cclarkblues said:It's a little like sharing a jail cell with Foghorn Leghorn...
:lol:
cclarkblues said:It's a little like sharing a jail cell with Foghorn Leghorn...
The public is the same animal, and increasingly, the laws impact the same. It just depends more on awareness and experience of the reality of a rapidly changing communication world.PlayerRep said:\Cool and interesting, but your sport wasn't college football. Again N/A. College football is a much different animal. I agree that coaches and others should take care of the student-athletes generally, and, in my view, that would include not dissing them in public right after they have been told they are not going to play, should move on, or have been cut. My view is the same, whether social media exists or doesn't exist.
You're much quicker at figuring things out than you let on.Bjorn Bjornstein said:You keep saying "athlete" when I think you mean "mathlete" and I'm pretty sure that the USOC isn't the governing body for debate teams!![]()
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Exactly. These are young people, not NFL athletes.mcg said:Actually both Colter and coach Stitt should have handled this situation better. Colter clearly jumped the gun in terms of naming names. Has he published some sort of error correction?
Mr. Stitt should have said something like "Some players will be leaving our team, we appreciate their contribution and wish them the best". There is no big secret that players were cut, they tweeted it. Instead he said something about not coasting for 5 years, which didn't reflect well on anybody.
I think outplacement is an undervalued skill for college coaches. If it's done right, everybody wins.
http://www.slate.com/articles/sports/sports_nut/2012/05/ncaa_scholarship_rules_it_s_morally_indefensible_that_athletic_scholarships_can_be_yanked_after_one_year_for_any_reason_.htmlLast week, ESPN agreed to pay the Atlantic Coast Conference $3.6 billion to televise its athletic events through 2026-27. The ACC will earn those billions thanks to the free labor of Duke basketball players and Miami football players. Is there any rational argument that these unpaid performers shouldn’t get a chunk of that TV cash?
Back in September, Sports Illustrated’s Seth Davis tried to mount such an argument. In response to Taylor Branch’s Atlantic polemic "The Shame of College Sports,” Davis wrote that it’s “indisputably untrue” that college athletes aren’t paid. “Student-athletes earn free tuition, which over the course of four years can exceed $200,000,” he wrote.
If you buy that star athletes are compensated with a valuable education, consider this complicating fact: An athletic scholarship is not a four-year educational guarantee. What few college sports fans—and not enough college recruits—realize is that a university can yank that scholarship after one, two, or three years without cause. Coach doesn’t like you? He’s free to cut you loose. Sitting the bench? You could lose your free ride to a new recruit.
Some schools have recognized that one-year scholarships, renewable at the school’s pleasure, are morally indefensible.
But the vast majority of wannabe college athletes don’t have Cousins’ strong bargaining position. Rather, they serve at the whim of coaches like Nick Saban and Tennessee’s Derek Dooley. "We forget this is a contract, a two-way street," Dooley said in February, explaining why he doesn’t like multiyear scholarships. "I think it's humorous that the academic institution can give an academic scholarship and take it away when a student doesn't perform at a certain GPA level, but it's absolutely the worst thing you can do as a coach—it's so wrong what you do to these young people—when he doesn't do what he's supposed to do."
Be careful what you wish for. Those who defend a coach's unilateral right to do what he wants, and defends any monumental discourtesy to the athlete in the process, runs the risk of propelling college athletic scholarships to a level that simply disqualifies schools like Montana from participating entirely.According to a report in the Cleveland Plain Dealer, some schools opposed multiyear scholarships because they could “[reduce] the flexibility of a new coach to get rid of players who didn't fit his style.” Remember that line the next time an athletic director bloviates on the glories of amateurism and the student-athlete: Your athletic ability is a ticket to a free education, so long as the new guy in charge doesn’t want to run the spread offense.
