I'm not pointing to the health aspect here. This isn't "myocarditis" has affected how the ILB approaches the game or life.
One thing I am pointing to his the lack of structure during that time. There were players that didn't attend school in person, didn't practice or play in a game during that stretch. But when it came to schools signing players those missing developmental steps have shown their ugly heads.
It's not just those juniors and seniors. Imagine yourself as a ninth grader where you are beginning to distinguish yourself. Who you are. What you're made of. How do you do that with your peers when you only see them in virtual settings? Or, at best, a few days a week?
It's my contention those two years severely damaged the maturation of
all the school kids. We're just seeing it and talking about it as it relates to this form of entertainment; football.
I don't disagree, at all. I think context is warranted.
Take the two years mentioned earlier in this post. How were parents equipped to handle their '2.5's' education when both are at work and now both kids are at home?
You bring up points like our parents didn't know where we were. These kids we're talking about? Their parents did. The kids were at home instead of school; instead of the practice fields.
My mom didn't have to know where I was either. I hung out with two other guys who lived on the street. Unfortunately, EVERYONE knew where we were!
I don't care for the smart phone being used as a root problem. It's just another iteration of Atari; in a smaller form. No doubt a part of the bigger picture.
It goes back to what I'm saying here. These kids were forced to communicate through smart devices in the virtual reality they were told they had to live in for a long stretch of their developmental years.
Answers? You and I both know you can't "snatch a knot out of his head" as a form of getting attention. That's why I'm of the opinion Saban's coaching style doesn't work any longer.