tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-11175154.post7668448310654904147..comments2024-03-22T05:48:26.129-05:00Comments on Braves & Birds: Chemistry is for Laboratories, Urban Meyer EditionMichaelhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08365733949431139562noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-11175154.post-37220794499637553512012-04-20T20:58:09.162-05:002012-04-20T20:58:09.162-05:00Every article has some holes. The WSJ article on A...Every article has some holes. The WSJ article on Alabama has some holes that Trent Richardson's grandma could run through. But the articles become gospel truth because enough people dislike the person the article's about to WANT to believe it.<br /><br />Meyer clearly had discipline problems at Florida, and those catch up to you in a program.<br /><br />Look at Enron. They actually made a TON of money for awhile - but the discipline eroded, and they cratered. Not a concept to grasp, actually.<br /><br />Presence of success does not necessarily mean absence of discipline issues - especially when such abysmal failure follows, and follows rather quickly.D Mhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/03366238423283920891noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-11175154.post-4766867353695158932012-04-17T11:37:24.378-05:002012-04-17T11:37:24.378-05:00I agree the article has some holes. Is it possibl...I agree the article has some holes. Is it possible though that there is some truth to the idea that some (but not all) of the reason Florida fell apart is that the inmates were running the asylum? That kind of thing seems OK when you have tons of talent and you're winning but if the talent drops slightly and the players stop trying because they feel too entitled or disgruntled, things go bad. It seems like that's what happened with UCLA hoops the last few years.Jeffhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/13859829080871435817noreply@blogger.com