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JJWalker
01-24-2010, 01:18 PM
I am not sure anyone is interested in this anymore, but I saw this article on ESPN's website. It is long, but interesting.

http://sports.espn.go.com/espn/columns/story?columnist=ohlmeyer_don&id=4844048

ESPN's Alamo Bowl treatment of Mike Leach controversy more biased than balanced

By Don Ohlmeyer
ESPN Ombudsman


Heard the old adage that there are two sides to every story? It turns out that there are often three -- your side, the other side and the truth. That is the nature of controversy, as recently exhibited in ESPN's coverage of the suspension and eventual firing of Mike Leach as football coach at Texas Tech.


One viewpoint: A talented, quirky coach "punished, humiliated and demeaned a player" for sustaining a concussion by confining him in a dark room near the practice field -- and the coach was, in turn, fired for insubordination.

Another perspective: A player with attitude problems and a meddling parent was disciplined by his coach, who subsequently was fired because a university with buyer's remorse saw an opportunity to extricate itself from an expensive contract.

The first scenario was amply covered during ESPN's broadcast of the Jan. 3 meeting between Texas Tech and Michigan State in the Valero Alamo Bowl. Elements of the second were glossed over. And complicating the entire dust-up for the network was the fact the player happened to be the son of an ESPN analyst.

The controversy surrounding Leach, Texas Tech, ESPN analyst Craig James and his son Adam -- a sophomore wideout for the Red Raiders -- generated more traffic in the ombudsman mailbag than any other issue in the past year.

A sampling: "The commentary regarding the Mike Leach situation is so biased" … "We put the broadcast on mute after your announcer said 'Adam James was punished for having a concussion'" … "This was not ESPN's journalistic best" … "The announcers need to concentrate on broadcasting the game" … "The James[es] had a lot more to do with this situation than ESPN is telling us" … "Give the Leach situation a rest" … "Will ESPN ever acknowledge their conflict of interest?"

According to ESPN, the Leach story overall generated more complaints to the network than any other topic in the past year (nearly 1,700 calls or e-mails, although it's unclear how many of those might have been driven by organized online campaigns). For the ombudsman mailbag, the increase was sixfold over any other previous issue (nearly 3,000). Many of the comments were directed at ESPN's overall coverage of the Leach controversy, not just the telecast, and one network executive noted that the total number of complaints was minor in proportion to an audience of nearly 8 million for the Alamo Bowl broadcast.

Although that's accurate, the number of complaints is immaterial. The ombudsman's task -- and the point ESPN should be concerned about -- is to examine whether the network served its audience with a solid, professional broadcast of the game.

I watched the Alamo Bowl live for pure pleasure, and had my own initial reaction as a viewer. After reading your e-mails, spending hours talking to various ESPN decision-makers, rescreening the game four times, analyzing transcripts, reading court affidavits and newspaper articles from across the country -- then spending countless hours trying to digest it all -- I drew some conclusions.

Some disclosure: I have no dog in this fight. I have no relationship with Leach, the James family or anyone at Texas Tech. I have no relationship with ESPN's Rece Davis, Heather Cox or Bob Davie. I've spoken with network play-by-play announcer Mike Patrick a few times and have always respected his work. I would never condone abusing a player, and offer no opinion as to whether Leach should have been fired. This column is not meant to review the entire body of ESPN's weeklong coverage of the Leach controversy -- there's no way for me to have consumed it all. What's at issue here, simply, is whether ESPN offered a balanced presentation of a complex story in its coverage of the Alamo Bowl.

The background

In September, ESPN assigned Patrick and Craig James to call the Alamo Bowl. The network's first problem arose Dec. 6 when the Michigan State-Texas Tech pairing was announced. This would mean that James would be covering a game involving his son. ESPN decided to let the assignment stand. Citing past games involving analysts such as Jeff Van Gundy, Bill Walton, Bob Griese and Lou Holtz, Norby Williamson, ESPN's executive vice president for studio and remote production, said, "It's not uncommon in our business for family members to work games involving a relative."

