I was sad. I knew that there was no way for him to top what he did in the 80's and 90's. He left on top in 1997- and that's how it should have ended. Aside from winning the SEC Tournament in 2005 and going to Omaha in 07, it was a disaster. It's too bad that LT didn't have the ball to say no.
But Polk I- I'd say he's probably second to Skip Bertman as far as the greatest SEC baseball coach in the history of the league. If Polk I had come along at a later time, I think he might have actually won a National Championship because of the talent that you have to have nowadays to just compete in the SEC. We're about as dominant in baseball as we are in football. I say that because competition makes you better and take it to another level, and I think that's probably what would have happened with us in the postseason.
To me, we were always a pitcher or two too short. Had some pretty good offensive teams in the 80's. But having two pitchers that were good and a good closer used to be enough to compete and maybe even win the SEC. That caught up to us in the postseason though.
As it is, Polk was a major reason for making SEC baseball what it is right now. And his book also had a major impact on baseball in general. When I was hanging out with the Royals in spring training, Brian Poldberg- who was their minor league coordinator at the time. He found out I was a student at MSU and called me over to his office. He said "I want to show you something"- and he pulls out Ron Polk's book. They use it to teach defense to their younger players and he told me that everyone else uses "the book".