here is this week's General Conensus...
<h1><font size="6" face="Times New Roman"><span style="font-size: 24pt;">Send off in style</span></font></h1><span id="size_icons"></span> <p class="MsoNormal"><font size="3" face="Times New Roman"><span style="font-size: 12pt;">By Brian Hadad, The Voice of the Fan
Posted Dec 18, 2008
<span class="articlecopyright">Copyright © 2008 BullDawgJunction.com</span></span></font></p> <p class="MsoNormal"><font size="3" face="Times New Roman"><span style="font-size: 12pt;"></span></font>
</p> <p class="MsoNormal"><font size="3" face="Times New Roman"><span style="font-size: 12pt;">After taking a week off to absorb all that has transpired with Mississippi State football, Brian Hadad is back with the General Consensus. As always, he says what many people are thinking and that may...will rub some the wrong way. While BDJ.com may not agree with everything said...he does have a valid point in many regards. So, I caution you to read at your own risk, Brian's farewell to Coach Croom. </span></font></p> <p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-bottom: 10pt;"><font size="3" face="Times New Roman"><span style="font-size: 12pt;">Hope you guys didn't miss me that much last week, but I knew anything I wrote would get buried under the wall to wall coverage BulldawgJunction.com provided last Thursday, so Michael and I agreed we'd take a hiatus to allow for all the interviews, recaps, and summaries that come with the hiring of a new head coach.</span></font></p> <p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-bottom: 10pt;"><font size="3" face="Times New Roman"><span style="font-size: 12pt;">So to that end, I'd like to offer my own belated welcome to Coach Dan Mullen and now to Coach Mark Hudspeth. For the first time that I can remember, I am legitimately excited about watching the Bulldog offense take the field. I'd also like to congratulate Greg Byrne for the professionialism he displayed throughout the search. After watching how badly Auburn bungled things, it gives me a great deal of confidence in our leadership structure going forward. Also, kudos must be given to the consummate Bulldog, Rockey Felker. If nothing else, he is loyal to his university and deserves all of our respect.</span></font></p> <p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-bottom: 10pt;"><font size="3" face="Times New Roman"><span style="font-size: 12pt;">And you know, I was going to take the high road, and just offer thanks and congratulations……BUT I HAVE SOMETHING TO SAY TO YOU CROOM.</span></font></p> <p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-bottom: 10pt;"><font size="3" face="Times New Roman"><span style="font-size: 12pt;">Finally! Finally you are no longer the protected head coach here at MSU. Finally I can let you know exactly how I, and thousands of other Bulldog fans, really felt about you from the beginning. Finally you are fired. Oh happy day!</span></font></p> <p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-bottom: 10pt;"><font size="3" face="Times New Roman"><span style="font-size: 12pt;">The fact is this Croom….YOU ARE AN IDIOT. You had exactly zero business being the head coach of a football team. For all the cries of racism that befell Alabama in 2003, the fact remains that hiring Mike Shula was by far the best decision. How incredibly humiliating must that be, that the worst coach Alabama has had in 20 years is still a far sight better than you? Alabama knew then what we should have known a year later, that you had no plan, you had no clue, and you had no idea what the hell you were doing.</span></font></p> <p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-bottom: 10pt;"><font size="3" face="Times New Roman"><span style="font-size: 12pt;">Oh, it sounded good. The idea of character and doing things the "right way" was music to the ears of fans who had seen the inmates take over the asylum in the last days of Jackie's time. We wanted to believe that we could have a good football team full of good people. We wanted to buy into what Croom sold us, but it was a bill of goods. We didn't have good football players, and they got arrested and disciplined just as much as Jackie's players did. Croom just said what we wanted to hear, and we lapped it up like mother's milk. And when he took that bow at midfield after the Tulane game, we cheered and believed that the glory days were coming back.</span></font></p> <p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-bottom: 10pt;"><font size="3" face="Times New Roman"><span style="font-size: 12pt;">And then we played Maine.