These decisions have usually been rationalized within the industry as unique opportunities to humanize the game or a chance to look beyond the veil. Might the real reason be self-indulgence? Although it might be heartwarming 20 years later for father and son to reminisce about a shared moment, what's in it for the audience? Would a father really divulge key strategic knowledge gained only by access to his son? Would he point out a strength or weakness in the son's ability only a father would notice? Would he spill the beans about a teammate or coach based on private information? Highly doubtful.

In a work of fiction the audience is asked to suspend its disbelief. In a live sportscast, the audience shouldn't be asked to suspend its expectation of objectivity. Transparent or not, intentional or not, it seems psychologically impossible for a father in that situation to be totally unbiased. It sounds like a clever conceit, but it's not honest to the fans, especially those rooting for the opposing team.

Another rationalization is the potential for a ratings boost. Would a larger audience be attracted because a father was providing analysis of his son's performance? Only if the announcer had a very large family.

After the Leach controversy boiled over with his suspension the last week in December, ESPN took James off the telecast -- but not Patrick. ESPN's rationale was that Patrick is a professional and his season-long work with James did not represent a conflict. Patrick's professionalism notwithstanding, ESPN's decision put him in an untenable position. In media, perception is reality, and it was clear the relationship between the two commentators could -- perhaps should -- raise questions for the audience. Word choices, phrases, even inflections are subjective. Everything Patrick said could be filtered through the subtext of "Would he have said that if he hadn't been James' partner throughout the past season?"

The circumstances surrounding Leach dictated that Patrick would have to discuss a controversy that had sparked heated emotions among many in the audience. And he fueled the flames late in the first quarter when, after ESPN showed graphics with statements from the university on the firing and a snippet of a Leach interview on why he believed he was dismissed, Patrick said of the reserve receiver, "There is Adam James, who is the young man who was actually punished for having a concussion."

That comment articulated ESPN's point of view for the audience: What happened? A player was punished. Who was the victim? Adam James. Who was the perpetrator? Mike Leach. What was the motivation? The player suffered a concussion. That thesis coincided with Texas Tech's position, not to mention that proffered by Craig James. Clearly, there were various versions of what happened between coach and player, but Patrick's statement offered no nuance. Opinion was stated as fact. James was "actually punished for having a concussion."

The central figures

A basic flaw in ESPN's presentation was the premise that Adam James was an innocent bystander. One ESPN decision-maker reflected this point of view when he told me that questioning Adam's actions and character would have been the equivalent of allowing a lawyer to defend a rapist by saying the victim dressed provocatively. Another flaw was the portrayal of Craig James, in the main, as someone who "courageously" reported Leach's misdeeds to school officials.

Were ESPN's choices well-intentioned but naive? Or were they influenced by James' role with the network? It's difficult to ascribe motive; that requires gazing into hearts, minds and souls. Editing and news judgments are always subjective and, in many ways, are art, not science. But it's clear that what's left out of a broadcast is as important as what's included.

Throughout the game, in the booth and from the studio, ESPN referred to affidavits released by Texas Tech on Jan. 2 to seemingly contradict statements Leach had made previously. Quoting other portions of those same documents, however, might have provided the audience with a different interpretation of what precipitated Leach's dispatching of James to that infamous dark place (variously referred to as a shed, an electrical closet and an interview room.)

The choices ESPN made in presenting the story gave the clear implication that Leach had maniacally sequestered James simply for having sustained a head injury. If there were anything in the coach's background alleging abuse of a player (a la Arizona State's Frank Kush or Ohio State's Woody Hayes), ESPN should have reported it. If not, the logical question became why James, and why now? Actions don't happen in a vacuum. There was a backstory, at least according to Leach. The broadcast team was aware of it and basically ignored it. An explanation was available from the same sources that ESPN quoted so liberally elsewhere.

The broadcast's only comment that gave insight into the younger James' actions was an incomplete reference by field reporter Heather Cox that noted "Before Mike Leach was fired, [assistant coach Lincoln] Riley wrote a critical letter to the administration which included negative comments regarding Adam James' character. He told me the letter was intended … to simply shed light on the situation."

Riley was James' position coach and knew him well. What were those negative comments Cox was referring to? On Dec. 29, ESPN ran the following on The Bottom Line: "Riley wrote: 'Two practices before Adam James claimed he had a concussion, Coach Leach and I were forced to discipline him for poor effort from the previous practice and poor effort during the early drills of that day … He complained to me that we were not doing our jobs as coaches and that his effort was just fine, all of which is very typical of him to say.'"

