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SouthernDawg wrote: Ok, I'm going to vent here for a minute and feel free to disagree with me.
As a student of the game and as someone who has lost more minutes of his life watching coaches' press conferences than I care to tally, it is clearly evident that the quality of question being asked these days to the coaches really speaks to where journalism in general is. These conferences really are a supreme waste of a coach's time, and you can see it written all over Kirby's face. I don't blame him. If I had to be asked "coach, what do you think Justin Fields brings to the team?," I think it would take a tremendous amount of self-possession not to just walk out of the room.
Sports beat writers used to be not only fans, but students of the game. Questions used to be meaningful, now they're just 15 minutes of useless air with maybe, if you're lucky, one or two pertinent questions asked. Instead of "coach, what level of detail are you focusing on this week in zone coverage," or "coach, why are we seeing so little of the tight ends thus far this season?," Kirby will be asked "coach, can you talk how much Deandre Baker means to this team and how much you've seen him develop?"
I'm just sick of it. Forgive me if I'm just ranting, but these questions really are amateur hour. No wonder Saban has the attitude with the media he does. I can't blame him.
The most valuable information gleaned from these press conferences is the injury report.
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