MellowYellow
New Member
Not in the UFCThere are plenty of big men with quit in them. That's why the best fighters come from tough backgrounds.
Not in the UFCThere are plenty of big men with quit in them. That's why the best fighters come from tough backgrounds.
It has more to do with their shitty instate recruiting and the fact that the boys that grow up around there are softer than the facilities new color scheme. Great programs start at the base, the base is instate recruiting.
yep, no all about that. Grew up in a tiny ass logger town.
Tradition and history are built, which means they have to start someplace!! Perhaps Oregon is building theirs now!! At some point all programs were like Oregon. A new, "upstart" that the existing "traditional teams" of the time, thought wouldn't last!! Instead they stuck around and eventually developed tradition and history!!
Maybe Oregon will fade back in to anonymity and never "get it" as you suggest or maybe 50 years from now, some Oregon fan will be starting a thread stating that some other schools' fans will never "get it"!!
Only time will tell!! In the meantime, why not just let Duck fans enjoy their success and see if they can sustain it long enough to have "tradition"!!
Besides, love them or hate them, they're damn fun to watch!!
And starting threads like this leads to them using the term "jelly" for jealous and I HATE that!!![]()
Seem to be an awful lot of players on the 'Bama roster that are not from Alabama!!
Or you can be a salesman like the rest of us with regular degrees. The tenured guys at my company make 7 figures.Ive done a lot of hard work myself. Worked for a tree cutting company, hauling a lot of huge ass logs in the texas heat on dollys. Then for a service company that did a lot of shit jobs for the local railroads. About to go back to school to earn a skill. Ive learned if you want to work in todays economy you have to have an elite degree or a needed skill. Or you can beat your to shit.
Ive done a lot of hard work myself. Worked for a tree cutting company, hauling a lot of huge ass logs in the texas heat on dollys. Then for a service company that did a lot of shit jobs for the local railroads. About to go back to school to earn a skill. Ive learned if you want to work in todays economy you have to have an elite degree or a needed skill. Or you can beat your to shit.
Yea, you and others have never done that with the south!![]()
Or you can be a salesman like the rest of us with regular degrees. The tenured guys at my company make 7 figures.
But we still have a strong core of Bama players and they are highly productive on the team. Espn just did a piece on it recently about which states produce the top talent and Alabama pound for pound was at the top.
They started building the program in 1999 and have made upgrades, etc. along the way!! However, this facility that they are so proud of was built after they were already a nationally competitive program!!
The purpose of the facility is to maintain the momentum they already got going, not to start momentum!! If these facilities attract a couple of top level recruits that they otherwise might not get, it will make a huge difference in keeping them nationally relevant!!
As I said earlier in the thread, Oregon does not have the tradition and history of schools like Michigan, USC, 'Bama, etc. but that doesn't mean they can't get it!!
There was a time that the Michigan's, USC's and 'Bama's of the world were sitting exactly where Oregon is right now!! I believe that the point of these facilities is so that they can remain relevant and create their own tradition and history like the aforementioned "storied" programs!!
LOLVery nice.![]()
Not with Phil Knights moneyThere is some truth to this, but the powers of today also benefited from the powers of yesteryear tapping out. When Michigan et al were where Oregon is today the powers of the time were names like Yale, Harvard and Chicago. So why aren't those programs powers anymore? Because they choose not to be. They de-emphasized football and athletics in general for academics. As such that left a void to be filled by Michigan, Alabama, and USC. Now today those programs aren't going anywhere so there is going to be no void to fill (that's what she said) so programs like Oregon have an uphill climb.
There is some truth to this, but the powers of today also benefited from the powers of yesteryear tapping out. When Michigan et al were where Oregon is today the powers of the time were names like Yale, Harvard and Chicago. So why aren't those programs powers anymore? Because they choose not to be. They de-emphasized football and athletics in general for academics. As such that left a void to be filled by Michigan, Alabama, and USC. Now today those programs aren't going anywhere so there is going to be no void to fill (that's what she said) so programs like Oregon have an uphill climb.
The difference is, that Alabama has a long history of success which encourages young boys in Alabama to become good football players and hopefully play for the Tide one day!!
LOL
Sales is my only skillset. If it weren't for this, I don't know what line of work I'd be in.
High school football in the state of Alabama is huge. It starts at the early ages and works its way up and everyone at every level takes it very serious. It produces not only good WRs and RBs but very strong and agile lineman which is the core of every football team. UofA is able to start with best of the core from the state every years and then see what they need to go outside of state to get in addition. Some years are more elite than others but even "the not elite players (3 stars)" tend to turn out more so then most states, according to the Espn article.
And I was not chiding... I was pointing out a very strong point.
If the success of Oregon's football team does that, then they will have that strong in state recruiting base that Alabama has!!
It won't take much for Oregon to fail. Like I keep saying, you can't buy kids with facilities.