Vindicate
In the Starting Line-Up
- Joined
- Oct 2, 2015
- Messages
- 4,161
- Reaction score
- 5,984
But my concern would be that this would turn his coaches on him too. "Why does Mayo dump all the film work on us while he goes and plays cards and screws around? Why should I have to do his work for him?" Especially considering he didn't really "earn" his job in the first place, he should have been busting his butt, not dumping his work on others.
If there is one thing you learn in leadership, it's that - regardless of you wanting to admit it or not - you are segmented out into classes, so-to-speak. When you are a coach, the closest allies you have are other coaches. Only the other coaches understand the experience of being a coach. You use this to build strength and unity within your class. You trust that your players will respond, you don't feel the need to buddy up with them over your own class, the coaches. Let Maye be that leader. Let Maye play cards. That's his realm. Trust him. Work with your ****ing coaches.
At that point, you are in a no-man's-land. You are not a player anymore, so you're simply not going to ever be... fully a player. You do not share the same experience as them any more. But if you're avoiding coaching, you're going to be dismissed by your own class of workers.
The only reason the Belichick-Brady meld worked is because they both understood this point more than potentially any HC+QB pairing in NFL history. Emblematic of this is when Brady demanded that Belichick be just as hard on him as he was other players, because Brady, wanting to be a leader of players, needed to show that he, too, shared the exact same experience as those he was leading on any given Sunday. Or Saturday. Or Monday. Or whatever day you're playing football, whatever.












