- Joined
- Jun 24, 2014
- Messages
- 3,689
CMR has more integrity than any other coach I've ever known about. I hope these kids care about that a little when picking which hat to put on or throw on the ground.
We’ll never be what we were, but we can be pretty **** good.
In 2000, we were 9 years removed from our last title. Not that far.
We’re currently sitting at 17 years since our last one. Most of the kids we’re recruiting weren’t even born.
Again, don’t get all defensive. I’m a firm believer we’re moving towards being a **** good team again. ****, maybe even get #6 one of these days. But we won’t repeat what we once were. Just enjoy it for what it was.
RetweetWe can be as good as we've ever been. Nearly every obstacle that's been stunting this program's potential...money, coaching, facilities and NCAA investigations...are behind us and are no longer a factor.
We were good enough to win 10 games with only 73 scholarship players dominated by young players and QB play that hurt us far more often than it helped.
Just imagine what we can do with the depth that comes with 85 rides on board and an an All-Conference caliber QB.
I can't imagine it will go down well the day one of these large sites discovers we just copy and paste full articles here.
That's not how it works. They get revenue every time someone views their site. They would not be ok with it.With a reference of the site and writer in the copy?
I doubt they would care.
We’ll never be what we were, but we can be pretty **** good.
CMR has more integrity than any other coach I've ever known about. I hope these kids care about that a little when picking which hat to put on or throw on the ground.
"They’ve had enough disappointment, enough men leave their lives."
Wow, what an awareness. Every coach say that they want to groom these kids into being great men. Most of those coaches, are full of ****. Richt understands the powerful and long lasting impact that abandonment can have on kids lives. He is literally changing mindsets of a lot of the young men.
Unfortunately, a lot of these kids do not have positive male influences in their lives. He is putting the responsibility on himself to break that cycle.
That's the type of positive impact that affects generations down the line. This is better than any X's & O's or technique that he can teach them on the field. This guy gets it!!!
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning–Kruger_effecthe seems like a legit good man in addition to being a very good coach.
this right here:
“It’s happened my whole career. I never once have tried to leverage another job for more money. I don’t think that’s right. The day we took the job, my mentality has always been, ‘If you’re the head coach, too many lives depend on you.’ If I just say on a whim, ‘You know, I think I’d rather go here,’ well, all these recruits you said something to, all these coaches you said something to, what about them?"
its too bad Butch Davis never had this philosophy, if he did, he was on his way to being a college football legend(yes, I believe h he had it rolling that good) but Cleveland came a calling and well, he left behind a dynasty and cost himself a historic legacy. The way he kept trying to get the UM job you understood his regrets
As for Richt, it feels good to have a wanted commodity who isn't a carpet bagger. Miami really hasn't had that before. I think that's huge
If there is ever a guy who deserves a Tom Osbourne like flourish to an end of a coaching career - its Mark Richt.
To paraphrase Howard Schnellenberger,'Miami is on collision course with greatness, the only variable is time - and QB play."
Well, that's what I'd like to believe