joe yaks;842848773 said:
If he switches to $uSC he can major in film studies...then again if he switches to uNeb he can study agronomy...or if he stays a Vol he can major in intercollegiate graduate statistics. They all offer decent CFB in the PAC-12, BigTen and SEC, respectively.
Maybe he'd be interested in the University of Wollongong in Dubai...rugby, my friend, and digital systems security is a field of the future, here today.
tequila4kapp;842848791 said:
I really think there should be consideration for eliminating the signing period. If a school offers a kid the kid can sign right then.
BEAST2324MODE;842848815 said:
this kind of behavior is not what you generally see from qb's, especially those who have successful careers. any other position and it's no big deal, but the qb is the centerpiece of the recruiting class and should be trying to pull other recruits in. glad we are no longer chasing him despite his physical talent.
NYCGOBEARS;842848767 said:
Good riddance.
https://www.seccountry.com/tennessee/tennessee-football-vols-adrian-martinez
NYCGOBEARS said:
Good riddance.
https://www.seccountry.com/tennessee/tennessee-football-vols-adrian-martinez
Mommy and daddy shouldn't be making this decision, nor some 'family adviser'. Wherever he chooses to go, Martinez himself is the one who is going to have to make it work--and is the one whose future will be on the line.Bear19 said:
It's hard to be critical of a kid who changes his mind about where he wants to go to college. It's clear this kid really doesn't know where he wants to go, and is not getting the guidance (from parents?) that he needs.
One fact I do know: Many, many, many, many D1 coaches are duplicitous liars & abandon their offered players whenever it suits them. Who knows what Adrian Martinez had been told by recruiting coaches?
A mature adult, who only cares about the well being of Adrian Martinez, needs to provide the guidance he needs, soon.
Reread my comments.Cave Bear said:Mommy and daddy shouldn't be making this decision, nor some 'family adviser'. Wherever he chooses to go, Martinez himself is the one who is going to have to make it work--and is the one whose future will be on the line.Bear19 said:
It's hard to be critical of a kid who changes his mind about where he wants to go to college. It's clear this kid really doesn't know where he wants to go, and is not getting the guidance (from parents?) that he needs.
One fact I do know: Many, many, many, many D1 coaches are duplicitous liars & abandon their offered players whenever it suits them. Who knows what Adrian Martinez had been told by recruiting coaches?
A mature adult, who only cares about the well being of Adrian Martinez, needs to provide the guidance he needs, soon.
Are you sure guidance isn't a euphemism for "make the decision"? That's the implication I think should be drawn from that statement that Martinez doesn't know what he wants and his parents should intervene. If their intervention ultimately produces decisiveness in his selection, perhaps it may have been because with amazing finesse they somehow guided his decision in some manner that can't be construed as having made the decision for him, but that seems absurd. If they were capable of producing that with this guidance, it seems to me that Martinez should already be capable of making this decision on his own.Bear19 said:Reread my comments.Cave Bear said:Mommy and daddy shouldn't be making this decision, nor some 'family adviser'. Wherever he chooses to go, Martinez himself is the one who is going to have to make it work--and is the one whose future will be on the line.Bear19 said:
It's hard to be critical of a kid who changes his mind about where he wants to go to college. It's clear this kid really doesn't know where he wants to go, and is not getting the guidance (from parents?) that he needs.
One fact I do know: Many, many, many, many D1 coaches are duplicitous liars & abandon their offered players whenever it suits them. Who knows what Adrian Martinez had been told by recruiting coaches?
A mature adult, who only cares about the well being of Adrian Martinez, needs to provide the guidance he needs, soon.
Didn't suggest anyone should "make the decision for Martinez," but rather provide guidance. Big difference, which should be obvious.
It will be one of his biggest decisions, with lifelong consequences (both good & bad). When you see Martinez commit & decommit to multiple schools, you can see he hasn't the benefit of someone helping him understand that he can look at all the schools, consider their pluses & minuses, then decide.
His behavior is immature, which is hurting him, and may limit his options if he decides his last "commit" needs to change. Slots are filling up, and coaches may decide they don't want to deal with a kid who doesn't know what he wants and can't keep his commitments. (See NYCGOBEARS initial comment as an example).