</span></font></p> <p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-bottom: 10pt;"><font size="3" face="Times New Roman"><span style="font-size: 12pt;">That game will forever remain in my mind. It is the reason I never take any game as a gimme. Anytime Mississippi State took the field in the remainder of the Croom era, I thought we would lose. It's not like Maine was even any good. There were a terrible Division I-AA team. They only won 4 more games that year. And they came down to Starkville and beat an SEC team on their own field. That is the epitome of embarrassment. As bad as it got for the next 56 games, that was the low point. Unfortunately, we barely crested above that.</span></font></p> <p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-bottom: 10pt;"><font size="3" face="Times New Roman"><span style="font-size: 12pt;">That's not to say there weren't some good times, it's just that they were sandwiched in between blowout losses and Conference USA teams beating us. For every Florida 2004, there's a UAB 2004, Houston 2005, and Tulane 2006. For every Alabama 2007, there's Auburn 2006, Arkansas 2005, and LSU 2004-2007. There really is no spot where you can look back and remember only the good times.</span></font></p> <p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-bottom: 10pt;"><font size="3" face="Times New Roman"><span style="font-size: 12pt;">The results are just one thing. It's when you look deeper, and actually look at the games and the decisions made within them that you have to wonder how Croom ever became a football coach. I have never seen more burned time outs, more third and shorts stuffed in the backfield, more four yard routes on third and seven, more terrible special teams play, more overall stupidity than I witnessed over the last five years. Croom made so many bad calls that it is almost impossible to pick the worst. If you made me choose, it's the go for it from the 47 punt from the 30 sequence. But it gets a run for its money from about ten different challengers.</span></font></p> <p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-bottom: 10pt;"><font size="3" face="Times New Roman"><span style="font-size: 12pt;">And then you delve even further in, and you have to ask why Croom was so stubborn with his offense? When he arrived, we had a quarterback and a running back that begged to be put in an option offense, but instead we pounded that square peg as far as we could into the round hole. The West Coast offense, thanks for playing. There's a reason that offense is so popular in the pros, it's because it takes someone practicing, studying film, and working with coaches 10-12 hours a day for it to be effective. No college, not USC, not Texas, not Florida, no one could have run the offense Croom installed, let alone one that will never consistently attract the top flight talent. But he persisted, and in doing so he wrote his own epitaph. Here lies Sly Croom, where the offense stayed below 100 every year he coached. I mean, is there any doubt we'll be better on offense this season? That we'll average at least 350 yards a game next year? Any whatsoever? And 350 still isn't great, but it's a decent first year benchmark. Now, if we had kept Croom, who'd be willing to think that? The answer is no one who has any rationality about the situation. We were never going to turn the corner with Croom as head coach.</span></font></p> <p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-bottom: 10pt;"><font size="3" face="Times New Roman"><span style="font-size: 12pt;">From the day he took over here, he talked down to the MSU fanbase. He constantly reminded us of how he didn't care what we thought, how he was going to do things his way, results be damned. This season, he told us he didn't care about what happened five years from now when he burned Arceto Clark's redshirt for those critical 6 touches he got. Then days after his resignation (cough cough), he talks about how he believed his commitment would last seven years. So which was it? That's right, it was both, it was whatever he wanted it to be at the time. There is a veritable list of examples of Croom doublespeak. He promised us we never would be embarrassed again, I assure it wasn't pleasure I was feeling in Oxford three weeks ago. He said it was be good or be gone, but plenty of Bulldogs ran afoul of the law and remain in maroon. He said the players in his first class would compete for a national title, the six that made it four years at MSU finished light years away. Croom set his own goals prior to this past season, he failed to accomplish a single one of them. </span></font></p> <p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-bottom: 10pt;"><font size="3" face="Times New Roman"><span style="font-size: 12pt;">Of course, we would be remiss if we didn't talk about the back-breaking sanctions we endured during Croom's tenure. My goodness, if only we could have used those eight scholarships, lord only knows how many more projects, children of Croom's friends, and total busts we could have signed! Yes, those eight players we were unable to sign were the downfall of Mississippi State football. That one year bowl ban really crushed any chance we had of being successful in 2008. Go talk to Tommy Tuberville about sanctions, Croom. What Ole Miss had done to them prior to his arrival makes the small tribulations Croom got look like cotton candy. Tuberville won five more games in four years than Croom won in five. Another joke of an excuse by the master of them.