That may be you VH but I drove 12 hours round trip and sat 5 rows behind the team against WKU and I can guarantee there were very few players giving max effort that game in route to a 66-6 defeat...that was not schemevor talent related... it was attitude.
And I repeat, there were players that gave up at some point during that dreadful season. But if you watch the tape, even in that WKU game, there are several players in the fourth quarter still battling and giving all they have. All I asked was that you don't throw the whole team in the same pot.
In defense of those who did eventually throw in the towel, don't be so quick to judge. In the WKU game for example, things went south quickly and then it must have felt like a landslide. I know that's how it felt for me in the stands. So as a player, you've had a tough season, the bottom has fallen out of the season, but you're still hoping to turn it around each game.
This game, WKU, will be the one. We can still salvage something if we can win this game. In the back of your mind you may not truly believe it, but you come out playing hard with every intention of success. And then same-old/same-old. It's not really a surprise that the things that haven't been working all season are not working. But it's still a gut-punch. I'm not surprised some of the players weren't giving max-effort in the second half. Tell me, were you cheering as loudly and passionately in the fourth quarter when we were down 8 scores? I bet you weren't giving max effort either.
You speak here with such authority from your seat in the stands, but let me remind you to not underestimate the roll scheme plays in effort. As Clint has been outlining, when a scheme makes no logical sense, has little hope of success, and puts players at an increased risk of injury, effort is definitely compromised. Still, there were players laying it all out there.