DISCLAIMER:

I love my dog, football college is better than the NFL, coffee, wine, men and lots of swear words!! Opinions are like assholes. Everyone has one. These are mine. If you are going to be mean keep yours to yourself.

Thursday, January 13, 2011

The loyalty I was looking for in a football coach!

The 2 bold quotes down at the bottom of this article are things that MORE football coaches need to implement into their personal football philosophies.

I know its a business. I know there is lots and lots of cash to be made. BUT when is enough money enough?

If you are working 15-18 hour days 362 days a year (Saban's staff) when are you going to spend that money? When do you get to see the family that college head coaches insist you have to show "stability" and that you are a "family man"?

I realize I am late to the LSU band wagon. I have only been riding it for a few years. But, Coach Miles just won a forever spot in my heart with his loyalty. I wish more people had stronger loyalty in their character. 2010 I realized just how UN-loyal some people can be. I frankly don't have time for that missing character trait in my friends.

Enjoy the article! Geaux Tigers!!

BATON ROUGE, La. -- Les Miles made it clear, in his own particular way, that he is living in the present.

His nostalgia for Michigan, where he played, and his enduring pride in his alma mater could not outweigh the relationships he's built in the past six seasons at LSU, where he's won 62 games and five bowls, including the 2007 national title.

"I'm one of those guys that believe where you are at is where you live your life," Miles said Wednesday shortly after LSU announced that the Tigers' coach had agreed to a new contract that would keep him living down on the bayou for the next seven seasons.

The announcement of Miles' new deal came two days after Michigan athletic director Dave Brandon flew to Baton Rouge to meet with Miles about the Wolverines' coaching vacancy that has since been filled by Brady Hoke.

Miles' annual salary will remain the same at a little more than $3.75 million. However, his new deal gives him three additional years and more opportunities to win bonuses based on postseason success.

LSU athletic director Joe Alleva said the contract will lend stability to a program that has already piled up an average of more than 10 victories a year since Miles arrived.

Miles said that stability would only make him a better recruiter and allow him to weather intermittent down years caused by injuries or unexpected departures of key players on account of personal or academic factors.

It also should make it easier for Miles to ignore his vocal critics. Miles has been lambasted on sports call-in shows in Louisiana and even booed in Tiger Stadium when the Tigers have struggled, as they did in a memorable narrow victory over Tennessee this past season. The Tigers initially appeared to lose that game on a botched play in the final seconds, only to be rescued by a Tennessee penalty.

Yet, Miles downplayed fans' fair-weather treatment, chalking it up to a fringe element prone toward negativity.

"I bet you those people don't sing the alma mater at the end of the game, and I bet you those people don't have tears in their eyes when the Tigers take the field," Miles said. "I began to understand that, as a part of love and appreciation for a team, just occasionally 2,500 knuckleheads might boo. I think I might want to be at a place where they care greatly for the work that you do and that it's important that you do it well. If that means that, very rarely, one or two guys might boo, I kind of understand."

On ESPN Radio's "The Scott Van Pelt Show," Miles didn't go into whether Michigan offered him a position, but said he was very happy to be at LSU.

"I enjoy who I represent. And my family being happy and enjoying the opportunities the state of Louisiana provides for them just allowed me to remain consistent to a commitment to these people," Miles told Van Pelt.

Although Miles still has strong feelings for Michigan, where he played and worked as an assistant coach, he said that bond does not determine his future.

"My fondness, the lessons that I learned, the people I enjoyed back there, does not equate to a necessity that I coach there," Miles said. "Just because I'm loyal and care and recognize that the credential of Michigan really has marked my life, I can't go by the sincerity and the authenticity of the people that I represent here in the state of Louisiana. It's just too important."

Miles said he discussed his options with his wife and his children on Monday night, largely ignoring the telecast of the BCS Championship Game in which Auburn edged Oregon to run the Southeastern Conference's string of national titles to five.

Miles' wife, Kathy, had a central role in the decision, and "tears were shed," the coach said. Miles also let his four children weigh in.

"Every one of my children are so happy here, enjoy being here, their friends, their things," Miles said. "That's not something that could not necessarily be maneuvered and replaced, but it did tell me they're happy here and that was an important factor."

All the while, Miles reflected on his commitments to current players and incoming recruits, as well as assistant coaches and officials in the LSU athletic department. He described struggling to sleep through the night and lying awake around 4 a.m., talking again with Kathy.

While he was leaning toward remaining at LSU, Miles said he had to consider the possibility that he could be persuaded to go to a place he's loved since he played under the late Bo Schembechler, who later gave Miles his first assistant coaching job.