UMGriz75 said:The public is the same animal, and increasingly, the laws impact the same. It just depends more on awareness and experience of the reality of a rapidly changing communication world.PlayerRep said:\Cool and interesting, but your sport wasn't college football. Again N/A. College football is a much different animal. I agree that coaches and others should take care of the student-athletes generally, and, in my view, that would include not dissing them in public right after they have been told they are not going to play, should move on, or have been cut. My view is the same, whether social media exists or doesn't exist.
"Not dissing them in public" is precisely what I am saying. When you say nothing, that invokes the rumor mill. There's no speculation about that; that's what this whole minor controversy is exactly about. It just happened! And it happens all the time. The newsstands are full of them. This just isn't a "new" concept, nor did Colter do anything that does not happen in journalism every day precisely because authentic sources want to withhold information.
Speculation about Area 51 is rife with rumors of aliens and black projects and super secret weapons because of "classified information," but the fact is, the local college football roster is not "Area 51" and when a kid is let go, he is entitled to be let go with some dignity and at a minimum, a public thanks and recognition for his contributions. It's just the classy thing to do.
Let these kids go out with a public acknowledgment of their contributions, a pat on the back, and best wishes.
Then, when they are seeking out their next school, the "Internet" contains a positive, official communication about their termination. And the rumors can't start. But if it isn't there, the rumors show up instead.
Any program has to recognize times have changed dramatically. I am involved in sports that have to recognize this because we are national and international in scale and deal with far larger numbers of players and coaches, much larger publics, and much larger stakes, as well as Congressional oversight because we are federal and national in scope, not state with far lower levels of such scrutiny. Because of the much higher levels of publicity and public scrutiny, we have learned that we need to be proactive in protecting the athletes, because, above all, it is about the athletes and not their $300,000 a year coaches.
The problem is, that is exactly what happened.PlayerRep said:In this type of situation, a coach remaining silent would not feed the rumor mill.
UMGriz75 said:The problem is, that is exactly what happened.PlayerRep said:In this type of situation, a coach remaining silent would not feed the rumor mill.
mtgrizrule said:Why is this such big deal here this year? Every year the roster changes. The changes are usually a little higher after the 1st year of a coaching and/or system change. I posted just after Stitt's hiring we would likely see a lot of roster changes after his 1st year, and it is happening.
It does suck for the impacted players and their families. Most of the players will find a new home to continue their playing and academics. I am glad to see Stitt wasted no time in doing so. He witnessed 1st hand the separation between Montana and NDSU. Like it or not, they are the program setting the bar for the FCS. Fortunately, Montana is 1 of the few programs in position to compete with them soon. With the right roster changes, the GRIZ very well could be going from pretenders to championship contenders again.
This is also a good sign for the program to the players and the fans. To me, it means Stitt is not wasting time to dwell on the 2015 season. He immediately dedicated himself to the 2016 season. 2016 began as soon as the NDSU game ended. He is busting his ass for 2016 and setting the tone for the returning players. He is 100% correct in his approach. I agree with him, once you have your scholarship, a player cannot and should not coast. The scholarships are a year to year commitment by each party. Stitt has given the impacted players as much time as possible to find a new program and school to be part of. Most of them will still be getting a scholarship, just not at Montana. To each of the impacted players, I wish them well. To the new players, welcome to GRIZ Nation. To coach Stitt, thank you for your dedication to your job, especially the toughest part of roster changes.
Here is to hoping the roster changes/cuts have sent a loud clear message to every returner and every recruit that excellence and dedication is expected your whole time as a GRIZ! GO GRIZ!!!
PlayerRep said:UMGriz75 said:The problem is, that is exactly what happened.PlayerRep said:In this type of situation, a coach remaining silent would not feed the rumor mill.
Sorry, but don't agree. The information was coming from tweets of players and some reporters, and maybe a few egriz posts from friends or families of players. It was immediately known that coach/player meetings had occurred. No reason for coaches to start providing additional information or specifics. Plus, this whole "controversy" is a big nothing that the vast majority of people will never know or care about, and a bunch of us who follow football carefully don't care about either. Are there 50 out there who care about the "controversy"? Obviously, the affected player and their friends care about the individual players, but that is not the "controversy" in my mind.
