Tru C
Senior
- Joined
- Aug 21, 2019
- Messages
- 3,837
I don't get this mindset.
How is it a shock to anyone that Country Club Manny was running a soft program and when Mario came in with an iron fist, the weakest links on this team all broke?
Did you read the articles about Manny's broken culture and program? Guys bailing out on practice with minor injuries and still allowed to play on Saturdays? QB1 getting drunk, missing curfew and still getting the start against FIU? All that chatter about Manny being afraid his best players would bolt for the portal, so he just bent over and let the team walk all over him?
How do you think a team that was that mentally weak and soft was going to respond to an alpha rolling in and putting a boot up their *** with no lube? A place where he was gonna strip it down to the studs, and rebuild it from the ground up—running off the weakest links and only keeping the ones who could survive the tough in the trenches program Mario wants to build?
Yes, Gattis is a bad fit and needs to go and yes, Mario can't just build a ground and pound offense. Build the trenches like Georgia and preach toughness, but with some offensive innovation—no debate with any of that—but for anyone to be confused by how or why this team backslid ... no different than when Butch Davis showed up with his hard-*** approach and he had a divided locker room as some guys wanted to work and the other half liked Dennis Erickson's hands-off approach (which produced underachievers like Jammi German, Daniel Ferguson, etc.)
This isn't the year that fans wanted, but sure as sh*t isn't the year Cristobal wanted, either. For every fan who thinks they love this program, how much do you think THIS GUY actually loves it? You want Miami to be "back"—how badly does Mario want to bring it back, for himself, his teammates, his city and his program's legacy? Fans think they want it more than this guy? Stop.
Manny Diaz wasn't better at "motivating"—he had no rules or restrictions and the little beta let the players do whatever they wanted—while Mario went full alpha and laid down the law with a lot of kids who didn't want to hear that type of hard work-driven process from the new coach. Period, full stop.
We'll see in the next couple of years how "motivated" guys look playing under Cristobal, as "motivation" didn't seem to be a problem at Oregon.
This is a good post and counter argument. And i have to agree with a lot of the points given. You dont try to relieve Mario of all responsibility here. As someone who has been on the other side of this in terms of assigning blame for the backslide, this is commendable. Does it completely change my mind? Not sure, but it makes me think. And it gives me more hope that an improvement is forthcoming.