šŸˆ What happens when you *listen* to what a coach says in a presser...

TerryP

Successfully wasting your time since...
Staff
We've talked about how many questions can be answered by simply listening to what's said in the pressers each week. It's a matter of deductive reasoning. Perhaps that's not the right way to put this...using "deductive reasoning?"

Anyway, I have this to offer:

"I’ve not seen them in any other times we’ve prepared for this team with an open week to have the likelihood to prepare too early,ā€ he said... - Miles.

Damn. I do understand what he's saying.
 
There is a game on the internet where you take a phrase and put it into Google Translate and translate it into another language. Then you take that and translate it to another language. You keep doing this until you finally bring it back to English. In the end it usually almost, but not quite, means the same thing but is worded weird as hell. This is how Les Miles learned English.
 
Terry, if you understand that you ought to be teaching a course. Miles as a Second Language. Miles 101. Theory of Les. Les Concepts in Business. Physiology of Miles (sort of like that one).
 
Terry, if you understand that you ought to be teaching a course. Miles as a Second Language. Miles 101. Theory of Les. Les Concepts in Business. Physiology of Miles (sort of like that one).


OK, here's what I got.



"I’ve not seen them in any other times we’ve prepared for this team with an open week to have the likelihood to prepare too early,ā€ he said... - Miles.

In the past, when they were starting their preparation for Bama with an open week preceding the game, they've not prepared too early. So it's not likely they'll do it this time.
 
If I had pursued sports journalism as a career, I could think of no other college beat job than to cover Miles. Regardless of him being a rival coach, his idgitcy and...odd sayings would make for a very fun job.
 
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