January 1, 2022Comments are off for this post.

From Where I Sit- Rip Van Rockne- January 1, 2022

I watched a number of football games during this college bowl season and the thought occurred to me, “If he woke up from a long sleep, would Knute Rockne recognize the game today?”. The game is fundamentally very much the same. Touchdowns, field goals, running, passing, and tackling. Plenty has changed, however. Especially, in the last 10 years.

Offenses deploy many more spread and option features than would’ve been seen 10 years ago. No more 3 yards and a cloud of dust. The defenses have adapted to the offenses and we see more aggressive features. The equipment has certainly advanced. There are some new playing rules (or at least interpretations of the old rules) and adjustments to how the game clock and play clock are run. On average, the players are bigger, stronger, and faster than ever before.

I’m struck, more so, by how the players have changed in recent years. I suppose the game is society in a microcosm. We see more and more individualistic behavior. Shorter attention spans. Greater need for immediate gratification. Players seek attention as much for their affect and personality as for their performance. More posing. More dancing. More talking. It's like old school professional wrestling.

Jersey numbers matter more than they used to. Teams assign the same number to different players to ensure everyone gets the number they want. Single-digit numbers are also a priority. We’ve made the number zero available now to create one more single digit opportunity. The emergence of suffixes and hyphenated names is a phenomenon, too. Why are the proportions of suffixes and hyphenated names in college football so much higher than in the rest of our society? Are there really more “juniors”, IIIs, and beyond that play football? Are they vehicles now for personal statements. Perhaps it all connects to players’ individual brands now as much (or more) than the team brand.

New relaxed player transfer rules have converged with increasing player individuality and the need for immediate gratification to make the transfer portal a huge dynamic in the game today. So much of what is new is player centric. Perhaps a good thing, but it will be interesting to see if these changes help or hinder competitive equity. Will the delta between the haves and have nots shrink or grow (as many predict). One thing for certain is, like so much else today, the game of college football is in a state of constant flux.

November 14, 2021Comments are off for this post.

From Where I Sit- Cannibalism in the Gator Nation- November 13, 2021

Florida’s first half defensive performance today against Samford was a reflection, in some part, on what happens when you fire coordinators six days before a game and elevate someone who has never been a coordinator. This is why head coaches, even when they quietly know what’s coming soon, try to hold off on coordinator firings until a more rational transition period. Sometimes, however, a midseason firing is unavoidable to appease the media and a vocal fan base. A persistent vortex of negativity damages recruiting and sometimes the evidence of commitment to change can't wait. When coordinator firings do happen mid season, some period of chaos shouldn’t be surprising. Florida will really need to stabilize the defense quickly to be ready for next week’s game AT Missouri.

Despite the Gators' righting the ship today, after an ugly first twenty five minutes and going on a 42 - 10 run over the final thirty five minutes, the drum beats got louder from the “Fire Mullen” cannibals. For some, his departure is a foregone conclusion and their negativity has spiraled into concerns over what the coaching staff wears, whether the players sing the alma mater, Mullen’s dismissive treatment of the media, and an array of other peripheral issues. Clearly, there is trouble in paradise and something needs to be done to fix the ineptitude that has defined Florida’s last 5 games. The question, really, is whether Mullen is afforded a reasonable opportunity to fix things himself and, if so, how much time he gets.. Firing two coaches last week didn’t immediately solve the problems. Some believe Mullen needs to win both remaining games to make it to next season.

I understand we now live in an “immediate results” society where persistence through adversity and delayed gratification isn’t easy to accept. I also understand that $7.2M is a lot of money. The decision points, right now, aren’t really about either of these. The $12M buyout for Mullen is also a lot of money and starting over with our 5th head coach since the 2008 National Championship doesn’t ensure success more quickly than giving Mullen another season.

