Players Weigh In On Cox Treatment
By Jay Coulter
jccoulter@gmail.com
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The consensus among the vast majority of respondents was that booing your own players was not only classless, but detrimental to the team. Many of you made excellent points. Even those of you who I don’t agree with make some valid arguments.
The players and coaches weighed in on the issue Monday. Speaking to various media outlets, here’s what some of them had to say...
"I think everybody feels the same way," senior fullback Carl Stewart said. "They might as well have turned on me. It was just horrible to see.
"I was pretty upset. To be in your home stadium and have your fans boo you, that's just disheartening."
"I’ve never seen anything like that in my life," said defensive end Quentin Groves "To boo Cox, that hurt me to my heart. I was like ‘wow, how could you do that to a guy that has been here for you?’
"He means so much to this team. To see your brother down is just like ‘oh my God,’ I could sit here all day and say what the fans shouldn’t have done, but they’re going to do what they’re going to do," said Groves.
"I'm hoping they were booing me," said Tommy Tuberville. "I don't think they'd be booing Brandon. That's the way we took it. That's the way it should be.
"If you are going to boo, boo the coaches. We get paid to do this. The players don't. They work awfully hard to do what they do. I think most people would agree with that. This is not pro ball. True fans are going to understand, hopefully."
Let’s all hope we put this ugly chapter behind us.
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Don’t be surprised to see dual quarterbacks for the foreseeable future. Ever since the Pat Washington/Bobby Walden debacle of 1985, I’ve been against the two quarterback system. But with the way things are going this year, it doesn’t look half bad.
The list of injuries continues to grow for the Tigers. The first two weeks we saw the defense get banged up. On Saturday, it was the offensive line’s turn.
King Dunlap and Mike Berry are questionable for Saturday’s game with New Mexico State. Back-up guard Leon Hart is out 6-8 weeks, effectively ending his college career.
For an offensive line that has struggled mightily this year, this is a huge blow. Things just seem to go from bad to worse.
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They are lead by former Kentucky head coach Hal Mumme. And yes, they throw just as much as Kentucky did with Tim Couch. They are averaging nearly 400 yards a game through the air and throw the ball an average of 50 times a contest.
Their quarterback is a good one. Chase Holbrook is on the Davey O’Brien Watch List for the top quarterback in the nation. Who would have guessed in August that this week’s game would be so big.
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Strange...
The little option offense that Burns was running didn't look too bad. Perhaps it will throw defenses off a bit to have Burns line up with that then have Cox run our typical offense.
Our running game is on the verge of breaking out with a big game here soon. I was hoping Ben Tate would have had a 100 yeards last Saturday, but he came up a bit short. Kodi Burns came close, too. I think that with the three of them in there, we could see 300 yard rushing games as the norm.
by War Eagle Atlanta on Sep 18, 2007 11:59 AM CDT reply actions
They did platoon.
.....It wasn't just Walden. Jeff Burger was in the rotation, too. 1985 was a messed-up year of wasted talent, offensively. Jack Crowe has never recovered as a coach, and 22 years later is coaching a small Alabama school trying to move up. (Jacksonville State) 1985 was a year I worked 75-80 hour weeks, and longed for the college hours I thought were so hard a year or two before...
.....Pat Washington had moved up in 1984 and become the starting QB. He was a class act, and a great talent, but he was NOT an option QB. The '84 offense got embarrassed, and looked like a broken model-T Ford, on national TV against defending national champ Miami, and Texas in Austin. Washington did find a way to be productive and ultimately win nine games, but we were a team with a ton of talent offensively in 1984, and no sense of focus.
.....In 1985, we installed a power-I sort of offense, a throwback to the early sixties, at best. After spring drills, it was clear that we were going to have to hit a few passes to make this thing work against good defenses, even with Bo Jackson and Brent Fullwood in the 1-2 I-back depth chart. Pat Washington took some horrific lumps in 1984, and was not the passer in spring drills some thought he should be. By the opener against USL, Walden was starting, Burger was the backup, and Pat Washington was third team.
.....We ROLLED USL. Bo had 285 on the ground. When Bo got tired, Fullwood had something like 185. Yeah, baby, we were Tailback-U! Southern Miss was next. And, they gave that offense problems. Just a hiccup, we said. No big deal.
.....In Knoxville, the Vols SOLD OUT to stop Bo. The QBs HAD to do something, to move the ball. Instead, we got a turnover-fest that fed the Vol offense time and time again. Bo took himself out. Us, the No. 1 team in the nation, took a 38-20 whipping. Pat Washington was not impressive, but he was the only QB that managed the game worth anything, and did not turn it over.
.....Shortly thereafter, Walden was diagnosed with physical problems that would permanently remove him from the field. Burger was a less-experienced drop-back passer than Pat Washington, and we limped to an 8-5 finish that cost coordinators Crowe and Orgel their jobs. "Jack Crowe's gotta go," anyone? Yeah, as much as I hate it, booing our own team is nothing new.
.....With Jackson gone, in 1986, we adopted a new offensive philosophy, threw on first down, won 10 games, and had a top-10 finish. But, by this time, Pat Dye's cough had kicked in. We didn't know it at the time, but recruiting would start going downhill, during our greatest SEC championship run.

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