</span></font></p> <p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-bottom: 10pt;"><font size="3" face="Times New Roman"><span style="font-size: 12pt;">And then there's the final untruth, the idea that we are somehow better today than when Croom arrived in 2004. Look at that team. There are six Bulldogs from that team in the NFL today. In five years, only two Croom recruits are currently in the NFL. Is there a player on the 2009 roster that has the talent of a Jerious Norwood? A lineman that could match David Stewart? A defensive jack of all trades like Quentin Culberson? There's not a single player that I look at on next year's team and think, for sure pro. There's some talent, there's some guys who can play at this level, but all in all, the talent level was higher then. From an aesthetic standpoint, you'd be right, our facilities are better, but any coach would have gotten those improvements.</span></font></p> <p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-bottom: 10pt;"><font size="3" face="Times New Roman"><span style="font-size: 12pt;">Did MSU make a mistake? I don't know, how quickly did another school scoop him up? Croom will never be a head coach again. No school will look at his resume and think, man that's our guy (well, maybe Auburn). Croom's time on the sideline is done. You would think a guy one year removed from SEC Coach of the Year would have gotten an interview somewhere. But the world now knows what we knew years ago, Croom is no coach. He got a free pass because he preached the right things, but didn't practice them. People believed in him, and those who did look like fools today. So goodbye, Croom. Goodbye and good riddance. And when we turn it around quicker than anyone believes we can, you can tape those games and watch the way the right way should have been.</span></font></p>
<h1><font size="6" face="Times New Roman"><span style="font-size: 24pt;">Send off in style</span></font></h1><span id="size_icons"></span> <p class="MsoNormal"><font size="3" face="Times New Roman"><span style="font-size: 12pt;">By Brian Hadad, The Voice of the Fan
Posted Dec 18, 2008
<span class="articlecopyright">Copyright © 2008 BullDawgJunction.com</span></span></font></p> <p class="MsoNormal"><font size="3" face="Times New Roman"><span style="font-size: 12pt;"></span></font>
</p> <p class="MsoNormal"><font size="3" face="Times New Roman"><span style="font-size: 12pt;">After taking a week off to absorb all that has transpired with Mississippi State football, Brian Hadad is back with the General Consensus. As always, he says what many people are thinking and that may...will rub some the wrong way. While BDJ.com may not agree with everything said...he does have a valid point in many regards. So, I caution you to read at your own risk, Brian's farewell to Coach Croom. </span></font></p> <p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-bottom: 10pt;"><font size="3" face="Times New Roman"><span style="font-size: 12pt;">Hope you guys didn't miss me that much last week, but I knew anything I wrote would get buried under the wall to wall coverage BulldawgJunction.com provided last Thursday, so Michael and I agreed we'd take a hiatus to allow for all the interviews, recaps, and summaries that come with the hiring of a new head coach.</span></font></p> <p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-bottom: 10pt;"><font size="3" face="Times New Roman"><span style="font-size: 12pt;">So to that end, I'd like to offer my own belated welcome to Coach Dan Mullen and now to Coach Mark Hudspeth. For the first time that I can remember, I am legitimately excited about watching the Bulldog offense take the field. I'd also like to congratulate Greg Byrne for the professionialism he displayed throughout the search. After watching how badly Auburn bungled things, it gives me a great deal of confidence in our leadership structure going forward. Also, kudos must be given to the consummate Bulldog, Rockey Felker. If nothing else, he is loyal to his university and deserves all of our respect.</span></font></p> <p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-bottom: 10pt;"><font size="3" face="Times New Roman"><span style="font-size: 12pt;">And you know, I was going to take the high road, and just offer thanks and congratulations……BUT I HAVE SOMETHING TO SAY TO YOU CROOM.