Here are the words "provide guidance" in the dictionary.Cave Bear said:Are you sure guidance isn't a euphemism for "make the decision"? That's the implication I think should be drawn from that statement that Martinez doesn't know what he wants and his parents should intervene. If their intervention ultimately produces decisiveness in his selection, perhaps it may have been because with amazing finesse they somehow guided his decision in some manner that can't be construed as having made the decision for him, but that seems absurd. If they were capable of producing that with this guidance, it seems to me that Martinez should already be capable of making this decision on his own.Bear19 said:Reread my comments.Cave Bear said:Mommy and daddy shouldn't be making this decision, nor some 'family adviser'. Wherever he chooses to go, Martinez himself is the one who is going to have to make it work--and is the one whose future will be on the line.Bear19 said:
It's hard to be critical of a kid who changes his mind about where he wants to go to college. It's clear this kid really doesn't know where he wants to go, and is not getting the guidance (from parents?) that he needs.
One fact I do know: Many, many, many, many D1 coaches are duplicitous liars & abandon their offered players whenever it suits them. Who knows what Adrian Martinez had been told by recruiting coaches?
A mature adult, who only cares about the well being of Adrian Martinez, needs to provide the guidance he needs, soon.
Didn't suggest anyone should "make the decision for Martinez," but rather provide guidance. Big difference, which should be obvious.
It will be one of his biggest decisions, with lifelong consequences (both good & bad). When you see Martinez commit & decommit to multiple schools, you can see he hasn't the benefit of someone helping him understand that he can look at all the schools, consider their pluses & minuses, then decide.
His behavior is immature, which is hurting him, and may limit his options if he decides his last "commit" needs to change. Slots are filling up, and coaches may decide they don't want to deal with a kid who doesn't know what he wants and can't keep his commitments. (See NYCGOBEARS initial comment as an example).
Fans lose their heads in the world of recruiting psychoanalyzing these kids. It's one of the several reasons I'm happy not following the recruiting season anymore. I prefer not to follow these kids as they make up their mind and just see where the chips land. It makes me think fondly of the old days when the closest I got to the meat processing factory that is CFB recruiting was waiting for my dad's copy of Blue Chip Illustrated to arrive after LOI day.
Quote:
PROVIDE: "To make available, furnish."
GUIDANCE: "Advise or counseling, especially that provided for students choosing a course of study or preparing for a vocation."
One thing to consider. Every flip involved a coaching change. You always hear pick the school not the coach, but coaching changes do matter. Matt Corral a very highly touted QB from SoCal has just flipped again to Ole Miss. That makes 3 different schools for him. If Mafi flips to UCLA this weekend will he also be in need of some adult counseling or guidance.Bear19 said:Here are the words "provide guidance" in the dictionary.Cave Bear said:Are you sure guidance isn't a euphemism for "make the decision"? That's the implication I think should be drawn from that statement that Martinez doesn't know what he wants and his parents should intervene. If their intervention ultimately produces decisiveness in his selection, perhaps it may have been because with amazing finesse they somehow guided his decision in some manner that can't be construed as having made the decision for him, but that seems absurd. If they were capable of producing that with this guidance, it seems to me that Martinez should already be capable of making this decision on his own.Bear19 said:Reread my comments.Cave Bear said:Mommy and daddy shouldn't be making this decision, nor some 'family adviser'. Wherever he chooses to go, Martinez himself is the one who is going to have to make it work--and is the one whose future will be on the line.Bear19 said:
It's hard to be critical of a kid who changes his mind about where he wants to go to college. It's clear this kid really doesn't know where he wants to go, and is not getting the guidance (from parents?) that he needs.
One fact I do know: Many, many, many, many D1 coaches are duplicitous liars & abandon their offered players whenever it suits them. Who knows what Adrian Martinez had been told by recruiting coaches?
A mature adult, who only cares about the well being of Adrian Martinez, needs to provide the guidance he needs, soon.
Didn't suggest anyone should "make the decision for Martinez," but rather provide guidance. Big difference, which should be obvious.
