Zbrod95
Thank God for the Columbus Mafia
- Joined
- Dec 13, 2015
- Messages
- 28,036
LOL @ "soft" offer.
"Son, we really like you, but not that much. We're kinda sorta extending an offer to you. It might be there for you later, it might not."
WTF?! LOL
Yeah because we've never given someone a scholarship offer before and not actually allowed them to commit...right?
Or just use them as placeholders and drop them once we get players higher up on the board.
you know what a soft offer is dude.
[MENTION=5124]Coach Macho[/MENTION] I got you dog, and he's still missing offersIt takes a special kind of douche to argue with a player's coach about which schools offered him and then use ESPN Recruiting as your reference. LOL
https://n.rivals.com/content/prospects/maple/94867
Redbank that was his offer list, ESPN never updates their offer lists..ever
Close to 50 players are offered scholarships to begin the recruiting cycle and most FBS schools. Hence, soft offer. In Jon's case, many of those offers came in late. Jon was a Plan C guy.
That being said, Jon is a hard worker and a good football player.
Publicity is like poison; it doesn't hurt unless you swallow it.
Kehoe wasn't good to begin with. Even in 01 we had a 9-3 or 10-2 caliber offensive line when the rest of the team was 12-0 caliber. To say that we had the best line in 01 is a huge stretch- the only reason why it may seem that way is because our RBs were good enough to run behind an unspectacular line.
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You don't seem to have an understanding as to how recruiting works.
What is a coach? We are teachers. Educators. We have the same obligations as all teachers, except we probably have more influence over young people than anybody but their families. And, in a lot of cases, more than their families.
You don't seem to have an understanding as to how recruiting works.
What is a coach? We are teachers. Educators. We have the same obligations as all teachers, except we probably have more influence over young people than anybody but their families. And, in a lot of cases, more than their families.
You don't seem to have an understanding of what you're talking about. You're over here trying to tell a coach about the recruiting process of one of his players. And now you're back-pedaling faster than Patrick Peterson cause you've been proven wrong. First it was "he had no offers" then it was "well those offers were soft".
Like I said, that takes a special kind of douche.
Where do you coach?
You don't seem to have an understanding as to how recruiting works.
What is a coach? We are teachers. Educators. We have the same obligations as all teachers, except we probably have more influence over young people than anybody but their families. And, in a lot of cases, more than their families.
You don't seem to have an understanding of what you're talking about. You're over here trying to tell a coach about the recruiting process of one of his players. And now you're back-pedaling faster than Patrick Peterson cause you've been proven wrong. First it was "he had no offers" then it was "well those offers were soft".
Like I said, that takes a special kind of douche.
Where do you coach?
You don't seem to have an understanding as to how recruiting works.
What is a coach? We are teachers. Educators. We have the same obligations as all teachers, except we probably have more influence over young people than anybody but their families. And, in a lot of cases, more than their families.
You don't seem to have an understanding of what you're talking about. You're over here trying to tell a coach about the recruiting process of one of his players. And now you're back-pedaling faster than Patrick Peterson cause you've been proven wrong. First it was "he had no offers" then it was "well those offers were soft".
Like I said, that takes a special kind of douche.
Where do you coach?
I'm not back pedaling. You're acting as though you've never seen a young man commit to a school and then have the school go in a different direction. Jon received some offers that may not have panned out come signing day. It's very similar to a soft/hard commit from a recruit.
I hope that you present yourself with much more humility than you have here when addressing your players. Success without honor is an unseasoned dish; it will satisfy your hunger, but it won't taste good.
LOL @ "soft" offer.
"Son, we really like you, but not that much. We're kinda sorta extending an offer to you. It might be there for you later, it might not."
WTF?! LOL
Yeah because we've never given someone a scholarship offer before and not actually allowed them to commit...right?
Or just use them as placeholders and drop them once we get players higher up on the board.
you know what a soft offer is dude.
You either have an offer or you don't. I've watched coaches extend offers in front of my face. There's nothing "soft" about them.
Now, a school may extend an exploding offer, meaning the kid better get on board ASAP or lose his spot. (happened with Oklahoma and my boy Dowels) But a "soft offer"...WTF is that?
You don't seem to have an understanding as to how recruiting works.
What is a coach? We are teachers. Educators. We have the same obligations as all teachers, except we probably have more influence over young people than anybody but their families. And, in a lot of cases, more than their families.
You don't seem to have an understanding of what you're talking about. You're over here trying to tell a coach about the recruiting process of one of his players. And now you're back-pedaling faster than Patrick Peterson cause you've been proven wrong. First it was "he had no offers" then it was "well those offers were soft".
Like I said, that takes a special kind of douche.
Where do you coach?
I'm not back pedaling. You're acting as though you've never seen a young man commit to a school and then have the school go in a different direction. Jon received some offers that may not have panned out come signing day. It's very similar to a soft/hard commit from a recruit.
I hope that you present yourself with much more humility than you have here when addressing your players. Success without honor is an unseasoned dish; it will satisfy your hunger, but it won't taste good.