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Why Georgia Tech likely will never adopt the shotgun again
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<blockquote data-quote="Sebastian GT" data-source="post: 378702" data-attributes="member: 426"><p>Agreed. This is the kind of crap that drives me nuts about Johnson. Unlike Friedgen who was willing to run just about anything in an effort to put Tech in the best position to win Johnson only seems to want to win if it's running his same handful of mostly option plays under center and is totally against going outside of that. It's like he is bound and determined to prove the whole world wrong regardless of the consequences to the program and the athletes he's recruited. I find it funny that most all of his disciples that are head coaches have taken his offense and expanded on it in some very creative ways. I guess "it is what it is" until either he decides to move on or Stansbury decides to move on from him. Being stubborn as hell and intellectually lazy is not a good way to run a power 5 football program.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Sebastian GT, post: 378702, member: 426"] Agreed. This is the kind of crap that drives me nuts about Johnson. Unlike Friedgen who was willing to run just about anything in an effort to put Tech in the best position to win Johnson only seems to want to win if it's running his same handful of mostly option plays under center and is totally against going outside of that. It's like he is bound and determined to prove the whole world wrong regardless of the consequences to the program and the athletes he's recruited. I find it funny that most all of his disciples that are head coaches have taken his offense and expanded on it in some very creative ways. I guess "it is what it is" until either he decides to move on or Stansbury decides to move on from him. Being stubborn as hell and intellectually lazy is not a good way to run a power 5 football program. [/QUOTE]
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Why Georgia Tech likely will never adopt the shotgun again
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