It will be one of his biggest decisions, with lifelong consequences (both good & bad). When you see Martinez commit & decommit to multiple schools, you can see he hasn't the benefit of someone helping him understand that he can look at all the schools, consider their pluses & minuses, then decide.
His behavior is immature, which is hurting him, and may limit his options if he decides his last "commit" needs to change. Slots are filling up, and coaches may decide they don't want to deal with a kid who doesn't know what he wants and can't keep his commitments. (See NYCGOBEARS initial comment as an example).
Fans lose their heads in the world of recruiting psychoanalyzing these kids. It's one of the several reasons I'm happy not following the recruiting season anymore. I prefer not to follow these kids as they make up their mind and just see where the chips land. It makes me think fondly of the old days when the closest I got to the meat processing factory that is CFB recruiting was waiting for my dad's copy of Blue Chip Illustrated to arrive after LOI day.Quote:
PROVIDE: "To make available, furnish."
GUIDANCE: "Advise or counseling, especially that provided for students choosing a course of study or preparing for a vocation."
I wrote what I meant - no euphemisms. If I meant "make the decision for" Martinez that's what I would have written.
You think he doesn't need any advise or counseling by a mature adult, with only Martinez's best interests at heart, fine with me. I think it could help him.
His flipping commitments from Cal to Tennessee to Nebraska are facts. And, yes, he has the right to keep flipping to as many schools as will take him.
Bear19 said:
His behavior is immature, which is hurting him, and may limit his options if he decides his last "commit" needs to change. Slots are filling up, and coaches may decide they don't want to deal with a kid who doesn't know what he wants and can't keep his commitments. (See NYCGOBEARS initial comment as an example).
golden sloth said:Bear19 said:
His behavior is immature, which is hurting him, and may limit his options if he decides his last "commit" needs to change. Slots are filling up, and coaches may decide they don't want to deal with a kid who doesn't know what he wants and can't keep his commitments. (See NYCGOBEARS initial comment as an example).
I for one, don't consider his behavior immature. It is perfectly acceptable to change one's mind, and I don't believe his changing mind is negatively impacting his future. The only one's who believe changing one's commitment is bad are the fans of the schools left behind, which I always thought had to do more with ego issues of the fans than the best interest of the kid.
Also, in my experience, and the experience of my fiends, the college that you choose doesn't impact your life as much as society makes it out to be. The most important job skills: interpersonal communication, consensus-building, etc. are not learned via college classes. The fact is, most kids will end up in a career not related to their undergraduate major.
I continue to disbelieve in the magical guidance that will suddenly resolve Martinez' indecision without doing anything that amounts to making the decision for him.Bear19 said:Here are the words "provide guidance" in the dictionary.Cave Bear said:Are you sure guidance isn't a euphemism for "make the decision"? That's the implication I think should be drawn from that statement that Martinez doesn't know what he wants and his parents should intervene. If their intervention ultimately produces decisiveness in his selection, perhaps it may have been because with amazing finesse they somehow guided his decision in some manner that can't be construed as having made the decision for him, but that seems absurd. If they were capable of producing that with this guidance, it seems to me that Martinez should already be capable of making this decision on his own.Bear19 said:Reread my comments.Cave Bear said:Mommy and daddy shouldn't be making this decision, nor some 'family adviser'. Wherever he chooses to go, Martinez himself is the one who is going to have to make it work--and is the one whose future will be on the line.Bear19 said:
It's hard to be critical of a kid who changes his mind about where he wants to go to college. It's clear this kid really doesn't know where he wants to go, and is not getting the guidance (from parents?) that he needs.
One fact I do know: Many, many, many, many D1 coaches are duplicitous liars & abandon their offered players whenever it suits them. Who knows what Adrian Martinez had been told by recruiting coaches?
A mature adult, who only cares about the well being of Adrian Martinez, needs to provide the guidance he needs, soon.
Didn't suggest anyone should "make the decision for Martinez," but rather provide guidance. Big difference, which should be obvious.
It will be one of his biggest decisions, with lifelong consequences (both good & bad). When you see Martinez commit & decommit to multiple schools, you can see he hasn't the benefit of someone helping him understand that he can look at all the schools, consider their pluses & minuses, then decide.
