w*****2 发帖数: 1458 | 2 I'm rolling with Les Miles too.
You're either a Nick Saban guy or a Les Miles guy.
As the Grass Bowl inches closer and the biggest regular season game in SEC
history nears, it's become an incontrovertible fact, you're riding with Les
or you're rolling with Saban. The single most fascinating aspect to this
game is the extreme differences beetween the two men helming their
respective teams. One man coaches based on rigroous gameplanning and data
points, the other believes in football karma, the gods of the sod.
If you're a Saban guy you don't believe in karma or ghosts or anything
outside the realm of game film. You're a process guy, a rigorous applier of
logic to a game or your own life. Nick Saban is very smart like lots of men
are very smart. I guarantee you Saban was good at math, he coaches football
like it's a difficult equation to solve. Input the right weight at
linebacker, the mammoth defensive tackle and the corners with loose hips and
the result is the stifling of movement. Football to Nick Saban is a process
, but it's also an equation that he's solved.
Please excuse my dear Uncle Nick. (It's algebra, stupid!)
Rooting for Nick Saban is like rooting for the industrial revolution, it
feels inevitable. Football as science, robotics meets pads. Nick Saban's men
play like well-oiled machines, a cheoreographed march of destruction.
Anything that interferes with that march is an annoyance. Ask LSU people
what working under Nick Saban was like and they'll be quiet for a long time
and then say, after requesting anonymit, "The guy's a complete ass----." All
he cares about in life is winning football games.
That's it.
The process is simple, apply it, fulfill the equation, and you win. But
these wins don't make Nick Saban happy. Look at him on the sideline. Look at
him anywhere. This is a profoundly unhappy man. He's not relishing in the
joy of the moment, he's not joyful. At no point in life has football brought
him joy. It's hard work, the science of gridiron conquest. Now compare him
with Les Miles on a Saturday. Miles relishes each moment; there is nothing
in life he would rather be doing. Football is fun. Put simply, Nick Saban
would never eat grass to connect with the karma of the game. If you asked
Nick Saban about eating grass at a press conference, as I asked Les Miles,
Saban would stare at you like Darth Vader, lift his right hand, and choke
you to death.
On the contrary, here was Les Miles when I asked him about grass eating.
Unlike Nick Saban Les Miles believes in the Gods of the Sod.
He coaches by intuition, feel. He's smarter at gameplanning than he's given
credit for -- last year Miles outcoached Saban -- but ultimately football is
a karmic discipline for Les Miles. Before big plays you lean over and
humble yourself before the altar of competition. And for this piety, he's
been rewarded with some of the most amazing wins in SEC history. In the past
, I've called them Milacles. But now I think that's unfair to Les, if good
fortune keeps happening to the same person, it's something more than luck.
Fortune favors the bold. (Especially if he eats grass).
Talk to SEC officials about Les Miles and they'll tell you that he's the
easiest coach to get along with on the sideline. He'll talk about things
that have nothing to do with football during game stoppages. Talk to LSU
athletic department employees and they'll regale you with stories about
Miles stopping them in the hallway. He knows their birthdays, their kids'
names. The day after Les Miles admitted to eating grass the LSU sports
information department put out grass clippings as part of the media meal.
Try that in Tuscaloosa.
Les Miles guys aren't that good at math and they aren't that good at five
year plans. Process? They laugh at process. Les Miles guys go off on long
meandering journeys where the trip itself is the purpose. Nick Saban hasn't
taken a purposeless trip in his life. That's why Miles is the perfect foil
to Nick Saban. You can't out-Saban Saban, not consistently, but you can
throw him for a loop by being a little bit loopy. When Nick Saban prepares
to coach against someone like him, he wins. When he tries to prepare for Les
Miles, he can't quite get inside his opponent's head. It's too wacky for
him in there, the leaps of logic are too large, intuition often dictates
different choices than logic.
It's hard to process grass eating.
Inevitably process meets grass in the world of sports, but also in the
larger world. Disciples of both paths can have great success. Steve Jobs? He
's a Les Miles guy. Bill Gates? He's a Nick Saban guy. George W. Bush, for
better and worse, was a Les Miles man, Jimmy Carter, for better and worse,
was a Nick Saban man.
Apply the rough outlines of each man's life to your own or to other
successful men's and you find, time and again, that the conflict between
process and grass occurs over and over. Nick Saban wouldn't acknowledge
karma, but it's the yin to each man's yang, the flip of a coin, the test of
chance, when an unbroken equation finds an outlier that doesn't make sense.
Ultimately the clash between process and grass is cataclysmic, like matter
and anti-matter colliding.
For most of this season the two men's teams have been stalking one another,
destroying foe after foe, always focused on the task at hand but
occasionally looking over their shoulder at one another's games. Now comes
the epic fight, the heavyweight clash, process vs. the grass.
Nick Saban is 44-5 in his last 49 games, but he's only 2-2 against Les Miles
. Meanwhile, Les is seeking a second national title that is entirely of his
own making. The two men have the best teams two teams in the country. In
head-to-head contests, they're completely even.
Now grass meets process and every single college football fan in the country
will be rooting for Les or Saban.
Are you a Les guy or a Saban guy?
The answer to that question will go a long way towards telling you who you'
re rooting for in the biggest game in SEC history.
For me, there's no doubt at all -- I'm rolling with Les. |