TriCitySam wrote:The Clarion Ledger is reporting that Leach's medical condition was a "massive heart attack" and did not received medical attention for 10-15 minutes, indicating there is potential brain damage.
TriCitySam wrote:UPDATE: there is a report out of Starkville that UMMC has transitioned Leach to comfort care as he has been unresponsive since the attack.
TriCitySam wrote:The Clarion Ledger is reporting that Leach's medical condition was a "massive heart attack" and did not received medical attention for 10-15 minutes, indicating there is potential brain damage.
RiverDog wrote:I never did like Leach as a coach, either at Texas Tech or at WSU. But that's neither here nor there.
RiverDog wrote:I never did like Leach as a coach, either at Texas Tech or at WSU. But that's neither here nor there.
TriCitySam wrote:Well, I enjoyed watching his teams - and he's had effect. Sonny Dykes (TCU), Lincoln Riley (USC) and Josh Heupel (Tennessee) are among his most successful...but, Leach was always so much fun to listen to.
This is a classic: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gGIap2_tmng
trents wrote:Mike Leach was one of a kind - unique. He was Will Rogers with a clipboard. There will never be another one. I made a point to watch as many of his games as I could because he was such a character and you never knew what was going to come out of his mouth at interview times. You just knew it would be rare.
TriCitySam wrote:But in a coaching career that spanned 35 years, a couple incidents hardly defines Leach as a person and his treatment of a forthletes. Fact is 99.999% loved the guy.
Hawktawk wrote:River . Love ya man . I been catching crap from you about daring to impugn a man that threw shade on my team and swindled a quarter billion out of Denver . Should I be critical at this time i would be reminded he’s concussed. As Bob said “ kicking a (250 million dollar )man when he’s down .
Man be quiet . Ssshhhhh!
A husband father grandfather friend to thousands and brilliant football mind died at 62.our tackes played in the system he invented . He had a growing coaching tree . His concepts are utilized at every level of the game .
Leach is widely considered a genius , broadly loved by 90%. It’s not appropriate to discuss your beef with him on this thread .
Jesus man .
Hawktawk wrote:I but as I've figured out River is NEVER WRONG.
Hawktawk wrote:I but as I've figured out River is NEVER WRONG.
TriCitySam wrote: Agreed, but Leach like many inspired emotions on both sides of the fence....but that's typical with a fan base. Constantly complaining about their coaches and thinking they know more. But I thought Mike Salk said it best: "Not that there weren't some things to question, but NOW is not the time". He has left an imprint in the offenses of the college and the NFL.
MackStrongIsMyHero wrote:As a Mississippi State alumnus and fan, I've enjoyed having The Pirate as our head coach. His bluntness and dead-pan humor didn't bother me, and he seemed to hold players accountable to the good of the team. I didn't mind in the least that he picked up the wide receivers' chairs on the sideline when they continually dropped passes. Far too many for an air raid offense.
I can't find where he trotted out his WSU oline to apologize, but he ripped the entire team pretty hard after that Cal game. How the team took it is a whole other thing.
As for the whole shed thing, I think there was a lot of information not everybody knew, and sports media, especially ESPN, pushed a certain narrative. The players Adam James whose dad is Craig James; former SMU running back (edit) and espn analyst at the time. A few links to a deposition from Adam James by Leach's attorney and a bleacher report of emails from players and staff at the time of the incident:
https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/pro ... deposition
https://www.reddit.com/r/CFB/comments/z ... ing_jokes/ (link to Bleacher Report article in thread)
Adam wasn't exactly a team player and was characterized as entitled and lazy because of who his daddy is. Casts some doubt on what really went down when you have an entitled player who was demoted and called his daddy in.
RiverDog wrote:Here's the incident that I was referring to where Leach made his OL apologize for their performance. I was wrong about the opponent. It was Utah, not Cal. 2012 was Leach's first year at WSU, so I remembered that part correctly:
The postgame outburst was similar to the last time his Cougars lost to Utah in 2012. WSU lost 49-6 that day and Leach sent his entire offensive line to the postgame press conference to answer questions.
https://apnews.com/article/87bcbba6af05 ... a1cccef160
The article doesn't specify exactly what Leach said, but it was reported locally that he told his OL that he wanted them to apologize for their performance. I guess you'll just have to trust me on that part of the story.
Who knows what transpired in the shed thing. According to the university, Leach refused to cooperate in the investigation, so apparently, he had something that he was ashamed of or didn't want to be known. Why would anyone refuse to cooperate if they were innocent? Why wouldn't you want your employer to know your side of the story? Or was he just offended that his employer would have the gall to even pose the questions?
RiverDog wrote:Here's the incident that I was referring to where Leach made his OL apologize for their performance. I was wrong about the opponent. It was Utah, not Cal. 2012 was Leach's first year at WSU, so I remembered that part correctly:
The postgame outburst was similar to the last time his Cougars lost to Utah in 2012. WSU lost 49-6 that day and Leach sent his entire offensive line to the postgame press conference to answer questions.
https://apnews.com/article/87bcbba6af05 ... a1cccef160
The article doesn't specify exactly what Leach said, but it was reported locally that he told his OL that he wanted them to apologize for their performance. I guess you'll just have to trust me on that part of the story.
