Per nj.com- no reasoning in article, just says "violation of team rules"
No link so no complaints about that site
No link so no complaints about that site
?Fudd has lost all control.
?
How about in Game 11 you don't let down your teammates by doing something stupid? Where/when are the players accountable for THEIR actions?
Again....I'll say it a little s l o w e r for you...It is obvious the players have no respect for Flood or the program.
There is no leadership. Flood has lost all control.
Coaches are,to use the Latin Phrase,IN LOCUS PARENTI.As ALL teachers are. They are IN PLACE OF THE PARENT. Ergo: When your kid screws up,you are responsible.Again....I'll say it a little s l o w e r for you...
At some point its up to YOU to show respect for YOURSELF and act the part on AND off the field.
Stop deflecting the blame from where it should really be directed at in this particular case.
GAME 11.
Again....I'll say it a little s l o w e r for you...
At some point its up to YOU to show respect for YOURSELF and act the part on AND off the field.
Stop deflecting the blame from where it should really be directed at in this particular case.
GAME 11.
I expect a young man who has been here for a few years to grow up when he is the program. At this stage your "cruise control" should have you doing the right thing on and off the field. If you still need a Mommy and Daddy type coach for this it's YOU.Disagree.
By the argument you are making, once a kid is in the program for a period of time, they should be on cruise control.
Cioffi has been here for years. What difference does game 1 vs. game 11 mean?
People skirt authority when they have no respect for it.
That authority is what keeps a group of 110 testosterone laced men, with a propensity for violent collisions, in line.
So when ever are YOU as "the kid" responsible?Coaches are,to use the Latin Phrase,IN LOCUS PARENTI.As ALL teachers are. They are IN PLACE OF THE PARENT. Ergo: When your kid screws up,you are responsible.
So when ever are YOU as "the kid" responsible?
And can we stop with the calling them kids crap? Can they vote, can they drive, did they register for Selective Service? If you answer yes to those three, ya ain't a kid.
Young? Sure.
Immature? Sure looks like it.
Kid? They are all out of HS now, yes?
I don't know what Cioffi did nor do I care.Most college kids are allowed to do everything except consume alcohol. Whether you agree with the current minimum age for that or not, do you feel that starting quarterback Chris Laviano should have been more responsible than to be caught using a fake ID to get into bars mere days before the start of the season? And was his punishment commensurate with Cioffis?
Disagree.
By the argument you are making, once a kid is in the program for a period of time, they should be on cruise control.
Cioffi has been here for years. What difference does game 1 vs. game 11 mean?
People skirt authority when they have no respect for it.
That authority is what keeps a group of 110 testosterone laced men, with a propensity for violent collisions, in line.
So when does this personal responsibility start?THIS. When people here talk about Miami in the 80's or the Florida arrests under Meyer, why does everyone look at the coach/program and not preach the 'individual responsibility' piece? Because it happened so many damn times that it seemed fairly evident that it was also a program/ atmosphere issue along with individuals making lousy decisions...how many of our guys have been disciplined this year????
So when do YOU as the player own YOUR actions that can result in some bad stuff to your teammates, program and school?In college sports, you own your kids actions as a coach, fair or not.
You don't want to be responsible or think it's not fair, don't be a coach.
Or you better win a whole bunch, then nobody will care what your kids do
I am not disagreeing with that at all.Efdny, it is Cioffi's fault. I'm not against the suspension and whatever happens there happens. At the same time though, how many incidents have to happen before some people say, 'hey, something doesn't seem right here; what are these coaches doing that so many players keep getting in trouble at a rate we haven't seen in years, if ever?'
Joe P.
Agree. But my question is when is it fair to ask what portion falls on the player?I'm not saying that it's ultimately not Cioffi's fault. Of course it is.
But if you're not asking WHY * kids are skirting authority, I think you're missing a good chunk of it.
* D1 football players are aggressive, risk taking guys.
What reigns them in? + Personal responsibility? or fear of the coaching staff?
come on...
Maybe this is getting control of the team - zero tolerance going forward. Who the heck knows for sure. No one but the team.
Agree. But my question is when is it fair to ask what portion falls on the player?
It seems sometimes on here if we ask that we are reminded of * this but not so much of + that.
It all falls on the player. Cioffi was suspended.
And when there are a STRING of such events, the guy in charge loses his job. Just like in the SEAL teams and in the Fire Department. This really isn't hard...
Since you're there already, how's the view?This is an easy one to interpret. When a kid like Anthony Cioffi, a borderline D-I player as it is, has so little respect for a coach's authority, that coach has no authority. I hope Fludd is there forever, only because he ensures your continued descent into oblivion. Just being honest...
I would like to know that, before I help with the rope.Does anybody actually know what rule he broke that led to the suspension?