šŸˆ Auburn officials decide to retain Harsin

The best part of all this... the same powerful group that wanted Harsin gone, still want him gone. In fact, they likely want him gone more now than ever since he just went Leeeroooooy Jeeeenkins and publicly teabagged them. Seems logical to think that barring a miracle season, they'll come at him with torches and pitchforks again after the '22 season... but the buyout then is still a salty $15 million. That is why there is zero doubt they will be looking for anything and everything from this point on to fire him for cause. Harsin has his work cut out for him on the field, and now, off the field in every possible way. Add to that his strongest ally, Allen Green, is also a powerless, flightless duck who is nearing the end of his auburn employment. It's just an incredible situation that only the "I believe in auburn and love it!" people could create.
They really are a sick cult, aren't they?
 
Am I supposed to believe Booger would actually follow his own instructions? If he were associated with rumors about his behavior, "again, just rumors," do you think he'd fall on his sword? Would he take advice from someone who doesn't know what happened at Auburn, but still suggest the right thing to do is ask for forgiveness for something that may or may not be true? "again, just rumors."

In his world, apologize whether it's right or wrong, because of how people have made it sound.

Swallow your pride even if you're right?


"I'm not really sure what went on at Auburn," McFarland said. "It sounds like a lot of players transferred out. It sounds like there were some accusations that Harsin was treating players a certain way. The bottom line is, it didn't sound like Bryan Harsin fit in the South.


"I want Bryan Harsin to succeed," McFarland said. "I wish somebody would get a message to him: Hey, man, swallow your pride. Regardless of whether you think you're wrong or not, you got to fall on the sword. OK, this is not a vendetta against Bryan Harsin. This is not a vendetta against where you come from. This is just — hey, you got to learn how to treat people, man. You got to learn not only how to tolerate Black people, but treat them the same way you want to be treated. Because those are the rumors that I'm hearing coming out of Auburn is that he doesn't know how to do that; he doesn't know how to treat people from the South — again, just rumors. I haven't been down there. But either way, Paul, we live in a country that will forgive you. He's got to fall on the sword."
 
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