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December 7, 2011

Jerry Sandusky: Two more victims

This is very disturbing grand jury testimonies from two more victims of this animal, psychopath, Jerry Sandusky. It’s graphic, I warn you. Very sad for these victims. I said earlier that I thought Sandusky should get the death penalty. I still think he should though that won’t happen. He’s accused of sexually molesting 10 boys now. He’s a pig and should pay the ultimate price for ruining at least 10 boys’ lives. There probably will be more come forward.
Sandusky:

Brian Mackin secures slam dunk with Garrick McGee

You would think the first thing new UAB football coach Garrick McGee would talk about in his opening press conference as the fourth football coach in UAB history is about winning conference championships and going to bowl games. That’s not McGee. McGee talked about character, graduating his kids and being the best you can be. He feels like if his players do that, the conference titles and bowl games will follow.
He said if a young man does the right things off the field: goes to class, studies, is a solid citizen, he won’t fumble late in a game and will make the clutch play instead of a costly play. McGee is a man of high character and integrity and just what this program needs. UAB AD Brian Mackin, President Garrison and others asked McGee the tough questions about graduating players, instilling character in the kids and McGee was impressed by that. He wanted to be in Birmingham. Mackin and company worked hard and succeeded in landing the perfect fit for the University.

I spoke with quarterback Jonathan Perry, a highly talented player and high character young man. He said the players were charged up by McGee’s speech to them in the lockerroom before McGee spoke to the media and the UAB fans. He impressed Perry and motivated him even more than he already is. Most of the team was at  the press conference and the players looked charged up and ready to get to work both on and off the field.

McGee said he looked in the lockerroom and saw a lot of high character guys. Neil Callaway may not have had great success on the football field, but he had a lot of success off the field reinstilling character in the lockerroom. McGee picked up on that. Callaway did a good job in a lot of areas. Unfortunately, his won-loss record wasn’t enough to keep him around for a sixth year, but he’s a solid coach and person and hopefully will land on his feet somewhere. McGee has inherited a pretty good team.

Four out of five starters on the offensive line will have to be replaced and the defense loses a couple of players but not many. Perry and his group of playmakers will return. If the young offensive line can come together, it should be an exciting team on the Southside. If the defense gets better, it could be a good season and a possible bowl for the Blazers.

McGee runs a quarterback-based offense. He has been the offensive coordinator at Arkansas for the last two years and developed both Ryan Mallett and Tyler Wilson into All-SEC quarterbacks. Mallett is on the New England Patriots right now and Wilson will be on an NFL roster in a couple of years and should be a starter in the NFL before too long. Mallett may be one one day as well. McGee played quarterback his junior and senior seasons at Oklahoma in the early, mid 90’s and threw for almost 2,500 yards. He knows the position. Perry, who was quite a player this year, will flourish under McGee’s guidance. McGee said he will have an attacking defense. That’s exciting to hear.

Conference USA will be going through some changes as Houston, SMU and UCF have been invited to join the Big East. UAB needs to do something about their conference. C-USA can add some teams and still make it a competitive conference. We’ll see what happens to those three  teams. UAB may need to go to another conference. With the ever changing conference landscape, it will be important for the Blazers to position themselves well. But I like what they’ve done in hiring McGee. Class act, great football coach. Coached the Jacksonville Jaguars receivers for a couple of years and was Northwestern’s offensive coordinator for a couple of years. He can really develop receivers and the UAB wideouts can flourish under him as well. Arkansas has had some pretty successful running backs under him including Knile Davis and Dennis Johnson, so he can do well with young ones Darrin Reeves and Greg Franklin among others. He’ll hire his assistants soon. He wants to have a defensive coordinator in place by this weekend and maybe another coach, so he and they can go out and recruit. UAB has 15 commits right now and they want to solidify those guys and add 10 more.

McGee was asked if the facilities were adequate to win in conference play. He said the facilities were in place to win and once he started winning championships, he’d go back to the administration, “and ask for more.”

Class guy, great hire by Mackin. Now if the Board of Trustees can just come through and give UAB the stadium it so desperately deserves, this program could excel. Conference stability will be important as well. I’m sure Mackin is studying that thoroughly.  It may take McGee winning a championship at UAB before the Board, a heavily populated University of Alabama group, gets the push it needs to do the right thing and let UAB build a stadium. It’s the right thing to do.

UAB’s got the right guy in place. Blazer fans will be happy with Garrick McGee. His players will excel on and off  the field. Congratulations to Brian Mackin and President Garrison for a tremendous hire. The Blazer Nation deserves it.

(Garrick McGee will lead the UAB football program to new heights.)

LeBron: It’s OK to be a Nice Guy

LeBron James went on ESPN two nights ago and talked to reporter Rachel Nichols about some of his regrets about the way he handled leaving Cleveland. He said he regretted leaving the fans and that if he was a fan of a great athlete in his city and the athlete left him/her there would be a sense of betrayal. LeBron understood that and said he was sorry for how it happened. He  said he thought the way he handled his departure from Cleveland in “The Decision,” was a mistake.
It was a very honest interview by the superstar for the Miami Heat. I’ve always thought LeBron was a nice guy, good person who has always been misunderstood. I’ve always liked him a lot and have admired his basketball skills. He’s made some errors in judgment in some of the things he’s said and done like saying he wanted to dunk over President Bush; that was disrespectful. But I cut him some slack. He’s a young man and young men, particularly in the public eye like professional athletes, are going to say some things they probably regret. I’m sure he regrets that comment. But he’s a good guy and I’ve forgiven him for the way he handled “The Decision.” I remember watching him play in Cleveland last year. The fans were booing him while the Cavs were beating the Heat, he looked to be almost in tears. This was his home state; the place he grew up in. He was born in Akron, but had been a Cleveland Cavalier for eight years. He is a sensitive, and I’d say, nice person.