ESPN.com also reported that Riley had characterized James as "unusually lazy and entitled" and someone who makes "excuses or blames people for things that go wrong in his life." Did this have any possible impact on how Leach treated James? One ESPN official told me he was surprised, at the time, that Cox had not included more detail in her report regarding Riley's letter. That's fine, but the live telecast still had hours to go. Why didn't ESPN have Cox revisit and expand her report?

During the game, ESPN reported what Leach said to Texas Tech trainer Steve Pincock when the coach told the trainer to take James to a dark place. The quotes from Pincock's affidavit seemingly were used to discredit an explanation Leach gave in a 37-minute interview with Rece Davis on New Year's Eve. The network noted in a graphic that Leach had used expletive-laden language when issuing his orders, but failed to offer perspective as to what prompted that explosive reaction.

In Pincock's affidavit, but unused on air, was a description of what allegedly led to Leach's actions: "James arrived for practice wearing street clothes, his cap on backwards, and sunglasses and began walking around the field in a very nonchalant way. He was not wearing the standard jersey and cleats or workout gear expected of all players during practice, including injured players. When head coach Mike Leach saw James on the field, he called me over to him … and asked what James was doing … I told him that James had suffered a concussion [yesterday] and was walking the field which was standard for players with a concussion. Leach was upset and concerned about James' appearance and attitude. Leach said he did not want him loafing while the players were working. Leach told me to place James in a dark place …"

Why did the network opt not to include that background in the broadcast? The motivation for Leach's actions might not matter with respect to his firing, but it does regarding the audience's perception of his actions and his character.

JJWalker
01-24-2010, 01:19 PM
The telecast

In timing the transcript, it appears that ESPN spent approximately 28 minutes of the broadcast discussing the controversy. How was the time used? Did the network make an effort to offer a balanced telling of the story?

ESPN officials generally indicated they worked diligently and did a good job of detailing the controversy against the backdrop of a live football game. Success in covering controversial issues, particularly those with reputational ramifications, is not judged by time devoted, how hard one tries or how well one performs "under the circumstances." It's determined by judging the finished product.

"When there is a story of this magnitude, we know going in it's always a difficult balance to tell that story while still keeping the focus on the action on the field," Williamson said. "The goal is always to keep a balance between clearly articulating the story and covering the action on the field. Can you imagine the criticism we would've received if we just focused on the game?"

To do the best work requires focus. Sports announcers can't provide targeted commentary while splitting attention between an employment dispute and a football game. Their thoughts on the controversy can become disjointed; there can be confusion about what they have said and haven't said; and important or complex facts can be lost when interrupted by exciting moments in the game.

Even for professionals, rambling extemporaneously presents opportunities for mistakes, poor word choices and misimpressions. Sentence construction and thought dynamics are tough enough without trying to concentrate on two things simultaneously. Which might explain why this telecast was Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde.

When the production crew focused on the game, the broadcast was fine -- engaging pictures, excellent graphics, relevant replays, and interesting information and insights rendered by the broadcasters. However, when the telecast was bifurcated with the video from the field and announcers commenting on the dispute and covering the game at the same time, the result was dreadful.

The announcers talked off-game over plays, replays, the referees' penalty calls and even each other. They had to interrupt what amounted to a sports radio talk show about Leach to pick up, in progress, several big plays, including a touchdown. They misidentified players and were late recognizing a fake field goal attempt. At one point, they went nine plays without verbalizing down and distance.

It's infuriating to sports fans when announcers ignore what's happening on the field. It subconsciously says to the viewers "What we're talking about is far more important and interesting that what you tuned in to watch." And more than that, it's unfair to broadcasters to put them in a position where they can't do their jobs well -- whether that's talking about a controversy or covering a football game.

The conflict

ESPN's handling of Craig James' involvement in the controversy raised the ire of many mailbag contributors. James was a former football star at SMU who went on to play in the USFL and the NFL. He has been an analyst since 1989 for various networks, including ABC and ESPN, in the studio and on remotes.