Who knows what transpired in the shed thing. According to the university, Leach refused to cooperate in the investigation, so apparently, he had something that he was ashamed of or didn't want to be known. Why would anyone refuse to cooperate if they were innocent? Why wouldn't you want your employer to know your side of the story? Or was he just offended that his employer would have the gall to even pose the questions?
Aseahawkfan wrote:I can understand it. There is what an employer has to do to follow the legal rules of a job and what you feel you need to do get s*** done. They do not always align, especially when some are playing games exactly to skirt the rules.
MackStrongIsMyHero wrote:River,
It seems you've made your mind up irrespective of anything to the contrary. You've already backtracked from "made his oline get up and apologize in a post-game press conference" to "it was reported locally that he wanted his Oline to apologize." That's two very different things, and there's no guessing; I'm not taking your word on a local report that hasn't been presented. Yes, in the press conference you referenced he called them "fat, dumb, and entitled"; he also goes on to say it was the same guys from last year who didn't play that way, who were tough. He then states that it goes all the way to the top for him and the coaching staff for letting them get that way. You don't hear about that, and, admittedly, a poor choice of words like those will get jumped on by the media.
As far as not attending to players' needs, what do you or I know about that? You're taking the small snapshots you get from the media and extending that to his day-to-day relationships with players over a 22-year head coaching career. I would hope a long track record of abusive behavior would have come to light, and I don't see how he'd be able to recruit anybody remotely talented (as his win record suggests) if he was awful to play for. The Adam James case isn't a good barometer of how he runs his program. Read the linked deposition and you'll see Adam James had lots of inconsistencies in his story and without a doubt his daddy stepped in a put pressure on Texas Tech to do something. The linked reddit to bleacher report page also has multiple emails of players supporting Leach and blasting James. May not alter your perspective, but interesting, nonetheless.
And, yeah, he doesn't have a filter when it comes to player performance, but he also consistently uses the word "we" when talking about correcting the issues and getting better.
Mississippi State fans are going to miss him as our football coach. Rant over.
Edit: He also didn't win his cases because they were dismissed on the basis of sovereign immunity. As far as I can read, that's not because there isn't sufficient evidence for the claim. Now, rant over.
RiverDog wrote:I need to make a correction on my previous statement about Leach and his making his OL apologize for their 2012 loss to Utah. The local report wasn't that he "wanted" his OL to apologize, it was that he sent them out there with instructions to do so. I'm not sure why I used the term "wanted" as it wasn't how I described the incident earlier in the thread, but it wasn't the result of my 'backtracking". Unfortunately, I do not have any link or quote which uses that specific language, but that's the way I heard it described back in 2012.
It's a pretty well documented fact that Leach made a habit out of openly criticizing his players in front of the media, at times using somewhat embarrassing terms like "fat", "lazy", etc. I'm not aware of his singling out any one particular player, but he did narrow it down to at a minimum of at least 5 specific players. While this might have been entertaining to fans, it is completely contrary to any kind of supervisory, parenting, or educational techniques that I've ever been exposed to. I don't think I'm alone in the belief that its a generally accepted practice that you praise in public and criticize in private. If you or anyone else disagrees with this philosophy, please make a notation of your objection, otherwise I'll accept your silence as agreement.
I'm not sure how many players a D1 head coach comes in contact with during the course of a year, but I think it's safe to say that it's in the hundreds. While the vast majority of players can handle such criticism and public humiliation, there may be a very small number that have serious emotional and unstable personalities that could make them subject to profound emotional trauma caused by such humiliation. It used to be that we would refer to such people as "pussies" or "snowflakes", but in today's modern society, we have learned the hard way that mental illness is a serious issue and nothing to be made fun of. Teen suicide is a serious issue, and out of the hundreds of players and other individuals that a major college coach comes in contact with, the odds of him/her encountering such an individual are quite a bit higher than you or me. For me personally, I've had two close friends/coworkers that chose to end their lives, and they were adults in their 30's, not the less mature teens and young adults that Leach was charged with.
Indeed, in January of 2018, one of Leach's players, 21 year old Tyler Hilinski, WSU's starting quarterback, was found dead in his apartment with a self inflicted gunshot wound to his head:
https://www.cbsnews.com/losangeles/news ... icide-cte/
I'm not accusing Leach of being a factor in any way, shape, or form of Hilinski's suicide. But it does provide a dramatic and real life example of why coaches and other authority figures should NOT be intentionally humiliating players AT ALL, let alone with dozens of media, microphones, and TV cameras present. Do it one-on-one or with the minimum amount of people present as possible and behind closed doors.
Aseahawkfan wrote:Seriously wrong thread to be talking about this. You decided to take silence as agreement in a thread talking about a man that died and you're starting a thread debate about public humiliation and such in a R.I.P. thread? Really bad manners. You want to start some kind of discussion of this kind, you should have taken it another thread.
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