</span></font></p> <p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-bottom: 10pt;"><font size="3" face="Times New Roman"><span style="font-size: 12pt;">Finally! Finally you are no longer the protected head coach here at MSU. Finally I can let you know exactly how I, and thousands of other Bulldog fans, really felt about you from the beginning. Finally you are fired. Oh happy day!</span></font></p> <p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-bottom: 10pt;"><font size="3" face="Times New Roman"><span style="font-size: 12pt;">The fact is this Croom….YOU ARE AN IDIOT. You had exactly zero business being the head coach of a football team. For all the cries of racism that befell Alabama in 2003, the fact remains that hiring Mike Shula was by far the best decision. How incredibly humiliating must that be, that the worst coach Alabama has had in 20 years is still a far sight better than you? Alabama knew then what we should have known a year later, that you had no plan, you had no clue, and you had no idea what the hell you were doing.</span></font></p> <p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-bottom: 10pt;"><font size="3" face="Times New Roman"><span style="font-size: 12pt;">Oh, it sounded good. The idea of character and doing things the "right way" was music to the ears of fans who had seen the inmates take over the asylum in the last days of Jackie's time. We wanted to believe that we could have a good football team full of good people. We wanted to buy into what Croom sold us, but it was a bill of goods. We didn't have good football players, and they got arrested and disciplined just as much as Jackie's players did. Croom just said what we wanted to hear, and we lapped it up like mother's milk. And when he took that bow at midfield after the Tulane game, we cheered and believed that the glory days were coming back.</span></font></p> <p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-bottom: 10pt;"><font size="3" face="Times New Roman"><span style="font-size: 12pt;">And then we played Maine.</span></font></p> <p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-bottom: 10pt;"><font size="3" face="Times New Roman"><span style="font-size: 12pt;">That game will forever remain in my mind. It is the reason I never take any game as a gimme. Anytime Mississippi State took the field in the remainder of the Croom era, I thought we would lose. It's not like Maine was even any good. There were a terrible Division I-AA team. They only won 4 more games that year. And they came down to Starkville and beat an SEC team on their own field. That is the epitome of embarrassment. As bad as it got for the next 56 games, that was the low point. Unfortunately, we barely crested above that.</span></font></p> <p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-bottom: 10pt;"><font size="3" face="Times New Roman"><span style="font-size: 12pt;">That's not to say there weren't some good times, it's just that they were sandwiched in between blowout losses and Conference USA teams beating us. For every Florida 2004, there's a UAB 2004, Houston 2005, and Tulane 2006. For every Alabama 2007, there's Auburn 2006, Arkansas 2005, and LSU 2004-2007. There really is no spot where you can look back and remember only the good times.</span></font></p> <p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-bottom: 10pt;"><font size="3" face="Times New Roman"><span style="font-size: 12pt;">The results are just one thing. It's when you look deeper, and actually look at the games and the decisions made within them that you have to wonder how Croom ever became a football coach. I have never seen more burned time outs, more third and shorts stuffed in the backfield, more four yard routes on third and seven, more terrible special teams play, more overall stupidity than I witnessed over the last five years. Croom made so many bad calls that it is almost impossible to pick the worst. If you made me choose, it's the go for it from the 47 punt from the 30 sequence. But it gets a run for its money from about ten different challengers.