Showing posts with label ineligible players. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ineligible players. Show all posts

Sunday, December 26, 2010

Three more players suspended


"We haven't talked about that, but I'm sure (the motivation) is there (...) The motivation of not getting embarrassed should be high on our list.

- Coach Paul Johnson


Starting linebacker Anthony Egbuniwe and reserve defensive backs Michael Peterson and Louis Young have found themselves appended to the ever-expanding roll of players unavailable for Monday afternoon's Poulan Weedwhacker Bowl. Apparently Coach Johnson has so little control over his players that he cannot get them to make curfew in the backwoods of Louisiana three days before a "must-win" bowl game. It appears the suspensions are for the first half of the game only.

Since two of the three, Egbuniwe and Peterson, are Gailey recruits, I'm sure the Kool-Aid slurpers have already devised a scenario whereby the pair treacherously ensnared the lily-white "Johnson-approved" Young into their sordid web of after-hours chicanery.

This ain't Navy, Coach Johnson! When you coach in the big-time, discipline and motivation don't simply take care of themselves! What an embarrassment the last month has been for all who love Georgia Tech.

Friday, December 24, 2010

Johnson losing control of team?



On Thursday four Georgia Tech football players were deemed academically ineligible for Monday's Weedwhacker Bowl in Shreveport. Starting receiver Stephen Hill, starting safety Mario Edwards, reserve linebacker Anthony Barnes, and woman-beating defensive lineman Robert Hall will not be suiting up for the illustrious game. This incident joins the abundance of evidence in the face of a miserable 6-6 season which has betrayed the fractures apparent throughout Johnson's crumbling program.

Only last Friday in fact were Tech fans faced with similarly distressing news, when WR Quentin Sims, a former two-star "CPJ special," revealed his transfer, presumably to the FCS where he belongs. In classic Johnson fashion, the reasons for this action "were not immediately [made] available" to the media. Sims's defection is the latest in what's been a virtual Conga line of departures in the last year, among them the dismissal of touted A-back Chris Jackson for a "violation of team rules," as well as the transfers of ballyhooed 4-star QB Jordan Luallen and backup QB Jaybo Shaw. Most puzzling of all was the bizarre transfer in early December of former starting safety Cooper Taylor, a Tech legacy and a once promising defender, who succumbed to mysterious "heat-related symptoms" in the opener versus SC State, never to be heard from again.

This attrition only underscores Johnson's growing lack of control over his team, something he freely admitted to in late November. Then, in a statement reported by the Atlanta Journal-Constitution, Johnson lamented his inability "to find the hot button on this team":

"When asked what motivated last year’s ACC championship team, [Johnson] said, 'If I knew I would use it this year. I don’t know. It just happens.'"

You heard it straight from the coach, folks! No teaching or motivation necessary. Apparently inspired play on the gridiron is merely some nebulous, uncertain thing-a-majig that just sort of "happens." As it turns out, Johnson doesn't really even understand how his team became motivated enough last year to win a championship, even if it was only the ACC and they still managed to lose to 6-5 UGA. Maybe it was dumb luck? Perhaps fueled by the most talented foursome ever on the same roster at Georgia Tech? None of which were recruited by Coach Johnson? Do you think?

Hall
The disruptions haven't been limited to transfers and academic casualties either. Last November, B-back and "high character" Johnson recruit Daniel Drummond was the recipient of a mandatory 12 month NCAA suspension of eligibility for... shh, don't tell anyone!... steroid use. And as previously mentioned, lineman Robert Hall was arrested and charged in June with battery for his brutalization of a young woman, an offense which the harsh disciplinarian Johnson greeted with a rigorous one game suspension for the opener versus prolific South Carolina State.

Even the rule-abiding members of the team have been finding ways to run afoul of the standard modes of decorum. Weeks ago, Tech fans were incensed when a seemingly-innocent exchange on Jonathan Dwyer's Twitter account belied current players Will Jackson and Roderick Sweeting turning on their own supporters and openly criticizing the loyalty of Tech fans.

And so the saga continues. Academic failure, attrition, discontent, rule-breaking, and now losses abound, and "The Man Who Wins Everywhere He Coaches" finds himself square in the middle. Surely now is where all that hard-won experience acquired at the Naval Academy and in Division 1-AA really pays off. At the rate things are going however, Johnson may not even need to draw on such a skill set, as he may soon enough find himself out of players left to coach.