Stupid Person Feelingsball: The value of players opinions

Submitted by IncrediblySTIFF on

The Elliot Mealer muggle thing has sparked a lot of conversation around here, and I have seen both positives and negatives.  I can see how "muggles" can be taken as a derogatory term (as it is basically used as one through Rowling's stories).  During my time as a student-athlete, we generally announced to the non-athletes who didn't understand that "I'm D-1, you don't know."  Right or wrong, morally justifiable or not, this was the attitude taken by myself and several of my peers.

I guess where I am going here is that it is hard to make an argument that a student-athlete knows whats best for an athletic department, notably not many student-athletes have significant (if any) experience on the administrative side.

That being said, how much value should the player's opinion on a coach merit?  Unless all the other people that have played for Brady Hoke and spoken out about their love/appreciation/confidence in his abilities as a coach are just doing so because of loyalty, it seems that they are some of the few still in his corner.

Should the opinions of the players factor in when picking a head coach?  We have seen coaches fired for "losing the team" (Charlie Weis, who one time held a practice without the seniors to "develop future talent").  Should we write off these opinions as quickly as we condemn them for thinking they know how an athletic department should be run?

GoWings2008

November 5th, 2014 at 10:18 AM ^

their inputs deserve a lot more consideration than any of ours on this site, for no other reason than they are the ones who will be directly playing for that man.

M-Dog

November 5th, 2014 at 10:20 AM ^

I think the issue is when someone, anyone, implies that their's is the only opinion that matters or that the opinions of other groups "don't count" at all.

That's not Michigan.  We are all part of the same family. 

swan flu

November 5th, 2014 at 10:22 AM ^

No. They shouldn't be put in that position. It's not fair to them. If a coach is bad at his job, he should be fired. Like anyone else bad at their job. But it's not the players' job to have any impact on anyone employment. Players should like their coach. Having the team like and respect you is a necessary but not sufficient attribute to be a good coach. Brady hoke is not a good coach. That is not my opinion. That is the conclusion to be drawn from all of the given data.

swan flu

November 5th, 2014 at 10:44 AM ^

Say you were a surgeon. And your surgery performance was severely below expectations, your post-op patient outcomes were, statistically speaking, the lowest of any surgeon in the history of that hospital despite performing only the lowest risk surgeries and having resources better or equal to any other hospital on the planet. Would that make you a bad surgeon or is that just an opinion?

IncrediblySTIFF

November 5th, 2014 at 10:50 AM ^

Despite performing only the lowest risk surgeries?  Resources better or equal to any other hospital?

 

Neither of those are similar to Brady Hoke's coaching.

Also, how bad can you mess up the lowest risk surgery?

Doctor: Hey, sorry, I know we were just supposed to cut that mole off but I accidently took your left arm with it, my bad.

 

swan flu

November 5th, 2014 at 11:03 AM ^

Lowest risk surgeries=highly rated recruiting classes. Resources better or equal to any other hospitals= Michigan facilities, biggest stadium, top 5 revenue, top 10 university in the world, highest paid coordinators in the big ten, largest alumni base of any school in the nation. And any surgery can result in death of a patient due to MRSA infection if the surgeon did not prep properly. There are many other possible complications. Edit: also, I know of specific incidents where a surgeon removed the wrong limb, the wrong testicle, actually killed a patient. It happens. Because some surgeons are really bad at their jobs.

GoWings2008

November 5th, 2014 at 11:20 AM ^

Yes, its easier to win with talented players.  But the problem with your analogy is that talented high school players does not necessarily mean talented college players.  I'm not trying to argue the entire discussion here with you, but you're not comparing apples to apples with this analogy, imo.

grumbler

November 5th, 2014 at 11:30 AM ^

I think coaching college football is a great deal more involved than you seem to think.  You cannot, for instance, say that Hoke is a failure because he recruits so well (and that is the implication of making "highly rated recruiting classes" the denominator in your coaching evaluation equation, because then all Hoke has to do is recruit crap players and he becomes a better coach in your model).

My advice:  you are in a hole.  Stop digging.

teldar

November 5th, 2014 at 11:46 AM ^

You have obviously never spent time in the or with an incompetent surgeon. You have no idea what someone can screw up. Puncturing a bowel while doing a d&c because she pushed so hard she went through uterus then needing someone to come in and do a partial colostomy with anastamosis... Bad shit can happen when someone who does a poor job gets going.

TheLastHarbaugh

November 5th, 2014 at 10:24 AM ^

Being an athlete =! Being an administrator

Knowing how to play a sport  =! Knowing sports administration

To be frank, neither the fans nor the athletes are good judges of these sorts of things. I'm sure there are plenty of exceptions to the rule. I'm sure there are plenty of alums that work in sports administration who know what they're talking about, just as I'm sure the same can be said of many former athletes. 

Just because you played LaCrosse or Baseball doesn't give you some magical insight into how to run an entire athletic department. That's like saying a fast food worker would know how to run Taco Bell or Yum! Brands. Perhaps that's a little unfair, but I don't think it's that unfair.

IncrediblySTIFF

November 5th, 2014 at 10:31 AM ^

I believe the correct syntax is !=.

code nazi'd.

I also don't care about the AD thing.  Does playing LaCrosse qualify you to have an opinion on LaCrosse coaches?  Undoubtedly, yes.  How much value should be given to this opinion?  Probably need a person by person evaluation to know whether their opinion deserves merit.

