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This Makes "bad griz fans" Look Good

Grizbacker1

Well-known member
Relatives of Rodriguez facing harassment, threats

Associated Press
January 8, 2008, 5:45 PM EST

GRANT TOWN, W.Va. (AP) - Relatives of Rich Rodriguez have been harassed and threatened in the three weeks since his resignation as West Virginia football coach.

His mother, Arleen Rodriguez, said her teenage grandson received a death threat and found other harassing notes taped to his locker at East Fairmont High School. Arleen said her 12-year-old granddaughter had to be escorted to classes.

Mountaineer fans furious over Rodriguez's Dec. 16 decision to accept the coaching job at Michigan also vandalized his home near Morgantown, hanging signs on a fence and tossing a mailbox in the yard.

"He put seven years into WVU and now everybody thinks he's garbage," his mother said. "Think like a parent. That's all I can say. Think about it. Think about what you're doing."

The backlash has been even more venomous on the Facebook social networking site, where dozens of groups with profanity-laced names have formed, devoted to wishing ill for Rodriguez and his family.

A similar but short-lived fury boiled up last month against Mountaineer kicker Pat McAfee, who received angry text messages and had his car vandalized after missing two field goals in West Virginia's 13-9 loss to Pitt. The loss knocked WVU out of national championship contention, but the team went on without Rodriguez to beat Oklahoma at the Fiesta Bowl.

Several wealthy football boosters claim there was behind-the-scenes tension between Rodriguez and the WVU administration, but the coach has yet to publicly discuss the matter.

"I don't think he felt wanted at WVU anymore," his mother said.
 
Here is another pretty good article on perspective about coaches from the Sporting News

Let's maintain perspective about coaches' accomplishments
E-MAIL PRINT COMMENTS 31 WATCH THIS TOPIC
Posted: January 8, 2008
NEW ORLEANS -- So I'm sitting here in the postmortem LSU lovefest, and it hits me.

Four months ago, Tigers coach Les Miles was a guy who couldn't win a big game and -- more importantly -- had underachieved with two extremely talented teams. Four months ago, Jim Tressel and Bob Stoops were the best coaches in college football.


Now Miles is Vince Lombardi. And Tressel and Stoops are Vince McMahon.

This is what it has come to in this grand game of ours: It's all about No. 1.

Look, I'm as guilty as the next guy, but at some point, we have to step back, take a deep breath and understand this for what it is. One team is going to win it all, 118 others aren't.

Today in Columbus, Ohio, and for the last week in Norman, Okla., talk radio and message boards nuts are in pig heaven: down and dirty dissection of their programs and coaches. Stoops has lost his mojo; Tressel has to change coordinators and give up play-calling.

To this I say: Has the whole world gone mad?

Big Game Bob's Sooner teams have lost four straight BCS bowl games, and all of a sudden you can't tell the difference between Oklahoma and Okie State.

In case anyone remembers: Stoops is also 5-1 in Big 12 Championship games.

Tressel's Buckeyes have lost the last two BCS national title games by a combined 38 points -- and, horror of horrors, to an SEC school each time.

Apparently, he can't get his team ready to play athletic, physical teams.

In case anyone remembers: Tressel's "slow" team beat Miami -- the most-talented, gifted, fastest college football team in the last 50 years -- in the 2002 national title game. And no matter the outcome, Tressel's teams have played in three of the last six national title games.

How many of the 119 Division I teams would take that?

"Your last game," Tressel says, "Is the game everyone remembers."

But at some point, there must be perspective.

So you're upset with Tressel's two-game losing streak in the big game?

Could be worse, he could be 2-10-1 in The Game and hawking hot tubs or snow tires on television. Instead, he's merely 6-1 vs. Michigan and has won the Big Ten in four of his seven seasons.

So Big Game Bob has suddenly morphed into Big Game Bust? Let's see, he's the king of his conference and he owns his rival (6-3 vs. Texas). I mean, I know that's not John Blake/Gary Gibbs stuff, but he's working on it, folks.

Want a true measure of coaching ability? Both Tressel and Stoops began this season with first-year starting quarterbacks. Each player won 11 of 13 games they started and completed.

Miles had a first-year starting quarterback, too. And Matt Flynn played better than Todd Boeckman and Sam Bradford in the last game of the season.

It's just that simple.

I'm not minimizing what Miles accomplished this season. He held together a talented team that could've easily fractured at numerous points, and had them ready to play in the game that mattered most.

That's not Lombardi. It's seizing the moment.

Like it or not, it's all about No. 1.

Matt Hayes is a writer for Sporting News. E-mail him at [email protected].
 
grizpack said:
To this I say: Has the whole world gone mad?

Big Game Bob's Sooner teams have lost four straight BCS bowl games, and all of a sudden you can't tell the difference between Oklahoma and Okie State.

In case anyone remembers: Stoops is also 5-1 in Big 12 Championship games.

Tressel's Buckeyes have lost the last two BCS national title games by a combined 38 points -- and, horror of horrors, to an SEC school each time.

Apparently, he can't get his team ready to play athletic, physical teams.

In case anyone remembers: Tressel's "slow" team beat Miami -- the most-talented, gifted, fastest college football team in the last 50 years -- in the 2002 national title game. And no matter the outcome, Tressel's teams have played in three of the last six national title games.

How many of the 119 Division I teams would take that?

So, in other words, it's contagious. Pessimism builds on itself. I would rather be in a world of optimists than complainers.
 
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