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August 4, 2004

It Can’t Pass Uncommented

Filed under: Uncategorized — Chas @ 10:25 pm

I tried. I wanted to let it go by, but it gnawed at me all afternoon after reading this.

The problem with today’s college football players?

Too much motherly love and not enough discipline from daddy, according to Florida State coach Bobby Bowden.

“[A player] needs discipline from a male. Not a mama. They all want to wear earrings like their mama. They all want to look like their mama. Because their mama is raising them,” the outspoken Bowden said Monday at the Florida Sportswriters Association Media Days event.

Read it again. Read slowly the name of the person saying it. Repeat.

Bobby-freakin’-Bowden talking about the need for discipline? The man who’s idea of punishment when his players are arrested is to have them run stadium steps?

Well, maybe it was taken out of context? It did come from a wire report. Let’s see:

Coach Bobby Bowden often responds with a lenient hand in FSU disciplinary matters. In the most recent incident, lineman Bobby Meeks was charged with violently resisting arrest and with battery against a police officer after a bar fight. He pleaded guilty after the charges were reduced to misdemeanors and can now play.

Discussing the landscape last week, Bowden recounted a conversation with a former member of his West Virginia staff, Chuck Klausing, who concluded that kids haven’t changed much, but parents have. Bowden agreed.

“The parents have got to teach ’em,” Bowden said, “and it’s got to be done when they’re 2, 3, 4 years of age. Kids are not getting that any more because the daddies aren’t home. The daddies are gone. A boy needs discipline. He needs discipline from a father, not a mama. They all want to wear earrings like their mamas. They all want to look like their mama, because their mama raised them.

“People keep saying: ‘Bobby, when are you going to change those kids you’ve got?’ I say: ‘The parents have got ’em 17 years, I got ’em two, and they get in a little trouble.’ But when they are taught right from wrong and they are disciplined, that’s when our problems will cease.”

Oooookayyy.

So I’m guessing that’s what he tells the parents when he goes to a recruit’s house — you people screwed him up and didn’t punish him properly, and I’m not going to start.

It’s part of what I really hate about Bowden. There is some small nugget of truth in there; but you know it is surrounded by his blatant hypocrisy, “aw, shucksism” crap, and his self-serving pious born again junk. What it really comes down to, for Bowden is winning the game. At least Jackie Sherrill and Jimmie Johnson admit that much.

Must See TV

Filed under: Uncategorized — Chas @ 9:42 pm

SI.com is ramping up its college football stories. Today, they have a flurry of articles about what it takes to be national champion, five teams that fit the mold, and the ten games on national TV that you must watch this year. Well since they put WVU in the list of five teams that they think could be national champion, the Backyard Brawl makes the list.

Many believe that since Miami and Virginia Tech (and next year, Boston College) left the Big East, the weakened conference’s winner doesn’t deserve an automatic BCS bid. Regardless, the bid still exists, and it’s a safe bet that the Backyard Brawl will decide which team receives it. The Mountaineers have the league’s most talented team and its most explosive trio in quarterback Rasheed Marshall, running back Kay-Jay Harris and wideout Chris Henry. If the Panthers wish to successfully defend their home turf, they’ll have to keep this a low-scoring affair. Pittsburgh’s offense is depleted, returning just three starters.

Next week they preview the Big East, but it looks like they just leaked who they think will be #2 in the Big East. SI.com also has, in conjuction with Athlon a preview of all teams including Pitt.

This will be WVU‘s turn as the darkhorse/sexy sleeper pick to be a major contender. Pitt blew it last year. It will be interesting to see how Rich Rodriguez and WVU handles the pressure.

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