Fuzzy Dunlop

November 5th, 2014 at 10:34 AM ^

I can see how "muggles" can be taken as a derogatory term (as it is basically used as one through Rowling's stories). 

 

This is not remotely true.  Your entire premise is incorrect.

IncrediblySTIFF

November 5th, 2014 at 10:42 AM ^

So you are saying that not a single person was offended by the use of the term?

Or are you arguing that Rowling's world was one where wizards and muggles lived on equal grounds?

 

For the record, I am not offended at all by the use of the term; I think it is funny.  And, Rowling's commentary on this:

 

 

 

The word 'mug' came to mind, for somebody gullible

 

Fuzzy Dunlop

November 5th, 2014 at 11:04 AM ^

So you are saying that not a single person was offended by the use of the term?

Oh, people were offended.  People can get offended over any old thing.  But I think it was utterly idiotic for people to be offended by what was clearly a good-natured, joking term.    

Or are you arguing that Rowling's world was one where wizards and muggles lived on equal grounds?

Not saying that either, but that's a far cry from saying that "muggle" was used as a "derogatory term" in the stories.  I mean, it's not like the Weasely's, Dumbledore, and all of the other likable characters who regularly used the term were portrayed as bigots.  It was a term of affection, if anything.

 

I'm on record from the outset as saying that people getting offended by the use of the word "muggle" to refer to non-athletes were whiners of the highest order.  Vincent Jackson's explanation below should have been obvious from the outset -- it was  a good natured, joking term for non-student athletes.  If anything, it is certainly less objectionable and more good-natured than the term "civilian," which athletes used during the Bo days.

As comments in the Vincent Jackson post make clear, at least some of the people who got upset about the word "muggle" never read the Harry Potter books or saw the movies, which makes their decision to be offended by a word without bothering to understand it even more frustrating.  This was made all the worse by our own fearless leader's decision to whine about the word in a post, even though he too never read the books.

This whole controversy was stupid from the outset.  People just like to get offended over nothing, apparently.

 

 

DesHow21

November 5th, 2014 at 10:37 AM ^

You are 18-21 year olds with little to no real-world experience running a business or heck even working in a professional environment full-time. Many of the folks you are referring to as "muggles" have all of this and advanced degrees to boot.Just keep that in mind and stay humble.

President Schlissel also made a great point that student athletes are just ONE of many stakeholders for an atheletic department. So we "muggles" are okay with you athletes having your say but it is idiotic for you to think you are the only constituency to have a say. 

DesHow21

November 5th, 2014 at 10:42 AM ^

athletes in one category. Vincent Smith gave a great explanation in a thread just a few minutes ago and showed that he really cared in listening to others in his replies. You one the other hand sound exactly like the stereotypical jock who would use the word in a derogatory way (When you say right or wrong that is my view, that is ignorance at its worst). 

 

Fuzzy Dunlop

November 5th, 2014 at 11:11 AM ^

 You one the other hand sound exactly like the stereotypical jock who would use the word in a derogatory way (When you say right or wrong that is my view, that is ignorance at its worst). 

 

Wow, slow your freaking roll dude.  Nothing OP said suggests that he is a "stereotypical jock that would use [a] word in a derogatory way."

 

Moreover, he didn't say "right or wrong that IS my view."  He said that, right or wrong, that WAS the attitude taken by players -- he is distinguishing his understanding of things now from his perspective when he was an 18-21 year old student (just as most of us mature and get a better perspective on things as we get older).

 

Maybe you also missed the very next sentence, in which he acknowledged that not many student athletes have administrative experience and that they don't necessarily know what's best for the department. 

 

Your response was quite dickish, and had virtually nothing to do with the original post.

taistreetsmyhero

November 5th, 2014 at 10:43 AM ^

There's also the unspoken assumption that athletes aren't as smart as non athletes and nobody likes being called dumb (which he is saying in not so many words), especially when it's by someone you assume is dumber than you.

Cranky Dave

November 5th, 2014 at 10:47 AM ^

with your view, as I spent two years as a college football player (albeit a very small school) and athletes and non-athletes have very different experiences. The muggles term isn't that different than Greeks using GDI.   

Athletes, at least current athletes, don't have any special insight into running an athletic department.  , I think some value should be placed on players opinions of coaches but only on the margin.  Ultimately the coaches record speaks for itself. 

 

IncrediblySTIFF

November 5th, 2014 at 10:54 AM ^

I'm with you here.  One common thing I have noticed is those that agree with the statement

"If we were winning, no one would care about any of this"

are former or current athletes.  Not sure who said it the other day, I believe Reader71, but this really hits the nail on the head, at least from an athletes standpoint.

Essentially: If I had done better in that game (and we won as a result), then serenity will encompass us.

riverrat

November 5th, 2014 at 10:55 AM ^

Sidetracked by the Charlie Weis comment...wow...perhaps it makes sense from a social justice standpoint to pay him *not* to coach, because he is not only horrible at it but he crushes souls while being horrible...

Monocle Smile

November 5th, 2014 at 11:01 AM ^

As mentioned in another thread, what grinds our gears is how former players come out with this "muggle" shit and yet say absolutely nothing the rest of the time. Clearly there are problems. They won't tell us what the problems are so we can help and target the right people, but they'll happily tell us to fuck off and that our opinions don't matter.

Bando Calrissian

November 5th, 2014 at 11:03 AM ^

Gosh, it's becoming positively exhausting to be a Michigan fan. It's obvious the players don't care what I think, and I'm sort of getting to the point of not caring what they think, either. Why is everything becoming so damn contentious?