dublinirish
Everestt Gholstonson
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Matt Fortuna on the latest Independent Podcast with Pete Sampson:
"Me and you (Pete Sampson) said this a million times, and we got killed for it. Kelly figured something out in life that is enviable. He did not work particularly hard when he was out of the office. He made a lot of money, he golfed a lot, he went to the lake. He figured out how to win 10 games a year on auto-pilot without really picking up the phone to recruit. Coaches liked working for him because he was not an overbearing boss. I don't know how he figured this out in a profession where the burnout rate is incredibly high, but he did. And he went to the SEC and tried the same thing...and that's ultimately how it fell apart, he felt he could get away with not doing a lot of things that are expected at LSU."
I got a chuckle when he said this: "From my understanding, Brian Kelly was really close with Kim Mulkey. Nobody is close with Kim Mulkey. That's a hilarious comedy that needs to be made."
Look the other way. He provides no value from a football brain / schematic standpoint. Every coach he rehabbed was "sharp"If Saban was still at Alabama do you think he would try and rehab Kelly or look the other way?
Virtually everyone he “rehabbed” were coaches that were heavily involved in offensive systems and offensive play calling at previous stops. It felt like Saban would hire these guys on the cheap hoping to glean offensive minded nuggets before they moved on.If Saban was still at Alabama do you think he would try and rehab Kelly or look the other way?
If you think that story is good, you should hear the Mike Elston story.I didn’t listen to the whole pod but Fortuna also mentioned something I hadn’t heard before about BK’s departure from ND.
After Kelly’s half assed goodbye/explanation to the players, he left the room and made a comment to someone that “I need to go get Tommy and Marcus (to speak to them) because I’m gonna get them to come with me”. Other staffers heard him and essentially told him to get lost, and by the next day BK was locked out of the building because his finger ID was deactivated lol
Not sure if everyone else already heard this story, but it was new to me. I’m never gonna feel bad for this narcissist and thank god we have Freeman.
Well come on now…..If you think that story is good, you should hear the Mike Elston story.
I’ll never understand his issue with alumni
I’d love to hear the Mike Elston storyIf you think that story is good, you should hear the Mike Elston story.
If you think that story is good, you should hear the Mike Elston story.
Look the other way. He provides no value from a football brain / schematic standpoint. Every coach he rehabbed was "sharp"
Agreed with both of these. Guys like Sark and Kiffin are known playcallers (I think Sark is a touch overrated, Kiffin is a great playcaller), what would BK do? BK is a "CEO" type coach and Saban wouldn't have needed that. I also don't think BK's pride would allow him to do that anyways.Virtually everyone he “rehabbed” were coaches that were heavily involved in offensive systems and offensive play calling at previous stops. It felt like Saban would hire these guys on the cheap hoping to glean offensive minded nuggets before they moved on.
BK is so far removed from that world that I suspect Saban would have no interest.
LAX doing us dirty lolIf you think that story is good, you should hear the Mike Elston story.
Very not gangster behaviorLAX doing us dirty lol
Pretty sure that was David GivensND staffer (not an assistant coach, some GA or something) started getting the face of the ref during (I think) a BC game. BK reacted as shown.
This feels like trolling but:
The old how do you keep a message board full of idiots in suspense trickIf you think that story is good, you should hear the Mike Elston story.
I’ll never understand his issue with alumni
If you think that story is good, you should hear the Mike Elston story.
What they described was a coach who delegated too much authority, didn’t care enough about recruiting and failed to bond with his players; an athletic director who was unusually involved in football day-to-day; and a program with national title aspirations but didn’t function like its rivals.