Skip Bayless and Stephen A. Smith, whom I both like and enjoy watching at night on ESPN’s First Take, were pretty hard on ‘Bron yesterday. A. said he’s acting like a superstar but hasn’t done anything yet–he hasn’t won an NBA title. Skip said he’s just not mentally tough. Well, maybe ‘Bron is just really a nice, sensitive guy. He’s a competitor; there is no doubt about it. I’ve watched him play. He’s relentless and tough. But off the court, it’s OK for him to be a nice guy. What’s wrong with that? And it’s OK to be a nice guy on the court and in that I mean respectful of your opponent, congratulating your opponent when they win and being humble in defeat. Nobody likes to lose, but losing with grace and dignity is the right thing to do. Acting like a poor loser is not the way to act. You can not like losing, but you’ve got to be a mature man, and handle it with class.

John Wooden was one of the nicest, kindest, gentle men to ever coach in sports. I read a powerful quote by him one time. The Wizard of Westwood said,”You should never try to be better than someone else, but you should never cease to try to be the best you can be.” John Wooden was a genuinely nice person. Did he have success? How about 10 national championships in 12 years at UCLA, seven national titles in a row and 88 straight wins; an alltime record. Anything wrong with Wooden being a nice guy?

Of course, Wooden and now LeBron were and are intense competitors. I’ll give a smaller example of how I treat a golf round with a friend or if I’m in a tournament. I’m so focused on playing the course, as they say, that I don’t think about beating my opponent. I’m just trying to be the best I can be. I want to complement and respect my playing partner or opponent. I’ll encourage them when they hit a good shot or make a putt. That’s the way it should be. Golf is competitive, but it’s a gentleman’s game and should be treated that way. Being the best you can be is important, but showing class and respecting your playing partner or opponent is just as important.

There are tremendous competitors out there like Nick Saban, Coach K and Bill Belichick. They are terrific coaches. But I bet they feel better about themselves when they compete with class. Don’t get me wrong they want to win; all competitors do. But when they’ll look back on their careers they want to be remembered for the relationships they had with their players and the impact they had. They’re strong, tough and relentless, but they’re decent people.

LeBron is a good guy, a nice guy. I really like him and always have. “The Decision” was exciting for me, but I was hoping he would have stayed in Cleveland. LeBron regrets the way he handled it, and told Nichols so in the interview. It’s OK to show some vulnerability. I think people like you better when you do that. And it’s OK to be a nice guy. You can be an intense competitor in the arena or the stadium, but you can also be a good sport and you can show integrity and be respectful of your opponent on the court or inside the stadium. That’s a good thing. It’s a spiritual thing. That’s the way the Lord wants you to act.

The thing about nice guys finishing last is a bunch of baloney. There are millions of nice guys who are winners. How about Drew Brees, who is one of the classiest, nicest guys you’ll ever want to meet. He’s done OK. Super Bowl champion in 2009 and looking to be a Super Bowl champion in 2011. The Packers will definitely have a say in that, but Drew and the Saints are in definite contention. And he’s got plenty of good years left as he’s 31. If you have read Drew’s book Coming Back Stronger, you have read what a class act he is and what a good person he is. He helps the city of New Orleans in many ways and helped in rebuilding the city physically and spiritually through his play in 2006. And, yes, he’s a very nice guy.

Tim Tebow is another one. Just a nice person, Christian guy. Many doubters in the media and in the public have lined up  to criticize Tim for his Christian beliefs and his play at quarterback. Well, he’s 6-1 as a starter and hasn’t lost any of his humility and his decency.

LeBron is a nice person. And I see him winning some championships alongside his two teammates, Dwyane Wade and Chris Bosh.Chris is another very nice, respectful person who has been roundly criticized by sportswriters and commentators like Bayless who has called him “Bosh Spice,” since he came to the Heat. Chris actually went on the show and Skip explained to him why he called him that. Chris handled it with grace and dignity. He’s a thoughtful guy who played at Georgia Tech, a fine academic institution. He said to Skip that it bothered his family a lot more than it bothered him. He also said that Skip’s name for him “motivated him.” He never attacked Skip verbally, just handled it with decency and grace. He’s a fine basketball player and had a very good finals last year, so I expect Chris, ‘Bron and DWade to be very motivated this season.

Nice people finish first all the time. I think Tom Brady and Peyton Manning are nice guys. Trent Richardson and RGIII are nice guys. They are the ultimate warriors, but they’re class guys off the field. All four of those guys are. So I can make an argument that nice guys are better competitors than the rough, cantankerous guys. Nice guys keep  their cool. They execute better. You always compete better when you’re calm and focused than when you’re angry. I think you lose your focus when you’re angry. Your emotions get the best of you.

LeBron could be the next nice guy to win it all. More importantly, he’s showing his maturity and decency for making mistakes in the past and admitting them. He’s a good guy and I wish him the best. He deserves it. He’s worked hard, tried to be the best he could be and admitted his mistakes to the national public. It’s OK to be nice. As a matter of fact, it’s an asset. People like nice people. You can be a great competitor on the floor and be a nice guy off of it. I think you’ll like yourself better if you are.

(LeBron is a nice person who is somewhat misunderstood.)

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