His behavior is immature, which is hurting him, and may limit his options if he decides his last "commit" needs to change. Slots are filling up, and coaches may decide they don't want to deal with a kid who doesn't know what he wants and can't keep his commitments. (See NYCGOBEARS initial comment as an example).
Fans lose their heads in the world of recruiting psychoanalyzing these kids. It's one of the several reasons I'm happy not following the recruiting season anymore. I prefer not to follow these kids as they make up their mind and just see where the chips land. It makes me think fondly of the old days when the closest I got to the meat processing factory that is CFB recruiting was waiting for my dad's copy of Blue Chip Illustrated to arrive after LOI day.Quote:
PROVIDE: "To make available, furnish."
GUIDANCE: "Advise or counseling, especially that provided for students choosing a course of study or preparing for a vocation."
I wrote what I meant - no euphemisms. If I meant "make the decision for" Martinez that's what I would have written.
You think he doesn't need any advise or counseling by a mature adult, with only Martinez's best interests at heart, fine with me. I think it could help him.
His flipping commitments from Cal to Tennessee to Nebraska are facts. And, yes, he has the right to keep flipping to as many schools as will take him.
Regardless of how he came to this recent decision, Nebraska with Frost as the HC will run an offense tailor made for a QB of Martinez's skill level.Cave Bear said:I continue to disbelieve in the magical guidance that will suddenly resolve Martinez' indecision without doing anything that amounts to making the decision for him.Bear19 said:Here are the words "provide guidance" in the dictionary.Cave Bear said:Are you sure guidance isn't a euphemism for "make the decision"? That's the implication I think should be drawn from that statement that Martinez doesn't know what he wants and his parents should intervene. If their intervention ultimately produces decisiveness in his selection, perhaps it may have been because with amazing finesse they somehow guided his decision in some manner that can't be construed as having made the decision for him, but that seems absurd. If they were capable of producing that with this guidance, it seems to me that Martinez should already be capable of making this decision on his own.Bear19 said:Reread my comments.Cave Bear said:Mommy and daddy shouldn't be making this decision, nor some 'family adviser'. Wherever he chooses to go, Martinez himself is the one who is going to have to make it work--and is the one whose future will be on the line.Bear19 said:
It's hard to be critical of a kid who changes his mind about where he wants to go to college. It's clear this kid really doesn't know where he wants to go, and is not getting the guidance (from parents?) that he needs.
One fact I do know: Many, many, many, many D1 coaches are duplicitous liars & abandon their offered players whenever it suits them. Who knows what Adrian Martinez had been told by recruiting coaches?
A mature adult, who only cares about the well being of Adrian Martinez, needs to provide the guidance he needs, soon.
Didn't suggest anyone should "make the decision for Martinez," but rather provide guidance. Big difference, which should be obvious.
It will be one of his biggest decisions, with lifelong consequences (both good & bad). When you see Martinez commit & decommit to multiple schools, you can see he hasn't the benefit of someone helping him understand that he can look at all the schools, consider their pluses & minuses, then decide.
His behavior is immature, which is hurting him, and may limit his options if he decides his last "commit" needs to change. Slots are filling up, and coaches may decide they don't want to deal with a kid who doesn't know what he wants and can't keep his commitments. (See NYCGOBEARS initial comment as an example).
Fans lose their heads in the world of recruiting psychoanalyzing these kids. It's one of the several reasons I'm happy not following the recruiting season anymore. I prefer not to follow these kids as they make up their mind and just see where the chips land. It makes me think fondly of the old days when the closest I got to the meat processing factory that is CFB recruiting was waiting for my dad's copy of Blue Chip Illustrated to arrive after LOI day.Quote:
PROVIDE: "To make available, furnish."
GUIDANCE: "Advise or counseling, especially that provided for students choosing a course of study or preparing for a vocation."
I wrote what I meant - no euphemisms. If I meant "make the decision for" Martinez that's what I would have written.
You think he doesn't need any advise or counseling by a mature adult, with only Martinez's best interests at heart, fine with me. I think it could help him.
His flipping commitments from Cal to Tennessee to Nebraska are facts. And, yes, he has the right to keep flipping to as many schools as will take him.