There were few mentions of the elder James in the telecast, but one of the most prominent was when Davis wrapped up his halftime report by referring to his New Year's Eve interview with Leach: " … Also in that interview, [Leach] characterized Craig James' involvement with the program and suggested James would use his position with ESPN as an analyst to leverage playing time for his son … James responds to those claims by saying 'it is absurd.'"

In the halftime report, Davis did not detail Leach's characterization of James' involvement. But in the interview, Leach pulled no punches, saying of James, "When you call coaches, when you call me, you call his position coaches, both of them, you call other administrators on campus or you come to practices and want to have constant discussions on your son and their playing time … and then you get calls from other people that he's discussed things with outside the program … at some point, we said we're not going to return any of the phone calls. Craig James required more time than all of the other parents combined."

Clearly Leach was exasperated with what he alleged to be Craig James' behavior, but those details were left out. That critical context was then lacking when Bob Davie addressed the issue in the fourth quarter of the game.

"Yeah, if you're a parent, if you sign that national letter, you've had the recruiting process, you've met the coach many times -- the James family met Mike Leach many times," Davie said. "Once you send that kid to that school, you've got an obligation to let that coach and those assistant coaches coach him. Now that coach has an obligation to treat him like he's my son, and only do what's in his best interest. But it's all about trust, Mike. Both of us have an obligation, the parent and the coach."

If the audience had been made aware of Leach's allegations that Craig James had meddled, Davie's comment would have been an indictment of both the father and the coach. That would be fair. Instead, all the audience heard was that James was "courageous" … and the only indictment was of Leach.

Another faulty impression involved the Texas Tech players. Although ESPN showed some fans holding signs in the stands supportive of Leach and spoke of the passion the controversy had ignited, the broadcast was misleading -- or at least incomplete -- in describing how the team reacted to Leach's firing.

On several occasions, Patrick pointed out that Adam James "enjoyed the support of his teammates." Davie told the audience, "You know I think the motivation for Texas Tech is simple: 'Show we can win a football game without Mike Leach.' He's been the face of this program. Let's face it, he's been the major reason for all this success. But for the coaches and players here tonight, they've got a great opportunity to show, 'Hey, it was us.' And we visited with them yesterday. They didn't have to say a word. You could sense that they're really excited about coming here tonight and getting this job done by themselves."

A viewer could ascertain from those comments that all the Texas Tech players were supportive of Leach's firing -- a strong indictment of the coach. Other news reports made clear that there were divergent opinions among the players. To give any other impression was not journalistically sound.

The conclusion

So, again, the key question: Was the telecast balanced? ESPN thinks it was -- and for me, that is the most troubling aspect of this whole affair. One ESPN decision-maker reviewed the telecast and, admitting his tally was subjective, told me the positive and negative comments about Leach were nearly equal. That may be accurate, at a high level. But the positives revolved around his X's and O's achievements as a coach. The negatives reflected on Leach's character as a man, which is where the balance was required.

That's a critical distinction.

Another recurring thread from ESPN was the assumption the audience had prior knowledge of the controversy. Indeed, some who complained about the coverage seemed to have a better grasp of the nuances of the dispute than those responsible for the broadcast. But it's not the audience's responsibility to come armed with those details. The telecast should have been constructed and executed as if the viewer had no background on or opinion of the Leach affair.

That said, there is a major mitigating factor to be considered. Print and Internet journalists have the ability to cover a story, write about it, edit it and even re-edit before publishing. Live television is just that: live.

That reality requires recognition of what can and can't be accomplished against the limitations of a live sportscast. Cover a news story, or cover a football game? The first answer is that the two don't mix. But if circumstances make it unavoidable -- and I would suggest that was the case for the Alamo Bowl -- a network must proceed with caution, recognize the dangers and take a less-is-more approach. It must remember that one man's opinion is another man's bias. That it is critical to concentrate on presenting all of the relevant facts. That shades of bias will always creep into a telecast and must be accounted for. That announcers are human beings, and that the challenge is to minimize the subjectivity and try to craft a telecast that serves the audience first.

In November, this column addressed the Steve Phillips affair and the fact ESPN was criticized for seeming to ignore, on its air, a messy sex scandal involving employees. Vince Doria, ESPN's senior vice president and director of news, noted at the time that "stories involving us are angst-ridden, and we recognize that we don't always do our best work on them. Fortunately, they don't come along too often."

