I do have this habit of writing names down and saving some of their posts when changes are made in Athens.
Also come back on occasion when board traffic is slow and read through different happenings at the time. That applies to myself also.
Interesting to read some of the opinions . . . . both before and after.
I liked offensive line coach Stacy Searels. Many thought he was the problem. Searels was handcuffed during his time with Georgia. Great offensive line coach, no backing from those higher up. Main reason Searels left was for that reason.
Lifted from the internet, below in italic.
Searels arrived at Georgia in January 2007, after serving four years coaching the offensive line at LSU from 2003-06. During that time, the Tigers won a National Championship (2003), a SEC Championship (2003), and two SEC West titles (2003 and 2005), while compiling a 44-8 record
In his first season at Georgia, as in 2008, Searels was faced with starting three freshmen, one of whom was Boling, whom he helped tutor into Freshman All-America honors in 2007. He also guided C Fernando Velasco into becoming a second-team All-SEC selection. Behind that line, Moreno earned first-team All-SEC honors and the Bulldogs completed an 11-2 campaign that ended in a Sugar Bowl win over Hawaii and a final ranking of No. 2/3. The offense averaged 177.2 rushing yards per game, while ranking 34th in the nation in scoring offense (32.6 ppg) and 13th in fewest sacks allowed (15).
Here is hoping that some very important lessons have been learned by those running the show in Athens. Rob Sales is not faced with the same "stuff" that Stacy Searels faced for sure.
Not always about the running backs, and quarterbacks do not seem to do well when not protected. Way I see it.
Keep hearing media chatter about the "strong armed quarterbacks". Good enough. Ever get the chance to ask AM who his real friends were while in Athens, bet you already know the answer. Those were the players that he had meet him in the ice cream parlor after games. Bright young man that AM, brighter than some above him.