OT-Butch piece on FIU

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I mean this in the nicest way.....

Everyone is tired of you f@*ktards hijacking the thread. Especially when you don't know Jackcrap about Butch Davis and probably weren't even alive when the Canes played back in those days.
You cant put blame on coaches for one game and then exclude the other coach for losing by blaming refs...
Butch saved this program from the depths of **** and built the greatest College football team in history.
To blaspheme about Butch in this forum is disgusting and reeks of how these new millenials are soft as f*@k with hearts made of friggin pudding.
I was born in 1980 so I’m more then qualified to talk about butch and this is putting it nicely below average game day coaching. Was he a good evaluator of talent and finding diamonds the rough during those times yes but let’s not pretend like he was a recruiting monster landing all the blue chips because he wasn’t. Go patronize a millennial but not someone who was there and saw it with his own eyes.
 
Are you retarded or just practicing? It reads he built the team...and the 2001 team is undefeated.
You are the king of getting big *** L's on this forum...bar none.

Larry Coker managed to go undefeated with that team. Botch Lombardi Davis (the current coach at FIU) managed to lose a game with that team.
 
I was born in 1980 so I’m more then qualified to talk about butch and this is putting it nicely below average game day coaching. Was he a good evaluator of talent and finding diamonds the rough during those times yes but let’s not pretend like he was a recruiting monster landing all the blue chips because he wasn’t.
Child stop lying. Who built the 2000-2002 team Mr Kruger?
 
What was the refs name at Washington?
The ref didn’t ***** us on the last play of the game in Washington like terry porter did against OSU in 2002 in overtime. No butch’s situational coaching screwed us against Washington for hundredth time.
 
I was born in 1980 so I’m more then qualified to talk about butch and this is putting it nicely below average game day coaching. Was he a good evaluator of talent and finding diamonds the rough during those times yes but let’s not pretend like he was a recruiting monster landing all the blue chips because he wasn’t. Go patronize a millennial but not someone who was there and saw it with his own eyes.
You were like in friggin high school. You didnt know **** about coaching football...you just proved how great a coach he is. You're right he didn't have to get 5-star Blue Chips he could get two stars and three stars and make them into future all-americans and NFL Hall of Famers.
GTFOH....take your L with jaggoff
 
Coker had to replace four 1st round draft picks and still won the national title. Freckles could not win a title with a team that had four 1st round draft picks. That is bizarre.
 
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Child stop lying. Who built the 2000-2002 team Mr Kruger?
Dude you weren’t even around then so your opinion has no stock. Butch built the 2000 team and then went on to a downward spiral of a career after that At Cleveland and UNC. Sorry dude but those are the facts.
 
The refs thing in the Washington game is a new creation. That was never brought up as a game the refs cost us until this week when people had to defend Botchulism.
 
Coker had to replace four 1st round draft picks and still won the national title.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2001_Miami_Hurricanes_football_team


Pre-season motivation
In 2000, Miami was shut out of the Orange Bowl BCS National Championship Game by the BCS computers. Despite Miami beating Florida State head-to-head that season and being higher ranked in both human polls, it was Florida State, and not Miami, that BCS computers selected to challenge the Oklahoma Sooners for the national championship (Oklahoma would win, 13–2). This was because Miami had lost to #15 Washington 34–29 on the road, while the Seminoles' lone loss was on the road to the #7 team in the country by 3. The experience led[citation needed] to alterations in the BCS rankings system to ensure that the situation would not repeat itself in the future. Nevertheless, Miami was left with a bitter sense of disappointment, believing they had been deprived of a shot at a potential national championship. That off-season, the team resolved to take the matter entirely out of the discretion of the computers by going a perfect 12–0. However, they had to do so under a new head coach, Larry Coker, who was named to the post after Butch Davis left to become head coach of the NFL's Cleveland Browns.

The 2001 Miami Hurricanes are considered by many experts and historians the greatest team in college football history.[1] The Hurricanes scored 512 (42.6 points per game) points while yielding only 117 (9.75 points allowed per game). Miami beat opponents by an average of 32.9 points per game, the largest margin in the school's history, and set the NCAA record for largest margin of victory over consecutive ranked teams (124–7).[2] The offense set the school scoring record, while the defense led the nation in scoring defense (fewest points allowed), pass defense, and turnover margin.[2] Additionally, the Hurricane defense scored eight touchdowns of its own. Six players earned All-American status and six players were finalists for national awards, including Maxwell Award winner, Ken Dorsey, and Outland Trophy winner, Bryant McKinnie. Dorsey was also a Heisman finalist, finishing third.

