Fedora said “good job coach”
Richt asked him a question and Fedora just blankly said “I don’t know” and kept walking
What would Richt have asked him? Like the score of the Rams/Vikings game?
Fedora said “good job coach”
Richt asked him a question and Fedora just blankly said “I don’t know” and kept walking
A lot simpler than that. Fedora said "good job." Richt tried to say a little more, maybe some consolation (cause Richt knows Fedora's on the hot seat and this won't help - cause Richt is classy) and Fedora just said "no," as in "Don't bother, I don't want to hear it." As a former coach, I've seen it. So Richt smiled cause Fedora's a ****, and what else can you do.
that smile and stare down is epic lol, hes like yea whatever the fuq and grins. Thats the y u mad bro face.Epic Twitter handle for a Cane fan.
My hydration specialist.
Condoms were used?I can confirm that there were no bodily fluids exchanged.
Thanks! I've been wondering that for a year.
didn't we accuse them of stealing plays or some ****
What would Richt have asked him? Like the score of the Rams/Vikings game?
What would Richt have asked him? Like the score of the Rams/Vikings game?
There is at least one old-school coach remaining in the college game. Paul Johnson has been at this for 20 years, first at Georgia Southern, then Navy and now Georgia Tech. He always has called his own plays from the sideline, then sent a running back on a relay mission to the quarterback. He likely gets a kick out of today’s shenanigans on the opposite sideline.
“I think a lot of it is window-dressing. . . . It’s just people having fun with some of it,” Johnson said. “We don’t try to get too caught up in all that.”
A big part of that is because Johnson’s teams continue to huddle before nearly every play. In a trend that began in the 1990s, many college teams now run a fast-paced, no-huddle offense. Without a huddle, teams must relay plays to the field via a series of signals.
As soon as it became apparent that teams were stealing those signals, the sideline theatrics became more elaborate. The way N.C. State sends signals is similar to most teams. Backup quarterbacks Josh Taylor, Dylan Parham and Woody Cornwell wear different colored vests and all three send signals simultaneously. To their side is a graduate assistant coach who also sends signals by waving his hands. The graduate assistant sometimes holds poster boards with various pictures of anything from current rock stars to NFL players. Behind them, two others hold a banner that provides a shield to press box lurkers as well as advertisement for Adidas, believe it or not.
Most of the signaling is decoys. The quarterback is trained to watch only one of the signalers. In case you were wondering, all of this activity is practiced daily, lest a signal be missed in a game. Jimbo Fisher said his team has used the signals system in every practice of his seven seasons as head coach at Florida State.
“You’re in a competition,” said Clemson’s Dabo Swinney. “You’re competing and you want to get every edge that you can. If you have an opponent who’s basically screaming out, ‘Hey, we’re running the ball,’ well, that’s an advantage. It’s just part of the game, and deception is part of the game as well.”
LF: Good job coach
CMR: Thanks, got a job after this *** whooping?
LF: I don't know
CMR smirks