulmer love to take away his last four years, as if they were all losing seasons. Or his last eight years. Or everything after the national championship. But that's just haters being haters.
We were relevant right up until 2008.
And Josh arrived in 2021 to begin righting the ship.
So it's not 20 years. It is 13: 2008 to 2020, inclusive.
Go Vols!
I disagree with your first statement, we haven't been "everyone else's homecoming game" even during our worst years, nor have we been "irrelevant"And so it goes, after Fulmer retired we become everyone elseās homecoming game for nearly 20 years ⦠and just about irrelevant in college football.
Fulmer won about 3/4 of his games and finally we have a coach who is winning just about 3/4 of his games. And, of course, in a rebuilding year with significant injuries in very critical parts of the team, especially the defense (lose an all-American corner back and it oughtāa sting), and with a couple of losses in games where it could have gone either way, and with recruiting success soaring, we get those who are saying, āyeah, that coach gotta get better real quick or he has gotta go ā¦ā
Couch coaching is somehow easier with a loss or two to work with.
Iāve heard this before. We all have. Twenty or so years ago.
Added, a new quarterback comes in, a journeyman looking for a chance and heās not only good, but with this coaching staff helping, he is great. The focus has been on his mistakes, but truth be told heās thrown some fantastic darts for touchdowns and high mileage gains, throws that some quarterbacks could not make or would not attempt because of the inherent risk. He has been immense fun to watch, but like any quarterback even he needs time to at least take a look downfield.
So, here we are, relevant again, all season in the discussion for college footballās ultimate prize, with an offense that is booming, an injured defense that is playing hard, a coach that is good, getting better and will likely be great ⦠and naysayers seem to have forgotten those long, hard twenty years.
Best to learn from history. It can be repeated. Making vast changes do indeed, usually, mean vast results. But, which way?
Firing Fulmer wasn't "wrong" in the grand scheme of how the program was and where it was going in relation to other SEC programs, however I might have given him one more year and see what happened.I was always of the mindset that firing Fulmer was the wrong thing to do. He had at least another 10 years left in him. Had he been able to leave with the dignity he deserved, the replacement and the ensuing years would have likely have seen us remain at the top.
TN unnecessarily sacrificed a ton of goodwill that ultimate hurt the program.
2001, 2003, 2004, 2006 and 2007 were good to great teams, I wouldn't call them "regressed"His teams regressed every year after 98. He had two chances to hire OC not named David Cutcliffe. He failed both times. I can't stand him but had Kiffin stayed 4-5 years things would have looked a lot different. Or if Cutcliffe would have taken over as head coach. The game passed Phil by no different than with coach majors
Fulmer was done. I wish heād done the right thing and stepped down, handing the reigns to Cutcliffe. It wouldāve been best for the program. But Fulmer is about Fulmer. Thatās how he got the job (and AD position) to begin with.About the only thing he did right was fire Phil. The only reason 07 went like it did was David Cutcliffe
Weird response that says nothing on the topic, but okay.Iām sure this is what you would have done
As I have said most of our fanbase does not know anything about football. Most of our country is idiots Anyone who wanted Fulmer fired and Kiffin hired is a moron of football and probably life who is broke after two divorces. Hopefully some of them have smartened up.The fanbase wanted it. Not everybody of course, but Volnation walked off the plank voluntarily. Hamilton gave the people what they wanted.
No doubt CFF made some bad decisions but that does not excuse the way in which he was let go and he should have been given the chance to make things right. CPF is a good man maybe too susceptible to political stuff but he always tried to do right by Tennessee and he deserved better. The idiots (usually bandwagon betting crew) upset with Heup are the same crowd that disrespected Fulmer and are bad mouthing Tony V. Frick 'em. For some people it goes deeper. We owe those who came before and those who are to come. If you are in it for the now then GTFO.And as another example of Fulmer's bad decision making, he advocated and fought for Mike Hamilton to be the AD and is a primary reason why he was selected. If Fulmer has said no, Hamilton would not be the AD.
