we didnt have a primary qb, hence the problem. not sure of your agenda here, I guess its to slam saban, I dont care. I was simply giving my unbiased take that you dont care for. I think it was wrong to do it even if it was directed at all 3, which it seems. Sorry, my opinion is not gospel, nor have i stated it as such as you do yours.
I guess some people that leave a place, just like what Saban did, feel that they have to bad-mouth where they were in order to make themselves feel that they, hands-down, made the right decision. Saban was great here and he had quite a thing going. Even in his departure, his legacy was in pretty good standing but with each and every comment that he makes towards us, his good name here is tarnished a bit, IMO.
Another "nail on the head" post. If he needed to defend LSU's conservative offense to the Miami media, he could have stated the offense played to it's strength, which was the running game. Instead, he chose to belittle the player(s) in a sense, which was not a good move. Much like his comments in the first press conference when he brought up fans booing, it really served no purpose IMO, other than to prop himself up before the media. I'd have liked to hear him explain the conservative offense of 2003, because we had a pretty "good" qb cabable of making smart decisions but hardly ever through the ball downfield that year either. Oh well, spilled milk I suppose. Saban is history, it's Les Miles' team now. :thumb:
I believe NS was just saying straight out what had bothered him with the fans booing (which I am sure he hates) and the inconsistent qb core. ________ WELLBUTRIN LAWYER
Maybe so, but when WE said it during the season, Saban was the very picture of outrage. Now that he's gone, I guess he thinks it's OK to come out and diss these kids...just like the way he basically threw Ronnie Prude under the wheels during the post-game PC Saturday. Just like the way he commented on the LSU fans for booing him when he first got here. Saban needs to take a little bit of that 4.5 mil and invest in a Dale Carnegie course...he might learn about a little something called tact. He might learn a little something about dealing with people with dignity and class instead of just saying what's on his mind, no matter what the context. Speaking your mind is often an admirable quality, but when you're totally insensitive to what it is you're saying, you've crossed the line.
the written transcript from the Dolphins site is edited. You'll have to watch it to get the whole thing.