Well, two months later, there comes another big story involving an ESPN analyst. Cover those stories too much, and it might appear self-serving. Cover them too little, and it's deemed a cover-up. That's the reality and the curse for ESPN.

Controversies lurk around every corner, and conflicts are troublesome for any company. Of course, they're particularly dangerous if a large part of your business relies on being perceived by an audience as factual, fair and credible.

As ESPN grows, so will the conflicts. All the policies in the world won't cover the potential scenarios. The company needs to develop a hypersensitivity to such developments. News decisions in these cases must not be resolved by asking "What's permissible for the employee?" but rather "What's fair to the audience?"

Emerson1
01-24-2010, 01:28 PM
Someone summarize

NateDawg39
01-24-2010, 01:44 PM
Basically, he is saying, ESPN needs to learn to concentrate on the GAME and not the supposed things that they assume are going on off the field with those teams. Or as with the GMAC Bowl, talk about the game and not the NC game. He made some good points people have been trying to get others to realize for a while now, that, ESPN is very biased towards every situation. Even without all the facts, they pick the side that benefits them.

JJWalker
01-24-2010, 01:54 PM
Originally posted by Emerson1
Someone summarize

I think this summarizes it well enough.

As ESPN grows, so will the conflicts. All the policies in the world won't cover the potential scenarios. The company needs to develop a hypersensitivity to such developments. News decisions in these cases must not be resolved by asking "What's permissible for the employee?" but rather "What's fair to the audience?"

STANG RED
01-24-2010, 02:01 PM
Originally posted by Emerson1
Someone summarize

In a very eloquent and diplomatic way, he told ESPN they screwed the pooch on this one. He did offer up a few excuses for why they did, and explained how easy it would be for them to screw it up as badly as they did. But he didn’t really pull many punches on them. It’s a very good article. You should take the whole 5 minutes it would take to read it. I don’t think your head will explode. But I could be wrong.:D

bobcat4life
01-24-2010, 04:23 PM
anybody else sick of this story?

STANG RED
01-24-2010, 04:48 PM
Originally posted by bobcat4life
anybody else sick of this story?

This isnt the story about Leach/James/TT. It's about how ESPN covered it, and their bias in their reporting of it. It's well worth taking a look at and discussing.

Eagle 1
01-24-2010, 05:22 PM
My take?
ESPN is crawdadding after nearly 1700 calls or emails complaints.
"oh we are sorry for the negatives reflected on Leach's character as a man"......after the fact.:rolleyes:

coach
01-24-2010, 05:35 PM
Originally posted by bobcat4life
anybody else sick of this story?


im sickof ppl bringing it up..the only time i hear it is whe somebody on the downlow that is an avid tech fan who is complaing about the situation whe in all reality...mike leached screwed up and his coaching carrer by a classles move that just showed how he really is

Txbroadcaster
01-24-2010, 05:55 PM
Originally posted by Eagle 1
My take?
ESPN is crawdadding after nearly 1700 calls or emails complaints.
"oh we are sorry for the negatives reflected on Leach's character as a man"......after the fact.:rolleyes:


ESPN itself is doing nothing..this is their Ombudsman whose job is to be hypercritical of what they do and it is a great article on the whole subject

JJWalker
01-24-2010, 08:36 PM
Originally posted by coach
im sickof ppl bringing it up..the only time i hear it is whe somebody on the downlow that is an avid tech fan who is complaing about the situation whe in all reality...mike leached screwed up and his coaching carrer by a classles move that just showed how he really is
So I guess I souldn't bring up that the Judge in Leach's law suit against Tech ... ordered that the two parties, Leach and Tech, go to mediation? And have it resolved by February 5th?

To me this is way more than a Tech fan thing. Anyone that has ever considered coaching contracts and such ... should be fascinated by this story and what happens with a coach's contract enforcement attempt.

LH Panther Mom
01-24-2010, 08:54 PM
Originally posted by bobcat4life
anybody else sick of this story?

Originally posted by coach
im sickof ppl bringing it up..
Then don't open the thread!!!!!!! :doh:

Tx Challenge
01-24-2010, 09:22 PM
Originally posted by LH Panther Mom
Then don't open the thread!!!!!!! :doh:

+1 Jeez....