</span></font></p> <p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-bottom: 10pt;"><font size="3" face="Times New Roman"><span style="font-size: 12pt;">And then you delve even further in, and you have to ask why Croom was so stubborn with his offense? When he arrived, we had a quarterback and a running back that begged to be put in an option offense, but instead we pounded that square peg as far as we could into the round hole. The West Coast offense, thanks for playing. There's a reason that offense is so popular in the pros, it's because it takes someone practicing, studying film, and working with coaches 10-12 hours a day for it to be effective. No college, not USC, not Texas, not Florida, no one could have run the offense Croom installed, let alone one that will never consistently attract the top flight talent. But he persisted, and in doing so he wrote his own epitaph. Here lies Sly Croom, where the offense stayed below 100 every year he coached. I mean, is there any doubt we'll be better on offense this season? That we'll average at least 350 yards a game next year? Any whatsoever? And 350 still isn't great, but it's a decent first year benchmark. Now, if we had kept Croom, who'd be willing to think that? The answer is no one who has any rationality about the situation. We were never going to turn the corner with Croom as head coach.</span></font></p> <p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-bottom: 10pt;"><font size="3" face="Times New Roman"><span style="font-size: 12pt;">From the day he took over here, he talked down to the MSU fanbase. He constantly reminded us of how he didn't care what we thought, how he was going to do things his way, results be damned. This season, he told us he didn't care about what happened five years from now when he burned Arceto Clark's redshirt for those critical 6 touches he got. Then days after his resignation (cough cough), he talks about how he believed his commitment would last seven years. So which was it? That's right, it was both, it was whatever he wanted it to be at the time. There is a veritable list of examples of Croom doublespeak. He promised us we never would be embarrassed again, I assure it wasn't pleasure I was feeling in Oxford three weeks ago. He said it was be good or be gone, but plenty of Bulldogs ran afoul of the law and remain in maroon. He said the players in his first class would compete for a national title, the six that made it four years at MSU finished light years away. Croom set his own goals prior to this past season, he failed to accomplish a single one of them. </span></font></p> <p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-bottom: 10pt;"><font size="3" face="Times New Roman"><span style="font-size: 12pt;">Of course, we would be remiss if we didn't talk about the back-breaking sanctions we endured during Croom's tenure. My goodness, if only we could have used those eight scholarships, lord only knows how many more projects, children of Croom's friends, and total busts we could have signed! Yes, those eight players we were unable to sign were the downfall of Mississippi State football. That one year bowl ban really crushed any chance we had of being successful in 2008. Go talk to Tommy Tuberville about sanctions, Croom. What Ole Miss had done to them prior to his arrival makes the small tribulations Croom got look like cotton candy. Tuberville won five more games in four years than Croom won in five. Another joke of an excuse by the master of them.</span></font></p> <p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-bottom: 10pt;"><font size="3" face="Times New Roman"><span style="font-size: 12pt;">And then there's the final untruth, the idea that we are somehow better today than when Croom arrived in 2004. Look at that team. There are six Bulldogs from that team in the NFL today. In five years, only two Croom recruits are currently in the NFL. Is there a player on the 2009 roster that has the talent of a Jerious Norwood? A lineman that could match David Stewart? A defensive jack of all trades like Quentin Culberson? There's not a single player that I look at on next year's team and think, for sure pro. There's some talent, there's some guys who can play at this level, but all in all, the talent level was higher then. From an aesthetic standpoint, you'd be right, our facilities are better, but any coach would have gotten those improvements.</span></font></p> <p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-bottom: 10pt;"><font size="3" face="Times New Roman"><span style="font-size: 12pt;">Did MSU make a mistake? I don't know, how quickly did another school scoop him up? Croom will never be a head coach again. No school will look at his resume and think, man that's our guy (well, maybe Auburn). Croom's time on the sideline is done. You would think a guy one year removed from SEC Coach of the Year would have gotten an interview somewhere. But the world now knows what we knew years ago, Croom is no coach. He got a free pass because he preached the right things, but didn't practice them. People believed in him, and those who did look like fools today. So goodbye, Croom. Goodbye and good riddance. And when we turn it around quicker than anyone believes we can, you can tape those games and watch the way the right way should have been.</span></font></p>