PlayerRep said:mtgrizrule said:Why is this such big deal here this year? Every year the roster changes. The changes are usually a little higher after the 1st year of a coaching and/or system change. I posted just after Stitt's hiring we would likely see a lot of roster changes after his 1st year, and it is happening.
It does suck for the impacted players and their families. Most of the players will find a new home to continue their playing and academics. I am glad to see Stitt wasted no time in doing so. He witnessed 1st hand the separation between Montana and NDSU. Like it or not, they are the program setting the bar for the FCS. Fortunately, Montana is 1 of the few programs in position to compete with them soon. With the right roster changes, the GRIZ very well could be going from pretenders to championship contenders again.
This is also a good sign for the program to the players and the fans. To me, it means Stitt is not wasting time to dwell on the 2015 season. He immediately dedicated himself to the 2016 season. 2016 began as soon as the NDSU game ended. He is busting his ass for 2016 and setting the tone for the returning players. He is 100% correct in his approach. I agree with him, once you have your scholarship, a player cannot and should not coast. The scholarships are a year to year commitment by each party. Stitt has given the impacted players as much time as possible to find a new program and school to be part of. Most of them will still be getting a scholarship, just not at Montana. To each of the impacted players, I wish them well. To the new players, welcome to GRIZ Nation. To coach Stitt, thank you for your dedication to your job, especially the toughest part of roster changes.
Here is to hoping the roster changes/cuts have sent a loud clear message to every returner and every recruit that excellence and dedication is expected your whole time as a GRIZ! GO GRIZ!!!
I don't think it is a big deal. It's just a few people not analyzing the situation properly and/or trying to use it to dig at Stitt.
That's the point. It wouldn't have happened had the coach or staff simply done the right thing. But when you have a policy that you don't owe anybody anything, that is precisely what is going to happen, it happened, here, and it will happen in the future.PlayerRep said:The information was coming from tweets of players and some reporters, and maybe a few egriz posts from friends or families of players.
That's not even the point, not at all. It came up at a press conference this year. Coach acted petulant in public. Had he done the right thing. Nothing. He didn't.mtgrizrule said:Why is this such big deal here this year? Every year the roster changes.
How would that hurt the program?Let these kids go out with a public acknowledgment of their contributions, a pat on the back, and best wishes.
mtgrizrule said:Why is this such big deal here this year? Every year the roster changes. The changes are usually a little higher after the 1st year of a coaching and/or system change. I posted just after Stitt's hiring we would likely see a lot of roster changes after his 1st year, and it is happening.
It does suck for the impacted players and their families. Most of the players will find a new home to continue their playing and academics. I am glad to see Stitt wasted no time in doing so. He witnessed 1st hand the separation between Montana and NDSU. Like it or not, they are the program setting the bar for the FCS. Fortunately, Montana is 1 of the few programs in position to compete with them soon. With the right roster changes, the GRIZ very well could be going from pretenders to championship contenders again.
This is also a good sign for the program to the players and the fans. To me, it means Stitt is not wasting time to dwell on the 2015 season. He immediately dedicated himself to the 2016 season. 2016 began as soon as the NDSU game ended. He is busting his ass for 2016 and setting the tone for the returning players. He is 100% correct in his approach. I agree with him, once you have your scholarship, a player cannot and should not coast. The scholarships are a year to year commitment by each party. Stitt has given the impacted players as much time as possible to find a new program and school to be part of. Most of them will still be getting a scholarship, just not at Montana. To each of the impacted players, I wish them well. To the new players, welcome to GRIZ Nation. To coach Stitt, thank you for your dedication to your job, especially the toughest part of roster changes.
Here is to hoping the roster changes/cuts have sent a loud clear message to every returner and every recruit that excellence and dedication is expected your whole time as a GRIZ! GO GRIZ!!!