NateDawg39
01-24-2010, 09:32 PM
Originally posted by LH Panther Mom
Then don't open the thread!!!!!!! :doh: X100.....:rolleyes:


Oh and it is always the same people complaining about it being brought up to just in case someone was wondering

coach
01-24-2010, 10:00 PM
Originally posted by LH Panther Mom
Then don't open the thread!!!!!!! :doh:

im just tired of tech ppl cpomplaining...yall arent going to win much anyway lol

Old Tiger
01-24-2010, 10:01 PM
I don't see why Tech people are still complaining...they got a hell of a lot better coach in Tuberville than Leach ever was.

coach
01-24-2010, 10:03 PM
what are you talking about? his greatest season ever was a cotton bowl loss

NateDawg39
01-24-2010, 10:07 PM
Originally posted by coach
im just tired of tech ppl cpomplaining...yall arent going to win much anyway lol Im not a tech fan...but I think it was handled terribly by all parties especially the administration

coach
01-24-2010, 10:08 PM
i honestly think if leach doesnt try and file a law suit on them then he is still the coach

NateDawg39
01-24-2010, 10:11 PM
Originally posted by coach
i honestly think if leach doesnt try and file a law suit on them then he is still the coach lol they fired him before the lawsuit I thought

coach
01-24-2010, 10:17 PM
Originally posted by NateDawg39
lol they fired him before the lawsuit I thought

no i dont think they did...i could be wrong though

NateDawg39
01-24-2010, 10:18 PM
Originally posted by coach
no i dont think they did...i could be wrong though Yea he filed after he was fired.

Eagle 1
01-24-2010, 10:40 PM
Originally posted by Txbroadcaster
ESPN itself is doing nothing..this is their Ombudsman whose job is to be hypercritical of what they do and it is a great article on the whole subject
Really? Even though its an ESPN website?
http://sports.espn.go.com/espn/columns/story?columnist=ohlmeyer_don&id=4844048

That's kind of like me being critical of me. :D

LE Dad
01-24-2010, 10:48 PM
Originally posted by Eagle 1
Really? Even though its an ESPN website?
http://sports.espn.go.com/espn/columns/story?columnist=ohlmeyer_don&id=4844048

That's kind of like me being critical of me. :D He is paid by ESPN. If you have a complaint or a comment about a show or anything a annoucer does, he acts as an objective go between. He is free to voice his views. If you have a complaint about ESPN he is the man to email.

STANG RED
01-24-2010, 10:55 PM
Originally posted by coach
no i dont think they did...i could be wrong though

Yep your wrong. He filed an injunction in an attempt to be able to coach in the bowl game. Then they fired him, then he filed the lawsuit.

Tx Challenge
01-24-2010, 11:13 PM
I guess my beef here is simple. Being an Auburn person I love Tubbs. Makes me a TT fan just on that alone. Having a kid at TT, I think Leach got screwed. That is my OPINION. Nothing more nothing less. If the fine folks that support Tech want to talk LET THEM.. The situation there is no different than a lot of things that go on. If you are "tired" or don't want to hear anything else, as LHPM stated. Dont open the thread.

Txbroadcaster
01-24-2010, 11:21 PM
Originally posted by Eagle 1
Really? Even though its an ESPN website?
http://sports.espn.go.com/espn/columns/story?columnist=ohlmeyer_don&id=4844048

That's kind of like me being critical of me. :D

He is paid to do what he does..examine and comment on the coverage of ESPN and be the middle man...They switch them regulary for the simple fact they always want the person in that position to be able to stay nuetral and have a fresh voice

As much as ESPN does wrong..the fact they even publish what he says shows they at least are transprant on issues...Almost EVERY major media outlet has someone in this position, but FEW acxtually post their opinions for the reader/viewer to see

Maroon87
01-24-2010, 11:37 PM
Originally posted by Eagle 1
Really? Even though its an ESPN website?
http://sports.espn.go.com/espn/columns/story?columnist=ohlmeyer_don&id=4844048

That's kind of like me being critical of me. :D

Don Ohlmeyer basically built NBC Sports in the 70's and 80's...he knows a thing or 95 about balanced coverage.