Among the numerous stars on the 2001 Miami squad were: quarterback Ken Dorsey; running backs Clinton Portis, Willis McGahee, Najeh Davenport, and Frank Gore; tight end Jeremy Shockey; wide receiver Andre Johnson; offensive tackle Bryant McKinnie; defensive linemen Jerome McDougle, William Joseph, and Vince Wilfork; linebackers Jonathan Vilma and D.J. Williams; and defensive backs Ed Reed, Mike Rumph, and Phillip Buchanon. Additional contributors included future stars Kellen Winslow II, Sean Taylor, Antrel Rolle, Vernon Carey, and Rocky McIntosh. In all, an extraordinary 17 players from the 2001 Miami football team were drafted in the first-round of the NFL Draft (5 in the 2002 NFL Draft: Buchanon, McKinnie, Reed, Rumph, and Shockey; 4 in 2003: Johnson, Joseph, McDougle, and McGahee; 6 in 2004: Carey, Taylor, Vilma, Wilfork, Williams, and Winslow; 1 in 2005: Rolle; and 1 in 2006: Kelly Jennings).

Overall, 38 members of the team would be selected in the NFL Draft
 
You were like in friggin high school. You didnt know **** about coaching football...you just proved how great a coach he is. You're right he didn't have to get 5-star Blue Chips he could get two stars and three stars and make them into future all-americans and NFL Hall of Famers.
GTFOH....take your L with jaggoff
Well maybe I never coached ball but I did play D2 ball so I think I know a little about the game fool! Go patronize your kids but not me.
 
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2001_Miami_Hurricanes_football_team


Pre-season motivation
In 2000, Miami was shut out of the Orange Bowl BCS National Championship Game by the BCS computers. Despite Miami beating Florida State head-to-head that season and being higher ranked in both human polls, it was Florida State, and not Miami, that BCS computers selected to challenge the Oklahoma Sooners for the national championship (Oklahoma would win, 13–2). This was because Miami had lost to #15 Washington 34–29 on the road, while the Seminoles' lone loss was on the road to the #7 team in the country by 3. The experience led[citation needed] to alterations in the BCS rankings system to ensure that the situation would not repeat itself in the future. Nevertheless, Miami was left with a bitter sense of disappointment, believing they had been deprived of a shot at a potential national championship. That off-season, the team resolved to take the matter entirely out of the discretion of the computers by going a perfect 12–0. However, they had to do so under a new head coach, Larry Coker, who was named to the post after Butch Davis left to become head coach of the NFL's Cleveland Browns.

The 2001 Miami Hurricanes are considered by many experts and historians the greatest team in college football history.[1] The Hurricanes scored 512 (42.6 points per game) points while yielding only 117 (9.75 points allowed per game). Miami beat opponents by an average of 32.9 points per game, the largest margin in the school's history, and set the NCAA record for largest margin of victory over consecutive ranked teams (124–7).[2] The offense set the school scoring record, while the defense led the nation in scoring defense (fewest points allowed), pass defense, and turnover margin.[2] Additionally, the Hurricane defense scored eight touchdowns of its own. Six players earned All-American status and six players were finalists for national awards, including Maxwell Award winner, Ken Dorsey, and Outland Trophy winner, Bryant McKinnie. Dorsey was also a Heisman finalist, finishing third.

Among the numerous stars on the 2001 Miami squad were: quarterback Ken Dorsey; running backs Clinton Portis, Willis McGahee, Najeh Davenport, and Frank Gore; tight end Jeremy Shockey; wide receiver Andre Johnson; offensive tackle Bryant McKinnie; defensive linemen Jerome McDougle, William Joseph, and Vince Wilfork; linebackers Jonathan Vilma and D.J. Williams; and defensive backs Ed Reed, Mike Rumph, and Phillip Buchanon. Additional contributors included future stars Kellen Winslow II, Sean Taylor, Antrel Rolle, Vernon Carey, and Rocky McIntosh. In all, an extraordinary 17 players from the 2001 Miami football team were drafted in the first-round of the NFL Draft (5 in the 2002 NFL Draft: Buchanon, McKinnie, Reed, Rumph, and Shockey; 4 in 2003: Johnson, Joseph, McDougle, and McGahee; 6 in 2004: Carey, Taylor, Vilma, Wilfork, Williams, and Winslow; 1 in 2005: Rolle; and 1 in 2006: Kelly Jennings).

Overall, 38 members of the team would be selected in the NFL Draft

Guess what......all of those guys were also on the 2000 team, PLUS four other first round picks.

Botch Cassidy lost with that team. Unbelievable.
 
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You were like in friggin high school. You didnt know **** about coaching football...you just proved how great a coach he is. You're right he didn't have to get 5-star Blue Chips he could get two stars and three stars and make them into future all-americans and NFL Hall of Famers.
GTFOH....take your L with jaggoff

If Butch can take 2- and 3 stars and turn them into NFL Hall of Famers, why hasn't he done it since then? Why didn't he make actual NFL players better?
 
Well maybe I never coached ball but I did play D2 ball so I think I know a little about the game fool! Go patronize your kids but not me.

And it shows you till dont know jack. The NFL thought so highly of richt that he had so many offers to coach in the league...oh wait....yeah never friiggin happened.
Butch Davis however...was given an expansion team and got them in the NFL playoffs...that team...the Cleveland friggin Browns.... have they been to the playoffs since? No no no they have not.

So many softies here....
The Teddy Ruxpin crew
 
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