And that is what a true leader does.I've had what I said confirmed by multiple sources. He's taking the heat off Tua and the family. People are free to believe what they want...
And that is what a true leader does.I've had what I said confirmed by multiple sources. He's taking the heat off Tua and the family. People are free to believe what they want...
I appreciate him doing that. He's big enough to take the heat, and he still had the final say as the head coach about who plays when and where. Saban obviously cares for Tua and I'm sure this bleeds over to his family as well. Protecting Tua and family is the right thing to do. Also having Taulia means keeping everyone happy is somewhat of a priority.I've had what I said confirmed by multiple sources. He's taking the heat off Tua and the family. People are free to believe what they want...
I remember another great coach who did that as well........kudos to SabanAnd that is what a true leader does.
Tua was on the field because he and his father wanted him there. Not because Saban wanted him there...
TIDE-HSV is the man. Trust him.If there a source for this? I would love for this to be accurate and not just hearsay so that when my family asks me, the only Alabama fan, about it at Thanksgiving I can answer them honestly.
Ignorance has no boundaries... :cool2:I ran into someone today who was very mad about Tua's injury. He is not a Bama/Saban fan but he does respect Tua. He was mad at Saban and the doctors who cleared him, saying there was no way he could have been healed after just 3 weeks, yet he was cleared and that he was pumped up with so much anti inflammatories and other stuff that it just hid the pain without healing it enough to play at 100 percent. Said he remembered Tua saying he was not fully 100 percent last time until May when he had the surgery in December. He also said there should be a malpractice lawsuit and Saban should be fired.
Yes, I know and I tried explaining that plus other things but he didn’t really agree. I guess he just doesn’t trust many doctors for some reason because he seemed to think it happens too often in college where players are cleared too soon.
I've been on a trip and couldn't keep up with this thread the last few days.
First off, I'm very glad to see the great diagnosis for Tua's situation.
Got a question: Someone else asked this several days ago and I initially wondered the same thing: When Tua went to the ground on the play he was injured, did he unconsciously try to protect his ankle as he fell to the ground? It seems to me that when he felt the pressure from the tacklers and he started to go down that he retracted his leg into a protective fetal position which caused his knee to contact the ground first and then the 500 pounds of defenders came down on him in such a way that caused the injury. Not that it changes anything now, but I've wondered all along if this was ever addressed?
TIDE-HSV is the man. Trust him.
He's definitely come through more than enough times. I just didn't know if this story had more legs or not.TIDE-HSV is the man. Trust him.
To me sometimes Tua seems indecisive with fighting against the fall/tackle vs just going with it, regardless of injury.I've been on a trip and couldn't keep up with this thread the last few days.
First off, I'm very glad to see the great diagnosis for Tua's situation.
Got a question: Someone else asked this several days ago and I initially wondered the same thing: When Tua went to the ground on the play he was injured, did he unconsciously try to protect his ankle as he fell to the ground? It seems to me that when he felt the pressure from the tacklers and he started to go down that he retracted his leg into a protective fetal position which caused his knee to contact the ground first and then the 500 pounds of defenders came down on him in such a way that caused the injury. Not that it changes anything now, but I've wondered all along if this was ever addressed?
To be sure, my question in no way is throwing shade at Tua, his family or Coach Saban for him being in the game/playing 3 weeks after surgery.To me sometimes Tua seems indecisive with fighting against the fall/tackle vs just going with it, regardless of injury.
My experience is that when you have an injury you un/consciously -- either -- try to protect that body part. Tua was instinctively not going to respond to the pressure as well as when 100%...that is reality.To be sure, my question in no way is throwing shade at Tua, his family or Coach Saban for him being in the game/playing 3 weeks after surgery.
I'm just asking the question out of curiosity considering the play was almost identical to the play when he hurt his ankle.
Again, not looking to cast blame to anyone, just asking a question I've pondered.We are all sick over this...but CNS is not the guilty party. Life happens...and not always like we think. Groundhog Day is just a movie...not reality.
You are pondering the unknowable.Again, not looking to cast blame to anyone, just asking a question I've pondered.