Phantom Stang
01-25-2010, 12:05 AM
Originally posted by STANG RED
Yep your wrong. He filed an injunction in an attempt to be able to coach in the bowl game. Then they fired him, then he filed the lawsuit.
This is the way I see it. Leach's bosses were keeping him on the payroll, but told him to not go to a certain job site. Leach didn't think his bosses had any business telling him where he could, or couldn't go on their dime, so he went down to the courthouse to try and talk a judge into strong-arming his bosses into letting him go to the designated job site. His bosses took offense to this blatant undermining, and ran his nasty arse off.

GreenMonster
01-25-2010, 01:41 AM
Originally posted by coach
...mike leached screwed up his coaching carrer by a classles move that just showed how he really is What are you referring to here, Leach refusing to apologize to the James family or the placing of Adam James (a student athlete claiming to be suffering from post concussion symptoms; more specifically sensitivity to sunlight) in a dark place? What is classless about either of those things? If he apologizes he is acknowledging that he did something wrong and opens himself to possible litigation by the family.

PS: I'm not a Tech fan and I'm even less a Leach fan. I think he's an arrogant waste of a football coach that knows little or nothing about sportsmanship and is only worried about scoring 100 points in a game. If he ever had a defense he might have actually accomplished something out there with those dang Prairie Aggies. I don't much care for Pirates either. I just think the guy got shafted by the school. They simply decided they had had enough of Mike Leach and this was just an excuse to get rid of him.

PhiI C
01-25-2010, 08:21 AM
Originally posted by LH Panther Mom
Then don't open the thread!!!!!!! :doh:

AMEN!

Espcially since the thread title made it very clear what the subject matter was about.

3afan
01-25-2010, 08:28 AM
Originally posted by coach
im sickof ppl bringing it up..the only time i hear it is whe somebody on the downlow that is an avid tech fan who is complaing about the situation whe in all reality...mike leached screwed up and his coaching carrer by a classles move that just showed how he really is

:clap:

Eagle 1
01-25-2010, 10:07 AM
Originally posted by Txbroadcaster
He is paid to do what he does..examine and comment on the coverage of ESPN and be the middle man...They switch them regulary for the simple fact they always want the person in that position to be able to stay nuetral and have a fresh voice

As much as ESPN does wrong..the fact they even publish what he says shows they at least are transprant on issues...Almost EVERY major media outlet has someone in this position, but FEW acxtually post their opinions for the reader/viewer to see

Exactly. Being paid by ESPN to be critical of ESPN.
If you put lipstick on a pig, its still a pig. ;)

BreckTxLonghorn
01-25-2010, 10:09 AM
Originally posted by Eagle 1
Exactly. Being paid by ESPN to be critical of ESPN.
If you put lipstick on a pig, its still a pig. ;)


But a much sexier pig....

NateDawg39
01-25-2010, 10:23 AM
Originally posted by PhiI C
AMEN!

Espcially since the thread title made it very clear what the subject matter was about. Tell em' how it is Phil!;)

Ranger Mom
01-25-2010, 10:32 AM
Originally posted by bobcat4life
anybody else sick of this story?

I'm not....I have kids that attend Tech, my husband "walked on" at Tech many moons ago. He and I are very interested!!

NateDawg39
01-25-2010, 10:42 AM
Originally posted by Ranger Mom
I'm not....I have kids that attend Tech, my husband "walked on" at Tech many moons ago. He and I are very interested!! My sister graduated Tech in 06. My dad did, I don't even know when. I went to ACU but attended Tech games all my life and have been a fan of Leach, Knight and the pass happy Raiders for a while now. I hope this story continues to grow and he gets more support from fans, and coaches alike and lets all administrations around the country know that coaches will not be bullied into submission.

maroogreen
01-25-2010, 12:10 PM
[i]If he ever had a defense he might have actually accomplished something out there with those dang Prairie Aggies. I don't much care for Pirates either. [/B]


...I object to being referred to as a "prairie aggie." If I had to choose between that and a pirate, I'd say "Arrggh!" every time.

Seriously. Prarie Aggie? Way to insult a school..our blood is red, never maroon. :D