I don't care for them either. 

GoGators!!! 

Mark 

On Fri, 20 Nov
2015 09:08:58 -0500, Woody  wrote:  
I havent liked them the last
several years. They remind me of parachute pants from the 80s 

On Fri,
Nov 20, 2015 at 9:07 AM, Realtracs  wrote:

I have a couple of
questions.  
Is anyone here impressed with the coaches' shirts/jackets
this year? (See photo below) 
The patch pocket on the sleeve in a
contrasting color by Nike isn't really doing it for me.  
And, what's
the weather for Gainesville tomorrow at noon? Hot? Rain? I guess it
won't matter because both teams are probably used to the Florida heat.


Oliver Barry, CRS, GRI, SFR 
Real Estate Broker 

PARKS 
305 B Indian
Lake Blvd 
Suite 220 
Hendersonville TN 37075 
Mobile: 615-972-4239

Office: 615-826-4040  
Sent from my iPhone   

Begin forwarded
message:

FROM: Shane Ford 
DATE: November 20, 2015 at 7:00:49 AM
CST
TO: GatorNews 
SUBJECT: [GATORNEWS] [SUN]: SHOULD COLLEGE COACHES
KNOW ALL THAT IS GOING ON IN PROGRAM?
REPLY-TO:
[email protected] [4]

SHOULD COLLEGE COACHES KNOW ALL
THAT IS GOING ON IN PROGRAM?

Florida coach Jim McElwain screams at the
coaching staff during the game against Vanderbilt earlier this month.
_Alan Youngblood/Star-Banner_  
By Kevin Brockway [5]
Gainesville SUN
Staff writer

PUBLISHED: THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 2015 AT 10:20 A.M.

LAST
MODIFIED: THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 2015 AT 10:20 A.M.

When it comes to
college athletics sports scandals, not knowing can be as damaging as a
violation itself.  

The latest scandal at Louisville, involving alleged
prostitution in an on-campus dorm to entice basketball recruits, raises
an interesting and concerning topic for coaches across the college
landscape. If Hall of Fame Louisville coach Rick Pitino had no knowledge
of the actions of his former graduate assistant Andre McGee, who
reportedly set up paid sex for recruits, should he have known? 

Under
NCAA bylaws, Pitino and Louisville could be hit with the same dreaded
"lack of institutional control" sanctions that were levied against Miami
in 2013 for failing to monitor rogue booster and ponzi schemer Nevin
Shapiro. 

Is it possible, or reasonable, for a coach to know everything
that goes on within his program? 

"Programs have gotten so big, staffs
have gotten so big, to say I know everything going on in my program
would be a lie," Texas A&M basketball coach Billy Kennedy said. "I
respect Coach Pitino and I don't believe he knew what was going on.
Unfortunately, it's our job and we're paid a lot of money to have the
responsibility of knowing what is going on in those type of situations.
I'd like to think I would have known that." 

Kennedy recalled some
stories about how evangelical preacher Billy Graham avoided scandal.
When Graham met with a woman, he always left the door open and always
had someone present. 

"We've got to do that in a different way with
everything we do because we're in a high-profile position," Kennedy
said. "We've got to be sensitive to that in a position as head college
basketball coach that I don't think Adolph Rupp was worried about years
ago." 

Georgia men's basketball coach Mark Fox said it's impossible to
know everything that goes on within a program. 

"You're never going to
know everything," Fox said. "But you do owe it to your university and
your team to have a great pulse on your program and to have a set of
eyes and ears out there that help keep that pulse and know what it is."


At Florida, football coach Jim McElwain prides himself on being
detail-oriented and welcomes the responsibility of monitoring his
program. 

"Well, I think we should," McElwain said. "That's our job.
Some things, you know, we don't have them 24 hours a day. I wish I
could. I wish I could have them all over at the house. I'm here to
protect them. I'm here to help them. 

"What you try to do is educate.
Here's the thing I think people don't get sometimes. It's your choice.
But it's, I'm wrong if I don't try to help educate. That's where our
duty is." 

Florida men's basketball coach Mike White said it comes down
to the type of players being brought into your program. 

"How realistic
is it to monitor your players? I think the first factor would be, what
type of student-athletes do you have," White said. "What type of
relationships do you have, what type of relationships do they have with
each other, what type of overall character do they have. That's why in
recruiting and evaluating that's one of the things that coaches are
looking for, a lot of times first and foremost before anything else,
guys that you can trust on and off the court." 

White said he had tried
to monitor recruiting visits closely, both at Louisiana Tech and now now
at Florida. 

"You can't spend 24 hours a day with your student-athletes
and you can't with your recruits," White said. "But you do your best to
keep your eyes and ears open and have your staff members do the same.
It's a challenge of course at times and it is at every program in the
country. But again, you want to bring in those student-athletes that you
feel like, at the bottom of your heart, are representing you and your
university, the way that it deserves to be represented." 

_Contact
Kevin Brockway at 352-374-5054 or [email protected]. Also check out
Brockway's blog at Gatorsports.com._ 

Sent From Shane's iPhone 
Go
Gators! & Skål Vikes! 
ALPCA #8756  
Europlate #1045  

  -- 
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GATORS: ONE VOICE ON SATURDAY - NO VOICE ON SUNDAY!
 1996 National
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Football Champions | 2007 National Basketball Champions 2008 National
Football Champions | 
 Three Heisman Trophy winners: Steve Spurrier
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Football Champions | Three Heisman Trophy winners: Steve Spurrier
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Football Champions | 2007 National Basketball Champions 2008 National
Football Champions | Three Heisman Trophy winners: Steve Spurrier
(1966), Danny Wuerffel (1996), Tim Tebow (2007)
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National Football Champions   |   Three Heisman Trophy winners: Steve Spurrier 
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