Maybe you are not smart enough. Do you have a big brain like Tomi Lahren?
Maybe you are not smart enough. Do you have a big brain like Tomi Lahren?
I share your frustration. I think it is more of a human condition than an American condition. This right wing “we need change” thing is worldwide in scope. The pendulum will swing back and forth.
Time does not permit it. He would be better served doing something else with the limited time and energy he has. But in a vacuum, yes.
The practice was not the problem. Running 10 110s alone is not the problem. It was the failure to realize his inability to do it and then the failure to treat him when his injuries became obvious.
You can’t mimic the wear and tear of a football game. But you do the best you can with interval training like this. The effort and force required to block for 6 seconds and 110 yard dash are not dissimilar. But even if he was training for a marathon it would make him a better lineman. More cardio is good cardio.
The assumptions in your post are so classic Internet. I support everything he is doing. I support President Obama as well who has been the best president of my life. That said, I question their motivations. (I raise Obama because even he questions his own motivations in his book.)
There is no way you have ever played football. Everyone is exhausted and playing on fumes in the 4th quarter. Everyone would benefit by being in better shape which is why cardio is vigorously pushed by coaches everywhere.
Just makes me sad that Crash Davis never had a moment like that.
You have turned a good take into an awful take. Offensive lineman need to be in the best cardio shape they possibly can. There is not a lineman in the history of football who would not have been served well by being in a little better cardio shape.
Of course not. There is probably not 32.
Right. Because being in great cardio shape is so optional for a lineman.
I mean, there is a plethora of scientific support that a fat pussy does slow a person down. I think this was fair inquiry.
The story at Maryland is that there was a maniacal desire to get better that led to coaches pushing kids in a way that was unfair and ultimately unsafe.
Thank you for your valuable contribution. Doctor, you represent the very best of the Internet and your time is really appreciated.
You should follow the thread. I support everything he stands for.
There is not a scale. As fans, we speculate.
Of course not. Except for the fact that my post is not frothing at the mouth with praise for him and asking an intellectually curious question, what in this chain would lead you to ask that?
Against world class athletes I would last less than two minutes. I played a little rugby abroad. There are so athletes in other countries. In the U.S.? Not so much.
You think it and I think it. He does not have to confess. The evidence has to suggest he did not want the job or was someone indifferent to it.
I agree.