No limit on stupid
http://espn.go.com/mens-college-basketb ... emic-fraud
No! Don't do it, Rashad. Too risky. Can't trust 'em.
No! Don't do it, Rashad. Too risky. Can't trust 'em.
"Here’s what is the elephant in the room. Travis had a bag before. Now everyone has a bag. The Travis Ford recruiting prowess was greatly exaggerated."---SLU fan explaining how NIL took away Ford's recruiting edge
i77cat wrote:http://espn.go.com/mens-college-basketb ... emic-fraud
No! Don't do it, Rashad. Too risky. Can't trust 'em.
McCants should agree to meet, and show up as planned, accompanied by his lawyer.
- collegecoach8502
- Posts: 4579
- Joined: Mon Nov 26, 2007 10:44 am
- Location: Davidson, NC
I am guessing he will keep his job. At the end of the day, his story is the "dirty little secret" of college athletics - athletics in general.
Everything I have read indicates to me something that 90% or more of DI coaches behavior. It's hard to gauge frequency - meaning every practice and every meeting he's this way or it's once a week or once a month.
Regardless, this behavior is not out of the ordinary on paper.
Everything I have read indicates to me something that 90% or more of DI coaches behavior. It's hard to gauge frequency - meaning every practice and every meeting he's this way or it's once a week or once a month.
Regardless, this behavior is not out of the ordinary on paper.
"He is a 6-foot-3, sweet smiling, fun loving boogeyman who will decimate entire teams, then sign autographs and take pictures with his fallen foes' children.
He is a question with no answers."
He is a question with no answers."
All this "stuff" about McCants, UNC, Roy Williams, the ugliness of college basketball vs. education, and the despicably self-serving NCAA testimony before Congress yesterday, etc., reminds me of that wonderful Rick Barnes quote that a regular poster on this site wisely uses as the PS of sorts on each and every one of his comments (the quote that says that Bob McKillop is the best basketball coach in NC). Whether it's teaching play fundamentals or demonstrating good sportsmanship or focusing upon what's important in life beyond the game or the moment, Bob's sense of integrity, his moral compass, his common sense, his good judgment, his sense of humor, and his innate goodness -- all make him stand out above the crowd. If those ratings of US college basketball coaches considered the totality of the person as coach and mentor, Davidson's Bob McKillop would be #1. He and Davidson clearly understand, accept the responsibility, and demonstrate that, rather than being basketball vs. education, the challenge is to marry a good college education with basketball, recognizing that the first should always be accorded priority over the latter.
Today's lesson from Chapel Hill: Don't trade cars with the guy you meet at the Fresh Market.
http://www.charlotteobserver.com/2014/0 ... 77DfEDrSHc
http://www.charlotteobserver.com/2014/0 ... 77DfEDrSHc