Coaches: Job tough. R They moping? Do we Empathize?

Cane2

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“I told my wife the other day, ‘I haven’t had a dream when I go to sleep that didn’t involve football, maybe in the last six months,’ ”.

“I wake up and there’s always a situation, right?”

“The human element of it makes it hard. But what really gives me strength is coming to work every day and coaching my players … ”

“What makes things calm for me is knowing that I can walk in the meeting room and see those faces. Regardless of whether it’s a tough day or a great day, you love going in there and coaching these kids.” said one UM coach.

Another UM Coach added, “It was a family decision when I got into this business,’’

“We’ve kind of been around it and through it and know what it entails. But if you always keep the focus solely on why you got into it, your kids at home understand that dad’s a football coach and dad loves developing and being around young people — and they become a part of it. They become immersed in the culture, so to speak.”

“It’s a way of life for football coaches and families. It’s what we do as a family. But … in that, we understand it [and] our wives have to understand it. You get into it for young people and we just understand that sometimes the business part is a big piece as well.”

As for the children of this coach, “They get it,” he said. “To me, I still try to keep it [that] I’m Dad. You go home, I’m Dad. I’m not ‘Coach.’ Either way it goes, to them I’m going to be Dad, regardless.’’

Yet, a third UM Coach chimed in, “All you can do is focus on doing the best job that you can,”

“We made a pact as a team, as coaches — coach to coach, player to player, player to coach — that we were going to stick together, we were going to have unity and we were going to finish the season to the best of our ability.”

“You wake up, you go to work, you figure out the best way to teach and the best way to prepare and give them everything you have.”

Is it hard for your family?

“Of course,” this coach said. “[For] anybody in this situation, I would think it would be hard.”

But one coach who isn't caught in this ongoing "hard"ship on himself and his family is one who is probably relaxing in the keys fishing and relaxing with his stunning charming wife and their beautiful children is one Al Golden enjoying the wonderful Florida weather as opposed to the current chill weather of his native North East. He was relieved of this hardship his old ***'t coaches are undergoing, as these tough days came to a head for him on Oct. 25, 2015 the evening after UM’s worst loss in history: 58-0 to now No. 1 Clemson. On that evening, he “wish the Canes the best” an rode off with a settlement check for the balance of the calendar year, and the balance of his $7,000,000 upcoming in the next months and years to follow. Be assured that we won't see him suing the University of Miami for his back payment as his astute attorney secured contract terms which, expectedly, were very tight and clear insofar as to seamlessly forward his payments schedule to an offshore bank account in the Keys. This Coach and the family should be fine.

Now as to the other Miami coaches, they say they’re tending to their players first, then thinking about themselves and their uncertain futures as the Canes (6-4, 3-3 Atlantic Coast Conference) prepare for a 12:30 p.m. home game Saturday against Georgia Tech (3-7, 1-6).

As for the players, one Senior, former 5* and No. 1 recruit at his position, chimed in on their coaches, “My coaches, they’re men and they’re tough, so I think they can handle anything like that. But a lot of our coaches are very experienced so I’m pretty sure they’re going to get jobs. I’m pretty sure they’re going to move on …

“But the younger and new coaches.… when I look at their younger kids and wives, that’s what I think about. It’s hard on them.… It’s an uncertainty of where they’re going to be at. But it’s the thing with families. That’s what I look at the most, their families.”

Added another defender and one the fastest player on the team, if not the fastest, “We always think about the coaches and what’s going on, and that’s what motivates us. We’re all going through a lot. They’re going through a lot.”

“I know it’s tough. It’s kind of tough for us, too, because we go home not [trying to think] if they’re going to be here or not. We try to put it to the side, because we still have got games to go.

“Letting that kind of bother us is going to bring us down.”

None of the offensive players made themselves available as that side of the field kept their feelings private, or the defensive players express whatever they might have opined.

Well, maybe one reason Al Golden brought all these young and new 1st time coaches on-board is due to the fact that it was well known that Golden was on borrowed and the more established coaches wouldn't have wanted to come here and uproot their families from far away to a situation where a coach was trying to win while having never been a proven winner on the field at this level of competition. Maybe that's non-young coach Mario Cristobal left.

Personally, I think that the remaining games provide a tremendous opportunity to make a name for these coaches, particularly the Coordinators, and to a lesser extent the Interim HC. James Coley is on his own as though he is the head coach of the offense, as Mark D'Onofrio is the head coach of his defense. No need to sulk, coaches! The only reason they are sulking right now is not because their former head coach is gone, but because their coaching and their players suck on the field, as the players in their own words said that "We didn't execute"

A dozen colleges have sent head coaches to the beaches, but left remaining coaches with a great opportunity to make a name for themselves. But I hope that they all learned the lesson of life that if you don't win enough where and when it matters, the people not winning have to go. And if you players keep not winning for the next couple weeks, 100% of your coaches will probably all have to go, while the seniors might reduce their best chances to navigate it to the League, if at all.

