Considering that he began his coaching career by pulling down his pants in the locker room, this was pretty much inevitable. He was all bluster and didn't really know what he was doing. Great players almost always make bad coaches. They don't know what it's like to not be a great player. They think it's just a question of their players getting their asses in gear, because that always worked for them when they played. They don't seem to understand the nuances of coaching. That's my theory, anyway.
"Zero2Cool" wrote: