Old Man Mike
Fast as Lightning!
- Messages
- 8,972
- Reaction score
- 6,460
All this sounds natural to me. Coaching staffs are trying to maximize their control over an inherently uncontrollable situation; athletes are trying to get a handle on their future and have a little fun while doing so; and outsider fans are listening to fragments of reality and innuendo and manifesting their own desires.
I'll bet that the dramatic dance between coaching staff and potential recruits is subtler than what we think we know, at least when you have a chess master like Kelly at the helm. This particular one sounds like "disappointments"are being stated to the recruit rather than forbiddance. The game is to elicit the greater commitment while not turning the young testosterone exploding superman off. The game goes harder or subtler depending upon how much you need the guy [Anzalone] and what your fallback strategies are [Folston].
Meanwhile, IE readers synthesize their fragments of knowledge and un-knowledge into concrete soap operas. Even if both the real [Kelly/James] plot and the IE fiction plot [He's wrong/ the other guy's wrong] seem to come to the same end, we'll hardly ever learn the real subtleties which actually prevailed.
Solution?: dump the extremist commentary; admit that people are usually not either complete fools nor horrible members of the human citizenry; and let Coach try his best to put the best class together that he can, even when, unlike in football games, he can't control the outcomes nearly as well.
I'll bet that the dramatic dance between coaching staff and potential recruits is subtler than what we think we know, at least when you have a chess master like Kelly at the helm. This particular one sounds like "disappointments"are being stated to the recruit rather than forbiddance. The game is to elicit the greater commitment while not turning the young testosterone exploding superman off. The game goes harder or subtler depending upon how much you need the guy [Anzalone] and what your fallback strategies are [Folston].
Meanwhile, IE readers synthesize their fragments of knowledge and un-knowledge into concrete soap operas. Even if both the real [Kelly/James] plot and the IE fiction plot [He's wrong/ the other guy's wrong] seem to come to the same end, we'll hardly ever learn the real subtleties which actually prevailed.
Solution?: dump the extremist commentary; admit that people are usually not either complete fools nor horrible members of the human citizenry; and let Coach try his best to put the best class together that he can, even when, unlike in football games, he can't control the outcomes nearly as well.