"I could not have met with Michigan without the potential of a different outcome," Miles said. "I always allowed for that, but it kept comfortably returning to the people and the commitment. I enjoy this community."

Miles also had the memory of LSU's 41-24 Cotton Bowl triumph over Texas A&M fresh in his mind -- the postgame celebration with his players and the howls of approval from rabid Tigers fans who'd traveled to Arlington, Texas.

As the team bus left Cowboys Stadium, Miles sat near redshirt freshman defensive end Sam Montgomery and freshman defensive back Tyrann Mathieu. Mathieu had made big plays all season and had an interception against the Aggies. Montgomery was having early success as a pass-rusher when his season was cut short by a knee injury. Miles considered their promising futures at LSU and all that went into bringing them to Baton Rouge.

"I told them I was going to be here when I recruited them, and for me not to respect those people that I committed to is just very difficult," Miles said.

Then Miles, the so-called "Mad Hatter," whose litany of quirky quotes inspired the creation of the website thequotablelesmiles.com, summed up his outlook in a way befitting his reputation.

"My strength and my weakness is loyalty," Miles began, "and I'll always see it as a strength."

Wednesday, January 5, 2011

Loyalty and Gentlemen

So, this blog started in my head as the media started to hound Harbaugh and Luck just seconds after Stanford's victory in the Orange Bowl. The media pisses me off so much. I was screaming at my tv. "LET THEM ENJOY THE WIN... BACK OFF!!"
Do you really think either one of them was going to be like "hell yeah bitches I am moving on to bigger and better things I just won the Orange bowl what else do I need to accomplish here??" Seriously!!

Luck has 2 years of eligibility and an architecture degree ahead of him.
Yes, he was #2 in voting for the Heisman. Yes, I have read the stories how he will miss out on $40-$60 Million if he doesn't leave for the NFL on January 15th. The rookie pay caps should have been in place years ago but those are opinions are for another blog at another time.
But why can't the kid stay in school because he wants to enjoy college life a little longer. There are "kids" in college who are on the 7 year program because they are having so much fun and they don't even play sports so, they don't get the extra benefits of free drinks at the college bars, or free meals or tattoos depending on the school and they certainly aren't getting the unlimited supply of pussy like the athletes are!!
So, why wouldn't a kid who was #2 in Heisman voting and just had the best season of his schools history NOT want to stay and play for 2 more years?!?!

I don't want Jim Harbaugh to leave Stanford. I don't know why but I want him to stay with a program that he turned around in 4 years. I want to see more coaches show some loyalty. I know AD's don't show loyalty. Look what Luck's dad did to his head coach Bill Stewart... He hired Dana Holgorsen with a head coach in waiting tag after the 2011 season. Now the entire offensive staff has been let go except one coach. It is a crazy business. I feel sorry for the players. Everyone wants instant success. No time to develop players or programs.
I'm not saying you need to be at a school a JoePa length of time. But there is something to be said for coaches who stay that long and for schools who allow them to.

I think the players are learning first hand how NOT to be loyal. The coaches are supposed to be building up their football fundamentals while the school is giving them a degree and something to fall back on when the NFL doesn't work out.
They are also to some extent teaching these 18 year old boys and how to grow up and be "men".
But I am starting to believe that they are really teaching them how to always chase the greener grass.

Does it ever occur to anyone that all this "gotta have that it is better than what I have now" is what is causing men to cheat because some one "better" has come along??

YES, I know there are various reasons that men & women cheat again this is another blog in waiting.

There is no loyalty in football unless you are a rabid fan.
Even then the million dollar boosters have too much say in the head coach firing/hiring process.

I want the gentleman football coach back.
I want a coach like Jim Wacker who while he was TCU turned his football team into the NCAA for violating NCAA rules.
I want a coach like Tom Landry who stays with a team for 30 years or Jeff Fischer with the Titans.
I want some fucking loyalty!

I would not let my little brother play for the slime of the earth coaches like Saban, Leach or Spurrier.
Those men make my skin crawl. They may be proven winners but I don't think they have their players in mind when they run on a football field. The players are just pawns in their chess game to become #1.

There was a story I was told once about Saban. When he left Michigan State for LSU he sent a plane to East Lansing and told the coaches who ever got on the plane had a job at LSU.
Not one single coach got on that plane. That to me speaks volumes about the kind of man Saban is or perhaps the lack of man that he is.
The "I'm not going to the NFL" stunt was just the cherry on top of all that is shitty about Saban.

I could go on for days with all is wrong with football. But that will not accomplish anything!!
So, enjoy the rest of the bowl games!
Enjoy the NFL playoffs!

Talk to you soon!
-Kate