Brick wrote:
good dolphin wrote:
He’s great for college football
It was probably inevitable but his legacy will likely be the idea that every new coach needs to come in and kick every player off the team he can in order to bring in other players. It's not like that didn't happen to some degree before but Deion basically walked in, looked at tape to see any talent he had, and told the rest to get out. It's different in the NFL with contracts and making millions.
I know college football is a business but how he built Colorado into the .500 powerhouse that shocked the college football world isn't exactly a great thing for the players.
Agreed, but he brings huge interest to the game in general and to a spot in the country that is kind of a dead zone. I'm not sure what he is as a coach,
but he is a great hype man. He is one of the few people to walk the line where 50% love him and 50% hate him but they all watch him.
I don't like what he did with the previous team. However, there has been a drastic shift in the power dynamic between coach/administration and players because of the portal and NIL. Kids aren't as beholden to the coach or program and there are openings across college football every year. Has anyone reported if any kids were left in the lurch without any subsequent scholarship? Anyway, that is an NCAA flaw. I fully embrace that scholarships should be greater commitments from a program. I think they should not just be 4 years, but 8 years of undergrad, to allow a student to take minimal classes in season but then have the time to make them up post eligibility (i saw at least 3 guys just on saturday night who were in their 7th years).
I was also disappointed he left the HBCU universe as I thought he was there on a mission.
Deion knows football, make no mistake about it. He was a sophisticated player as well as physically great. That doesn't mean he is a great coach. No one can deny that he has had pretty good success in two stops so far, so he is doing something.
absolutely. and after the debacle against stanford, what it means to be a coach is how you respond next week. this was an abysmal loss, no matter what was at stake or how it looked to the college football world. there was no excuse at all to lose this game.
as far as commitment, i'd be interested to see a statistic to see how many transfers of major skill players (qb, wr, rb) there have been in the past 10 years versus all of the 20th century. i wouldn't be surprised if the numbers have skyrocketed. it seems like almost every great player out there has transferred from another school. college sports shouldn't have this "trade deadline" mentality.