Ultimately, the "situation" is really a life lesson not to feel sorry and sulk, but to seize an opportunity given. Show the world that you can learn from it by recognizing consequences of being a loser, and then win yourselves and win your coaches the next two games.
 
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How heart warming! I've had about enough of all this soft shouldered feminine chit!! No one is entitled to have a coaching job at high level program. These guys didnt cut it. Give them all a participation ribbon and a juice box and get these losers the fack out of here!
 
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Maybe the players could help the coaches by not having false starts, illegal procedures, and taunting penalties? Unfortunately, a lot of the personal responsibility to detail like that comes from the coaches themselves, so if it's not reinforced, history will repeat.
 
It's coaching at division one level. Win or go home. That's like me complaining about the military ....I knew what the Fvck was up when I signed my name on that dotted line
 
"Offshore" bank account in the keys? Who wrote this, a fifth grader? Just post a link to article(s) and stop making sht up.
 
Is it hard work? Yeap. But it is want this guys love to do. Anyone in corporate America today is a blink away from losing their jobs today. I do not feel any more sorry for coaches than any other worker. HC's make big money and I have no pity for them. The lower level assistants, sure, they are mostly worker bees like the rest of us. But they coaching world has a history of taking care of its own, so most will find jobs. Some of the guys Al brought it lately were not experienced and came to help local recruiting. If they made a little noise recruiting So Fl talent, that alone will get them a job elsewhere.
 
"Offshore" bank account in the keys? Who wrote this, a fifth grader? Just post a link to article(s) and stop making sht up.

Carlos, I was going to type the same thing. The author of that article is not only illiterate, but also retarded. That's a great combination.
 
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Watching them coach our players and the product they put out on the field has been tough...
 
"Offshore" bank account in the keys? Who wrote this, a fifth grader? Just post a link to article(s) and stop making sht up.

Carlos, I was going to type the same thing. The author of that article is not only illiterate, but also retarded. That's a great combination.


OP always does this and it's awful. He chops up quotes and parts of real articles and adds his own commentary. Pretty sure English is not his first language.
 
"Offshore" bank account in the keys? Who wrote this, a fifth grader? Just post a link to article(s) and stop making sht up.

Carlos, I was going to type the same thing. The author of that article is not only illiterate, but also retarded. That's a great combination.


OP always does this and it's awful. He chops up quotes and parts of real articles and adds his own commentary. Pretty sure English is not his first language.

This is the last time I open a Potato2 thread.
 
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You know something fellows; this is a message board for which this criticism is unwarranted, as it was in some other threads I've opened. What’s the big deal writing that a former employee will be collecting his attorney’s hard-nose contractual and extremely well compensated severance package via automatic funds transfer at a bank in the Keys? Adding for purpose of editorial genre, and perhaps for a little brevity, is hardly cause for riding the writer for his discretionary use of enhancing spices to a truthful reality. While this may be characterized as tongue in cheek, it nonetheless reduces not one single thing from the full fact that Al Golden is not worried and will never be found in these days of the Fall complaining about being in a “tough situation” for his "family" and children as our current coaches are quoted making, with a few players expressing some support of this “situation”.

As for these moping “woe be me” emotional expressions from our current crop of Football coaches, they’re are all over youtube, CaneAllAccess, and a number of Canes-interest sites that anyone can hear for oneself.

However, the piece of this OP is the one and only write-up that looks at their “situation” from an angle of emotions and energy that should be much better served instead to synergize the full capture of the fantastic opportunity this “situation” presents in its totality.

This is a true opportunity for each of the three coaching principals to work as their own boss without the old boss’ shadow, and ultimately to step out and show out as “The Man” in his own respective capacity. That is, whether 1.) One emerges as Head Coach material leading young men to significant transformational change from their old failures to a dynamic state of success and winnings. Or 2.) One can be seen as a fully independent play caller and master of your craft at your own side of the ball while demonstrating the command of your respective troops by your ingenuity, wizardry, and innovation. If the individuals of this trio can successfully navigate 1 and 2, they won’t mope. But if they’re failing at it, as in Chapel Hill, then it’s the only reason they’re moping and any other reason as in this “situation” is a false flag.

Moreover, they shouldn’t be dumping their non-situation “situation” on their players, and their players shouldn’t really be made to concern themselves with the realities of their coaches’ failures, as one of the players noted, “Letting that kind of... bother us is going to bring us down.” as these players need to up to their own jobs and game.



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"Offshore" bank account in the keys? Who wrote this, a fifth grader? Just post a link to article(s) and stop making sht up.

Carlos, I was going to type the same thing. The author of that article is not only illiterate, but also retarded. That's a great combination.


OP always does this and it's awful. He chops up quotes and parts of real articles and adds his own commentary. Pretty sure English is not his first language.

Is he related to a Nigerian Prince?
 
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