Yeah, me too. Disappointing.I really thought Franklin had more class than that. Guess I was wrong.
Ditto.I really thought Franklin had more class than that. Guess I was wrong.
I don't. He shown time and again his character.I really thought Franklin had more class than that. Guess I was wrong.
Yes, just do it..talk's cheap.I really thought Franklin had more class than that. Guess I was wrong.
Yes, he might(I doubt it) but the results and quality, he'll never achieve.Thanks, Allie!
I'm not sure that there are enough hours in the day or days in the week to "outwork" Nick Saban.
Agreed. He isn't in the business to win style points with us or any other program other than Vanderbilt.Franklin has always been a little, shall we say, "bold" with his words. This doesn't surprise me at all.
Immature and stupid, but I'm not going to get my feelings hurt over it. He can call our coach whatever he wants; our coach's team will beat his team. "Sticks and stones may break my bones, but we'll destroy you on the football field."
I don't think anyone is suggesting he should feel otherwise, but the oft-overused term of 'class' comes into play here. I guess I'm old-school, but I'd be mortified if CNS stooped to name-calling of other coaches. I expect more from a representative of my university.Agreed. He isn't in the business to win style points with us or any other program other than Vanderbilt.
You're right. The use of the word "class" is way overused, and people are incredibly quick to throw that out as a "be all, end all" factor.I don't think anyone is suggesting he should feel otherwise, but the oft-overused term of 'class' comes into play here. I guess I'm old-school, but I'd be mortified if CNS stooped to name-calling of other coaches. I expect more from a representative of my university.
And if a fan or two from another program are nice to us, then the program is deemed "classy." Likewise, a jerk or two render the entire program "classless." We, of course, are always & only "classy."You're right. The use of the word "class" is way overused, and people are incredibly quick to throw that out as a "be all, end all" factor.