Jump to content

Terry Bowden comments


TigerOne

Recommended Posts

Did $aban wear the same suit at the pc as the one he had on getting off the plane?

good grief pack some clothes next time.

http://sports.yahoo.com/ncaaf/news;_ylt=Al...o&type=lgns

now the article

"Back in 1979, when I was a student assistant football coach at West Virginia University, we had a defensive backfield coach by the name of Nick $aban. I don't remember everything about our coaching staff that year, but I do remember that $aban was the hardest-working guy I had ever seen. He was only 28, but many of us knew he was going to be a big-time coach someday.

Well, as of Wednesday, he is the big-time coach at Alabama. And, he is the highest-paid big-time coach in college football with a contract reportedly worth $32 million.

Although $aban should have stayed and finished the job with the Miami Dolphins, if his heart was set on coaching at Alabama I can't fault him for making the decision to go there. Coaching is a very unforgiving profession, and you had better love what you're doing and where you're doing it or you probably won't be around very long anyway.

$aban was wrong when he publicly stated that he would not be the coach at Alabama. Your word is your bond in this world. and you can't choose when that rule applies and when it does not. This is not something that will define his legacy as a coach – but it is something $aban will carry with him the rest of his career.

And $32 million? That's too much to be paying a college coach anywhere. It probably represents the mess Alabama's program is in more than what $aban's services really are worth. Of course, I don't fault $aban for taking it. But I do question Alabama's reasoning for offering it.

But in spite of all these things, the Crimson Tide got the right man for the job. $aban is a tough-minded individual who will win quickly at Alabama. He is strong enough to deal with the boosters and smart enough to do it without turning them off. He is an old-school X-and-O ball coach and a sophisticated CEO. Most importantly, he will take Alabama's recruiting efforts to another level just as he did at LSU.

Things just got even more interesting in the SEC."

Link to comment
Share on other sites





Did $aban wear the same suit at the pc as the one he had on getting off the plane?

good grief pack some clothes next time.

http://sports.yahoo.com/ncaaf/news;_ylt=Al...o&type=lgns

now the article

"Back in 1979, when I was a student assistant football coach at West Virginia University, we had a defensive backfield coach by the name of Nick $aban. I don't remember everything about our coaching staff that year, but I do remember that $aban was the hardest-working guy I had ever seen. He was only 28, but many of us knew he was going to be a big-time coach someday.

Well, as of Wednesday, he is the big-time coach at Alabama. And, he is the highest-paid big-time coach in college football with a contract reportedly worth $32 million.

Although $aban should have stayed and finished the job with the Miami Dolphins, if his heart was set on coaching at Alabama I can't fault him for making the decision to go there. Coaching is a very unforgiving profession, and you had better love what you're doing and where you're doing it or you probably won't be around very long anyway.

$aban was wrong when he publicly stated that he would not be the coach at Alabama. Your word is your bond in this world. and you can't choose when that rule applies and when it does not. This is not something that will define his legacy as a coach – but it is something $aban will carry with him the rest of his career.

And $32 million? That's too much to be paying a college coach anywhere. It probably represents the mess Alabama's program is in more than what $aban's services really are worth. Of course, I don't fault $aban for taking it. But I do question Alabama's reasoning for offering it.

But in spite of all these things, the Crimson Tide got the right man for the job. $aban is a tough-minded individual who will win quickly at Alabama. He is strong enough to deal with the boosters and smart enough to do it without turning them off. He is an old-school X-and-O ball coach and a sophisticated CEO. Most importantly, he will take Alabama's recruiting efforts to another level just as he did at LSU.

Things just got even more interesting in the SEC."

Funny to hear Terry Bowden say that your word is your bond!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Archived

This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.

×
×
  • Create New...