You say:The article clearly states how the BOR has used academics throughout the years to prevent Tech from taking measures that would help Tech athletics.
My response: Then how did Dodd have success? Ross ? O'Leary? Why can't Johnson? Why does he get a pass?
You say: It is the BOR, not the Hill, which prevents Tech from dropping the calculus requirement for ALL students, jocks or not.
My response: The required "Survey of Calculus" course for non-engineering majors is like a HS pre-calculus course. My son, who is a Tech student, made that exact point while he was here for Thanksgiving. That doesn't explain why we can't get 15 or so high quality football players if we had a program that kids wanted to be a part of. The basketball team has 2 national top 100 recruits and a couple of other top 250 players. Why can't the football team even sign top 50 players from Georgia? Are you making the point that basketball players are smarter than football players? It makes as much sense as the rest of your argument.
You say: "schools like Stanford, which has tons of "easy" majors". Name one easy major at Stanford. Now name "tons." Your argument is that only calculus is hard--therefore if you don't have to take calculus then college is easy. That's just BS and arrogance. Stanford has higher academic entry requirements for athletes than Tech--the Young kid that played DB for us a few years ago wanted to go to Stanford and didn't get in. There was another kid a few years ago whose name escapes me in the same boat. Again,you offer a lame and unsubstantiated excuse by insecure people like you who embrace excuses to justify the current mediocrity instead of demanding better. A loser mentality.
You say: "Gailey, they did not have the APR restrictions which Tech has now."
My response: The NCAA established APR in 2004. In any event, you have provided no evidence that Ross, O'Leary or Gailey would not have achieved satisfactory APR results.
You say:"none of the other coaches since Lewis have taken us to even one Orange Bowl, much less two"
My response: None of the other coaches since Lewis (after O'Leary cleaned up the Lewis mess) had one losing season, much less two. And that's with Johnson playing far more FCS teams than Gailey or O'Leary (we didn't play any FCS/1-AA from 1996-2000 (O'Leary) or 2002, 2003 or 2005 (Gailey)).
You say: "no Gailey team ever finished 8th in the country either, which Johnson's team did in 2014"
My response: No Gailey team ever finished with fewer than 7 wins either like Johnson has multiple times. But Gailey was a mediocre coach because he wouldn't hire a good OC, and he should have been fired. It's amazing to me that people want to compare him with Gailey, a fired coach, in an effort to show that Johnson isn't quite so bad. In other words, which mediocre coach is less mediocre? The one (Johnson) who was hired at double Gailey's salary? Oh yeah, let's keep him....he's not quite as mediocre (which is debatable).
O'Leary had 5 consecutive AP Top 25 finishes. How many total has Johnson had in 11 tries? And he can thank Gailey's excellent recruiting for his early success--success he hasn't been able to match with his own recruits. How do you explain Gailey's improved recruiting in view of APR and Tech's calculus requirement? I can explain it: he was an ex-NFL coach, an attractive quality, and he had a better recruiting staff. What he lacked was a good offense coordinator (due to his arrogance), which cost him his job.
You present noting but opinions. Even if any of what you said was objectively accurate, it doesn't explain how O'Leary can have a 40-19 record vs FBS in five years, while Johnson is one (1!) game over .500 vs FBS over the last 9 years (104 games). That's a BIG difference not explained by the lame academic excuse.
Johnson has averaged less than 6 FBS wins a year over the last 9 years while averaging almost 12 FBS games. The very definition of mediocrity, and unacceptable except to those who embrace mediocrity. The academic excuse doesn't justify that record, nor does it explain losing to Duke on an annual basis.
To paraphrase Kim King, we probably can't be a top 10 team very often due to academics, but we can be a top 25 team. Things are so bad that people are happy that we just had a 7-5 Gailey like season while playing in a very weak Coastal division--coming on the heels of a losing season, something that Gailey never had. Sad, just sad, that people are happy with the state of this program under Johnson.
I'll express one opinion: You people who support Johnson and his mediocre program are Paul Johnson fans, not Tech fans.