Shit, no. If someone says they hurt, they are pussies. It was a little uncomfortable, but they deaden the crap out of the knee before the injection (and I hate needles.). The deadening shot was the worst part of it, and even then, it stung a bit for a few seconds, but it didn't hurt. I walked out of the office two minutes after they were finished. The doctor did give me a prescription for pain pills. I don't know why. It feels better than it did, not worse. ETA: I am a woman and have given birth twice. You must have spoken with men about this in the past.
Oh, they drained it first. That only hurt when he squeezed my knee cap because I broke pieces of that in a fall back in May, so it's still sore.
I will tell you but you won't like the answer. It's because LSU thinks they are more important than they really are. Is it a great job? Yes, but not as great as what the admin/boosters think it is.
Established world class coaches command tons of guaranteed money and control. Not alot of incentive to change if you have a huge ego and think nothing is wrong. Might as well keep Les...
It's a lot better job than some think also. LSU has a ton of things going for it that make a top job. Add to that the rarity of being able to step into a job where there is an abundance of talent already on hand and an established tradition of winning and success over the last 15 years. How many job openings come available each season where a coach can take over a program where LSU is now? We're only an offensive coordinator from being a top 10 team right now.
Call it what you will but many would argue that UT and S. Call are better jobs than LSU. I'd agree on S. Cal not on Tex even though everyone in the media would say that Tex is better. I just don't see it. Auburn, no way.
Neither have won anything in years, the next coach at LSU won't have to rebuild. Same even with ND, they're another rebuild job. LSU at this point in time would be hard to match unless a coach at a winning program decides to retire.