Notice Georgia’s posture. Meanwhile Kyle ford leaves usc. Fails at ucla. And usc welcomes him back to fail some more. Sending the message to kids that they can jerk Riley however they want
He left. Hes not a star. Bye. And no it’s not totally different. You produce or you don’t. You could make an argument that bear had more of an impact on his side of the ball than Ford has on his
I am sure, and he should have finished his career at UCLA. Allowing a guy to work you, come back and then be a nice little second stringer is a very beta male coach thing for Riley to do There's a reason many companies have a no rehire policy
Did you ever notice that whenever there's a player with talent in one facet of the game, about whom everyone agrees that "if only he could do X, he'd be terrific," the player is never able to learn to do X? It's even worse when X is "work hard and screw your head on straight."
"Boy, if Chico, who's really fast but can't hit the ball out of the infield, could only learn to bunt and to chop the ball between the infielders, he could hit .300 and steal a ton of bases when he gets on." The Chicos of the world never learn to bunt, never learn the Baltimore Chop, and never hit .300. If they're lucky and land on a team that can waste a spot on the bench, they become full-time pinch-runners.
Notice Georgia’s posture. Meanwhile Kyle ford leaves usc. Fails at ucla. And usc welcomes him back to fail some more. Sending the message to kids that they can jerk Riley however they want
Did you ever notice that whenever there's a player with talent in one facet of the game, about whom everyone agrees that "if only he could do X, he'd be terrific," the player is never able to learn to do X? It's even worse when X is "work hard and screw your head on straight."
"Boy, if Chico, who's really fast but can't hit the ball out of the infield, could only learn to bunt and to chop the ball between the infielders, he could hit .300 and steal a ton of bases when he gets on." The Chicos of the world never learn to bunt, never learn the Baltimore Chop, and never hit .300. If they're lucky and land on a team that can waste a spot on the bench, they become full-time pinch-runners.
Rule #1 in all sports (and business, too):
No head cases.