With all the Head Coach Sparano love that is floating around, I thought this would add a nice perspective to the discussion:
http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpa...7A15754C0A9639C8B63&sec=&spon=&pagewanted=all
4 a days?
The Saban comparison:
Tags:
-
-
Boooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo!!!
I do not want perspective. I want complete homerism and total Fanaticism!opfinistic likes this. -
-
PMZQ, dolphindebby, PhinsRock and 4 others like this.
-
there were also a few, "who would you rather have, Culpepper or Brady?" discussions.
-
-
We won the East last season with Saban's draftee's or signees at a couple of positions, his eye for talent wasn't bad, he didn't have the stomach for the NFL though.
Tony Sparano is the opposite, he seems to like the grind.Pauly likes this. -
PhinsRock and Frumundah Finnatic like this.
-
Shula was a leader who prepared and drilled his teams to have very solid fundamentals and then dared you to beat him by out executing him. Shula also had the gift of getting everybody to contribute to their fullest. I remember the year marino snapped his achilles, Scott freakin' Mitchell steps into the lineup and plays at pro-bowl level and when Micthell goes down Steve Deberg (?) hobbles onto the field using a zimmer frame and plays damn good football. -
Saban couldn't wear Don Shula's jock strap. :no:
Saban is a pretty good college coach, where you can be a god and your players have no choice but to get on their knees for you. But he could not cut it in the NFL because players are not motivated the same way, his way won't work in the NFL.
The only credit I'll give Saban was he knew defense and he knew enough to get out of the NFL, fast. -
Comparing the likes of satan to Shula is laughable.
Shula was a great coach, a great man and respected by his players, fans and peers.
satan only had his mouth, temper and self love IMO. Plus a bald faced liar.
Even if he could draft good players what good did it do us in the long run?PMZQ likes this. -
dolphindebby likes this.