Texas football coach Charlie Strong tells the truth on ESPN and shows why he got the job to LEAD

by Kent Sterling

Charlie Strong is a serious man with a serious culture change in Austin, and it's about time an coach said what he said on ESPN.

Charlie Strong is a serious man with a serious culture change in Austin, and it’s about time an coach said what he said on ESPN.

When coaches and administrators get it wrong in college football or basketball, we carp and shriek from the mountaintops, so when one gets it right, we should applaud.

Texas football coach Charlie Strong told some serious truth during the Big 12 coaches car wash on the ESPN campus in Bristol yesterday.  Some have been critical of Strong’s intolerance for idiocy from student-athletes, but I love it.

Part of being a college student is learning the boundaries within which they will be required to live as a functional adult, and many coaches punt on the responsibility to instill limits that occasionally will work to the short term detriment of the team’s ability to win.  The result is a group of irresponsible adults who cannot assimilate easily into normal society.

Strong in his words and actions has shown he wants no part of irresponsibility from too often-pampered and enabled student-athletes.

Here are some of Strong’s gems:

  • “A lot of times (coaches) think, ‘Well I can help him.’ But are they helping him?  If you see a young man with issues, you have to surround him with enough people to help change his life. If you can’t surround him with enough people to help change his life, you can say all you want, but the kid is never going to change.”
  • “There is no way a guy should hit a woman.  There is no reason for it. If it happens, you need to find somewhere else to play. It isn’t hard. Sometimes people think it’s hard. You have values. Treat women with respect. No drugs. No weapons. How hard is that? I don’t get it.”
  • “I think a lot of coaches coach to avoid confrontation.  They don’t want to discipline. But kids are looking for discipline. They need it.”

Strong hits on a great point, the problem with kids is because parents and coaches allow them to move through life unscathed while being morons.  Not only do kids want discipline, they know they need it.  Parents and coaches who strictly enforce limits wind up with great kids.  Those who allow kids to rule the roost and never impose serious consequences for behavior that stretches beyond limits get screwballs who are constantly screwing up.

One of the great canards of sports is that talent is king.  The truth is that talent, while necessary, is not nearly enough.  There needs to be a well-defined culture, and a culture requires limits.  Strong brought limits with him to Austin from Louisville, and the result was multiple players being told to leave the program.

Between March and September last year (his first season leading the Longhorns), Strong dismissed nine players, and suspended several more because rules establish a culture, and those who violate the rules forfeit their privilege to be part of the team.  Consequences instill discipline, and that was the immediate message communicated by Strong in 2014.

Sure, the Longhorns finished his first regular season 6-6, but the same thing happened at Louisville when he got there – the culture took root, and the Cardinals became a very good college football team.  It will take time, but Strong at Texas is a potential problem for Alabama and Ohio State as those blue bloods try to continue to hang national championship banners.

Regardless of whether Strong wins a number of national champions in Austin, the culture at Texas will graduate adults ready to contribute into a professional workplace with its own rigid culture.  That’s in stark contrast to what continues at Florida State where the inmates run the asylum rather than the adult Jimbo Fisher is paid to be.

Knucklehead programs attract knuckleheads.  Serious and disciplined programs get serious and disciplined players.  Strong has taken Texas from knucklehead to serious, and Longhorn players will reap the benefits of that sea change – and so soon will their fans.

3 thoughts on “Texas football coach Charlie Strong tells the truth on ESPN and shows why he got the job to LEAD

  1. Gordon Whitecotton

    Being a long-time Oklahoma fan and a graduate (1983), I appreciate that our rival has good core values and will make our rivalry and conference better. I am not happy how Bob Stoops lets certain players get away with too much off the field garbage. RB Mixon, for example!! He smashed a girl in the face last year before playing a single game and got suspended one year! Now he is Back. That young man needed to be kicked off the team and and out of school, period!! Because was a 5-star recruit he was given a break!! If the player was a second-stringer, he would have been gone!! I am not going to get into to how OU has regressed on the field the last few years, but Stoops is living off his success the first 10 years at OU! He is the 3rd highest paid coach in College Football, lives in a 2 million dollar home with a moat around it in Norman, OK. Norman is a nice town, but it isn’t Boca Raton or the Hamptons, either!! Go OU, enjoy your show!!

    Reply
    1. kentsterling Post author

      Thanks for listening. I appreciate you taking the time to write. The jury in my head is still out on Stoops.

      Reply

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