Europeans a month ago:
“This US team is a joke. They have zero chance.”
Europeans today, after the red card reversal:
“If the US wins it all, they won’t have earned it.”
Crazy how fast it went from “not good enough to be here” to “so dangerous we need to pre-discredit them.”
Gameday Mood!
Juiced up to be back on The Ranch for the spring scrimmage vs that red and black team up the road! We need the entire @LANIER_HERD packed out all night!
Let’s go 1-0! @LanierFootball#FPE#HookEm🤘🏼
How life feels when
The Atlanta Braves are still the only team in MLB yet to lose a series
The Braves own the Phillies
The Mets have lost 10 games in a row
State populations of top four:
Georgia - 11.3 million
Texas - 31.7 million
Florida - 23.3 million
California - 39.5 million
Georgia High School football is truly the best in the country
“I need you to lock in stop being distracted right. I BELIEVE in you but YOU’VE got to want this moment. This isn’t my story alright?”
IM READY TO RUN THROUGH A BRICK WALL
Fair question. The most American thing you can do is improve your situation through hard work and skill.
But if the claim is that kids are making these decisions because they “don’t believe in their coach,” you can’t then turn around and shield every consequence with “they’re just kids.” Either they’re mature enough to decide, or they’re not. It can’t be both.
I am on record stating I don’t care if kids transfer. If they’re already looking elsewhere, they weren’t fully committed anyway. What I do oppose is grown men DM’ing 14–17-year-old boys to entice them to leave. That shouldn’t be controversial.
This post is about the ripple effect and keeping Coaches employed. Teams lose depth, wins disappear, and a potential 7–3 season turns into 4–6. Fans want the coach fired, conveniently forgetting he lost multiple players to empty promises like “better exposure” or “more touches.”
Kids can be manipulated. Coaches get blamed. Happens every year.