carolinaviking
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This was posted in another thread:
This is interesting. What is a football coach's job? Is it to win? Or is it to raise young men to do their best, work as a team, face adversity, and deal with loss?
It could be argued that winning every game indicates that they are working as a team and are doing their best. But does that prepare them properly for life? We all know what happens when someone who has won everything for a long time finally loses. It's ugly because they do not know how to deal with it.
It could be argued that losing every game indicates that they are not working as a team or doing their best. But then again, maybe it doesn't. In high school, there were always teams that lost most or all of their games. They didn't have the resources to compete. But they competed, anyway. Why field a team? Why would students try out for that team, knowing they would get whupped every game for four years straight? Could it be because those kids understood that it was about competing and not about winning? Could it be they understood that it was about a coach teaching them to be men? To be team members? Why does Vanderbilt field a team every year, knowing they will most likely have a losing record? Is it because those few wins are so much sweeter?
Like everyone else, I wish Tennessee would dominate and win a championship, and unfortunately, they are not doing that. But I am quite uncomfortable with all of this hatred and vitriol spewed at Coach Jones. He is a Vol. He has a family. He is a human being whose failures are on full display for the world to see. If your father/brother/son/best friend coached the Vols this way, would you be willing to shoot an arrow into his back the way so many here on VN do to Coach Jones every day? I know he gets paid millions, but that is not on him; that is on the school, and it is the nature of the beast.
This thread is not about whether or not CBJ should be fired. It is a question of responsibility.
So, what is a coach's job?
A full year without a single conference win.
Do you have employees that don't even come close to accomplishing their job - or would you be OK with that?
This is interesting. What is a football coach's job? Is it to win? Or is it to raise young men to do their best, work as a team, face adversity, and deal with loss?
It could be argued that winning every game indicates that they are working as a team and are doing their best. But does that prepare them properly for life? We all know what happens when someone who has won everything for a long time finally loses. It's ugly because they do not know how to deal with it.
It could be argued that losing every game indicates that they are not working as a team or doing their best. But then again, maybe it doesn't. In high school, there were always teams that lost most or all of their games. They didn't have the resources to compete. But they competed, anyway. Why field a team? Why would students try out for that team, knowing they would get whupped every game for four years straight? Could it be because those kids understood that it was about competing and not about winning? Could it be they understood that it was about a coach teaching them to be men? To be team members? Why does Vanderbilt field a team every year, knowing they will most likely have a losing record? Is it because those few wins are so much sweeter?
Like everyone else, I wish Tennessee would dominate and win a championship, and unfortunately, they are not doing that. But I am quite uncomfortable with all of this hatred and vitriol spewed at Coach Jones. He is a Vol. He has a family. He is a human being whose failures are on full display for the world to see. If your father/brother/son/best friend coached the Vols this way, would you be willing to shoot an arrow into his back the way so many here on VN do to Coach Jones every day? I know he gets paid millions, but that is not on him; that is on the school, and it is the nature of the beast.
This thread is not about whether or not CBJ should be fired. It is a question of responsibility.
So, what is a coach's job?