...and, I still find it interesting that so many sports / media figure heads insist on calling him "efficient." Now, that is no doubt the truth. But, it goes so much, so much, beyond that.
Consider this quote...
"We've had a lot of great players at the University of Alabama, and Greg is certainly a great player for us the last two years, but I would want to put him and his legacy as an University of Alabama football player as one of the greatest ambassadors who could ever represent the university," Coach Nick Saban said. "You talk about a lot of class personally, academically his achievements and accomplishments, and what he's been able to do on the field, not only with his performance but how he affected other people on the field, has to be right up there with the best and great ones." — Nick Saban
No freakin' kiddin', eh?
I don't know of you guys happen to notice it, I didn't catch it due to all the other games playing around me. When he was pulled in the third he went out to a standing ovation and returned that ovation with a salute to the crowd. (Hell of a lot of Crimson in the stadium yesterday, right?)
Here's another neat quote from the presser, this from Greg, when he was asked about that moment...
"It was kind of a surreal moment," he said. "I had to reflect briefly and it was nice to salute the fans because they make it special to come here. That's why I came here, to play for a passionate fan base and I wanted to make them proud."
Now, be honest with me. How many of you guys came out of your seat when Greg made the block downfield springing Julio for the TD?
I saw him take the corner and literally said "Oh chit" when it looked like he was hitting another gear.
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Goes to say a heck of a lot about what kind of player he's been for us the last two years.
Last, but not least...here's a few more comments on Greg that came out yesterday morning before the game...
All McElroy has done, after being the Tide's second choice, is lead Alabama to last year's national title, go 23-3 as a starter, set some school records, lead an exemplary life that'd make an Eagle Scout look like a Crip and become a Rhodes Scholarship finalist.
"It's flown by extremely fast," McElroy said earlier in the week. "I'm going on 23, I'm a fifth-year senior. I think we've accomplished everything I've wanted to accomplish since I've been here."
Today, McElroy plays his final game at Alabama, leading the Tide into the Capital One Bowl against Michigan State.
It's an opportunity for a fairly distinguished bunch of players to punctuate their careers with a win That, includes seniors like McElroy, Earl Alexander, James Carpenter and Preston Dial, and with the assumption that juniors Mark Ingram, Julio Jones and Marcell Dareus will venture into pro ball next season.
Win or lose, this isn't some legacy deal today.
Not for this senior class.
Not for McElroy.
Legacies have already been established.
The Heisman went to Ingram. The hype went to Jones. But as much as anyone, the face of the Alabama program the last two seasons has been a freckled one with sweat-smeared eye-black running down his cheek and tousled red hair.
His legacy of all-around excellence is secure. He may not join the pantheon of Namath, Stabler and Trammell. But a national title and the robotic efficiency and accuracy (70.6 percent of his passes this season) puts him on the next tier.
Eagle scout look like a crip...hilarious line.
Consider this quote...
"We've had a lot of great players at the University of Alabama, and Greg is certainly a great player for us the last two years, but I would want to put him and his legacy as an University of Alabama football player as one of the greatest ambassadors who could ever represent the university," Coach Nick Saban said. "You talk about a lot of class personally, academically his achievements and accomplishments, and what he's been able to do on the field, not only with his performance but how he affected other people on the field, has to be right up there with the best and great ones." — Nick Saban
No freakin' kiddin', eh?
I don't know of you guys happen to notice it, I didn't catch it due to all the other games playing around me. When he was pulled in the third he went out to a standing ovation and returned that ovation with a salute to the crowd. (Hell of a lot of Crimson in the stadium yesterday, right?)
Here's another neat quote from the presser, this from Greg, when he was asked about that moment...
"It was kind of a surreal moment," he said. "I had to reflect briefly and it was nice to salute the fans because they make it special to come here. That's why I came here, to play for a passionate fan base and I wanted to make them proud."
Now, be honest with me. How many of you guys came out of your seat when Greg made the block downfield springing Julio for the TD?
I saw him take the corner and literally said "Oh chit" when it looked like he was hitting another gear.
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Goes to say a heck of a lot about what kind of player he's been for us the last two years.
Last, but not least...here's a few more comments on Greg that came out yesterday morning before the game...
All McElroy has done, after being the Tide's second choice, is lead Alabama to last year's national title, go 23-3 as a starter, set some school records, lead an exemplary life that'd make an Eagle Scout look like a Crip and become a Rhodes Scholarship finalist.
"It's flown by extremely fast," McElroy said earlier in the week. "I'm going on 23, I'm a fifth-year senior. I think we've accomplished everything I've wanted to accomplish since I've been here."
Today, McElroy plays his final game at Alabama, leading the Tide into the Capital One Bowl against Michigan State.
It's an opportunity for a fairly distinguished bunch of players to punctuate their careers with a win That, includes seniors like McElroy, Earl Alexander, James Carpenter and Preston Dial, and with the assumption that juniors Mark Ingram, Julio Jones and Marcell Dareus will venture into pro ball next season.
Win or lose, this isn't some legacy deal today.
Not for this senior class.
Not for McElroy.
Legacies have already been established.
The Heisman went to Ingram. The hype went to Jones. But as much as anyone, the face of the Alabama program the last two seasons has been a freckled one with sweat-smeared eye-black running down his cheek and tousled red hair.
His legacy of all-around excellence is secure. He may not join the pantheon of Namath, Stabler and Trammell. But a national title and the robotic efficiency and accuracy (70.6 percent of his passes this season) puts him on the next tier.
Eagle scout look like a crip...hilarious line.
