tm3308
Well-Known Member
At what point did we as a nation become this wuss-i-fied? I'm being serious, was it when the court ruled that dude at McDonalds or wherever that spilled their hot coffee all over themselves should get a bagillion dollars? It's d1 football people, its a workout seriously. Obviously they got pushed a little too far for their capacity on a given day in January 2011, that's the goal of the drill. Obviously the intent is not to put em in the hospital and have some kidney difficulties, but all the guys are fine and seriously it sounds like none of em were ever in danger. You read the sports columnists both state and national and you'd think we had the entire team close to death. The re-donk-u-lous overblowing of this situation is amazing to me. So where I work I have the unenviable position of working with a lot of former iowa state cyclone players, some of whom went on to the nfl, some were all conference big 12 athletes and some of them were just (not meant as a slight) starters for a year or two (huge accomplishment not knocking it). I was talking to one of them friday about this situation and he said though the workout in question sounds "ridiculous" (his words), that they at Iowa State had workouts that would beat them up severely. I asked him flat out, did you have any that put you in bed, unable to move hardly at all for like a whole weekend. He said, "Yes. Sure. A couple times a year." He went on to explain how they would have and he knows Iowa has workouts designed to speed up the process by which you can build muscle, and that starts by shocking your muscular and nervous system which his what this workout was designed to do. ESPN and others have completely overblown this because they have alot of financial reasons to enjoy any big name big ten team losing clout throughout the country. They financially benefit from trashing us, plain and simple. If this was at an SEC school it wouldn't even be reported, just like they don't talk about all the over-recruiting at all the SEC schools, just like Cam Newton is the greatest QB in the history of the world, and a model athlete for how he handled everything this year. Give me a break ESPN, and give me a break everybody that's piling on.
I don't agree with this. The goal is not to push them beyond their capabilities (which happened last week, whether there were other factors or not).
Pat Angerer summed up what is supposed to happen very well when he said that Doyle never pushed him beyond his means. He was just pushed past where he could have gone by himself. THAT'S the goal of any workout that Doyle puts the players through. And there's a big difference between that and pushing them past what they're capable of.