Starts with Doc.
Funny how in the offseason, you didn't call for his head when he made these decisions. Several on here praised (and have praised) him for trying to keep the program clean and not troublesome.
http://www.espn.com/espn/wire?section=ncf&id=7525479Of course, this was from 4 years ago, but I imagine it's pretty much the same as it is now. You see/read of players either leaving programs for smaller ones and for (as I said) pretty much anything. Appleby left Purdue after we beat them, for Florida. Some highly regarded Florida QB got kicked off the team and went to morganhole to backup their overrated QB.
Hell, Cole Garvin left and went to South Alabama and they just beat San Diego State (after beating Mississippi State earlier in the year).
You also have to factor in coaches and coordinators who leave for greener pastures or just get fired. That leaves a rift in the recruiting as well as attrition of a program.
New coaches come in, with schemes that do not fit the style of incumbent players, said players transfer, it's no hard feelings, its NCAA football AKA a business.
Then ya got the people who do dumb stuff on the team...need we remind ourselves of the highly touted recruits who made Papa John's re-think their franchises here? Or about some of the players having multiple run-ins with the law in general, now being reduced to nothing?
How would they have panned out had they been good, who knows, at this point, who cares? Seems like you guys keep looking into that whole element to somehow justify your right to be mad at Doc presently.
Everyone came down on the players (rightfully so) for their actions...are these guys "kids" when they're 18 years old and given a pretty straightforward set of rules like, "Don't commit crimes" (which, sadly, most of these recruits know what crimes are and how they are committed).
I find it strange several would likely fill you up with stories of how bad life was for them back home, knowing how everything goes down and having experience with some rough stuff, yet when given the opportunity to avoid it and become everything they set out to be, they just regress back to their old selves...Psychologically it's likely a coping mechanism to deal with the pressures and stresses of being a D-1 athlete, reverting back to what you know to feel comfortable, even if it's the wrong thing.
Anyways, this whole "it starts with Doc" crap is old and useless at this point. He's going to continue to dismiss players who violate the rules. For protection of the players, we have no right to know what those rules specifically are, but a guy who's been around Urban Meyer, Florida, wvu, and NC State, likely has a good idea of what sort of rules those are, and has an idea of how lenient he should be to them.
Heater is a great and solid coach, but looking at how our defense has played (minus Louisville) it's not exactly been a solid year for him...
I'm not calling for his head or anything, but as it was said, the blame seems to be squarely on the offense with the defense, looking absolutely terrible in the first half last night.
Not to mention, Doc left some of the dismissal decisions up, to the team, and it wasn't always his call.
Gentlemen, what we are talking about here is a morality element of sports...and it's one that is subjective as well.
You're right, we aren't Alabama, we can't afford to lose players as much as they do, but attrition is difficult, even at the top level and for various reasons (besides the coaching staff which several on here seem to simple-mindedly blame continuously).
But Alabama and Saban would literally give a player $10,000 in front of the NCAA infractions committee with another student athlete paid specifically to yell, "Just try something" at them...and get away with it.
It's actually become a social problem for many, when you let people just run around and do what they want. Look at Baylor. Imagine if Briles had actually, you know, DONE SOMETHING rather than just let it go.
Florida State? Known now as the CrimiNOLES?
Miami? "Bunch of thugs"?
Penn State, now Ped State?
Baylor has a very good chance of having the hammer slammed on them. They don't have the connections someone like Texas or Alabama would have, they are a private school with no real consistent history of success before RG3 was there.
Due to his firing, it's unclear how Baylor will recover, sure, they are winning with a new coach, but for how long? Briles had 7 recruits de-commit once they found out he was fired.
One of the better coaches in the country, is going to have a very negative social perception about him for a very, very long time...it will affect his future and the program who hires him (Petrino seemed like he wouldn't ever be hired but look at him now).
Do we want that?
Is the cost of winning that important we sacrifice what we attempt to uphold, which is a respectable program? I ask you to consider this because if you feel we should, then dismissal of problem players is gonna happen regardless, and some are going to be pretty tough.
Ultimately it IS up the coaching staff to adjust, and that ain't easy to do, but don't toss them under the bus when we take a loss, because I'll take a loss over a possibly forever looming negative social stereotype...as if you WVians don't have it bad enough since you're lumped together with drunken idiots up North and, for some reason, still are associated with Virginia (trust us, we don't like it either).
Or, if you want to be a part of the winning program, at whatever cost it's gonna be, do two things;
1. Consider your life and the fact you're willing to do such a thing and figure out if there's more to your life and value...because if there isn't, that's kinda sad.
2. I'm sure Wal-Mart has lots of UK and Alabama gear for you to wear...go near Texas and I'm sure you'll find some Baylor stuff as well.