refrigeratormover
Dodd-Like
- Joined
- Jul 25, 2002
- Messages
- 6,488
I will give a thousand dollars to any of the recruiters who pulls in a 5 star. It will be the "cash-handshake" thing someone on here used to love so much.
I liked those.
I will give a thousand dollars to any of the recruiters who pulls in a 5 star. It will be the "cash-handshake" thing someone on here used to love so much.
Does that count firing wommack after 09? We still had a good bit of Gailey players in 10.
didn't most of wommacks assistants stay?
Womack didn't choose his assistants. So it's hard to call them his.
my history on that part is a little hazy. weren't most of them from tenuta? or were they guys that CPJ brought?
My point DA is that he has only changed in the last year or so when Gailey's talent ran out on him and he is in trouble about losing his big tit to suck on.
It took a while for CPJ's recruits to see significant playing time. He was hired in late 2007 and did what he could prior to the start of the 2008-2009 season. He said most of his recruiting time then was spent recruiting the guys who were on the team and who had committed under Gailey.
His first full class was the class that entered school in Fall 2009. Most of them redshirted in 2009. 2010 would have been their first year of playing. Redshirt freshman are undersized and make a lot of mistakes, so you're still evaluating partly on potential. So it really wasn't until after the 2011-2012 season that CPJ could start to properly evaluate just how good or bad those players were. And then that was just one recruiting class. This past season gave him a second class to look at and a second look at his first class. At that point it looks like he agreed with the fans that he needed to start doing some things differently.
I think the reason CPJ got labled as stubborn is that when he came to GT, he had an understanding of what had made him successful in the past. He didn't come to GT and say "What I used to do won't work anymore because it's GT not Navy, it's ACC not Independent, it's this, not that". Rather, he stuck to what he knew to be a successful way of doing things when it did not appear to be working and he stuck to it when other people told him what he was doing wouldn't work. He stuck with what had made him successful previously until he was convinced that it wouldn't make him successful at GT. Now that he's had some time to try out his ideas, he starting to change them. And perhaps none to soon.