(Should this category be renamed "People trying to emulate Neal McReedy? Hrrmm.
Or, perhaps, where are they now? If you take the time and read over some of the comments at the bottom of this opinion piece do you find yourself wondering "I wonder what they are thinking today...")
Here's an excerpt:
When it is all said and done, Nick Saban will not be remembered as a football coach, but rather what kind of human being he has been to the people around him. We really believe that Nick Saban needs his “Scrooge-type” moment right now where he can see the way he has acted in the past, the way he is behaving right now, and where he will end up in the future if he continues on his current path. It is not a given that Saban will succeed at Alabama, because the SEC is much more difficult place to win in, than when he departed LSU for the Dolphins. If Saban does fail at Alabama, and failure at Alabama is not winning SEC and National Championships, Saban’s behavior when leaving the Dolphins and the general sense of the man among his peers might end up as the dominant themes in his biography. We cannot imagine that Nick Saban wishes to be remembered as a liar that also treated the people that worked for him like shit. If Saban believes that his personal behavior is not relative to his immediate and future success, then he is sadly mistaken and he is walking on a very perilous path.
It's worth the read—CoachHotSeat.com's "Saban is a pompous ass."
Or, perhaps, where are they now? If you take the time and read over some of the comments at the bottom of this opinion piece do you find yourself wondering "I wonder what they are thinking today...")
Here's an excerpt:
When it is all said and done, Nick Saban will not be remembered as a football coach, but rather what kind of human being he has been to the people around him. We really believe that Nick Saban needs his “Scrooge-type” moment right now where he can see the way he has acted in the past, the way he is behaving right now, and where he will end up in the future if he continues on his current path. It is not a given that Saban will succeed at Alabama, because the SEC is much more difficult place to win in, than when he departed LSU for the Dolphins. If Saban does fail at Alabama, and failure at Alabama is not winning SEC and National Championships, Saban’s behavior when leaving the Dolphins and the general sense of the man among his peers might end up as the dominant themes in his biography. We cannot imagine that Nick Saban wishes to be remembered as a liar that also treated the people that worked for him like shit. If Saban believes that his personal behavior is not relative to his immediate and future success, then he is sadly mistaken and he is walking on a very perilous path.
It's worth the read—CoachHotSeat.com's "Saban is a pompous ass."