The expectations at Florida ate up Jim McElwain, Will Muschamp, and even Urban Meyer. Who could Florida hire right now that would, without question, get the Gators to the College Football Playoff within four years? The other two finalists when Mullen was hired by the Gators (Chip Kelly and Scott Frost) haven’t done as well as Mullen. Maybe Mullen was too good in his first three years and there is no going backwards to be tolerated? The University of Florida is one of a handful of places where there is no grace period, but maybe the more successful approach is to be a little more patient? As one example, Jim Harbaugh is in his 6th year at Michigan and the Wolverines are currently 9-1. In 2020, Michigan had a losing record. Perhaps Florida should choose that path instead of the paths taken at places like Tennessee and Texas? If so, just maybe their patience will be rewarded.

October 17, 2021Comments are off for this post.

From Where I Sit- Civility and Personal Character- October 17, 2021

I typically comment about University of Florida’s football games, but was working a basketball telecast yesterday and didn’t get to watch this week’s game at LSU. What I did see was the end of the University of Mississippi at University of Tennessee football game. There was certainly some interesting football to be analyzed, but sadly the relevance of the game was overwhelmed by the disturbing fan behavior in the closing moments.

In the final minutes of a close football game, the game officials made, and upheld, a call that enraged many of the fans in attendance. Some of these fans threw objects on to the field. Many, many others joined the stupidity. Ultimately, the game was paused for over twenty minutes while officials and coaches huddled to discuss how the game could be safely finished. The band left. The cheerleaders left. Some fans left. Some coaches and players were struck by thrown objects, including golf balls. Ultimately, some degree of calm was restored and the last minutes of the game were played.

The concept of sports serving as a microcosm that mirrors society isn’t new. Yesterday’s behavior occurred within the context of sports, but unfortunately is reflective of a much more pervasive societal problem. The disgusting fan behavior yesterday in Knoxville is just the current sports related example. The symptoms of this disintegration of civility and personal character are not limited to Knoxville or even to sports.

A migration of personal values, the emergence of crowd sourced decision making, a growing preference for emotion over facts, and other facets have created this dangerous dynamic.

Here’s how it usually plays out. An incident occurs that elicits a strong negative feeling in an individual or a group. This feeling is accepted as being important even before any analysis of the facts surrounding the incident can be accomplished. An impulsive and typically unfettered reaction to the real or perceived injustice occurs. We tolerate this type of unmeasured reaction because we “understand” the person’s or group’s frustration and no longer expect/require people to delay gratification for their impulses. The heightened intensity triggers even more people and the volatility of the circumstances escalate. In the final analysis, when the facts do support the basis for the initial frustration we find their behavior justified (even when excessive). When the facts don’t ultimately support the complainants reaction, we excuse the behavior (too easily) because we understand their need for instant justice.

Societally, we are conditioned more and more to expect immediate and fair outcomes. These are good things in most circumstances. The rub occurs when these things can’t/don’t happen and people aren’t emotionally stable enough to handle the disappointment. The old days of “who told you everything was going to be fair” have passed. We seek and expect immediate redress for even the smallest of transgressions by others. Patience is a lost trait. We get responded to by email and even text rather than “snail mail”. We shop online with delivery by tomorrow. We get answers on Google and rarely wait for anything. Again, all good things except when we aren’t capable of coping with any delay in gratification.

In general, the media adds to the problem by encouraging a societal attraction to victims and victimization. Drama drives clicks and interpersonal conflict is the highest drama. We learn to focus more on the struggles, conflicts, and obstacles along the way than on the successes through consistent focus and effort. This way of thinking means people get more (immediate) attention, especially as children, for fighting, crying, and struggling, than they get for being steady, positive, and smiling. The point isn’t to discount the significance of mental health issues. The point is to highlight the problems we create when we accept, reward, and reinforce what should be unacceptable behaviors. These things begin in small ways and then systematically grow into much larger and, in some cases, dangerous behaviors.

There will, hopefully, be significant consequences for yesterday’s craziness in Knoxville meted out by the University of Tennessee and the SEC, but the real solutions will lie in reshaping the societal standards for acceptable expressions of dissent. We need to return to the days when some level of civility is expected. We need to draw a clear line between dissent which is truly speech and dissent which is actually violent behavior. If we continue to accept (and even justify) dangerous behavior when it serves our own agendas, we shouldn’t be surprised when it permeates all facets of our lives.