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I reckon we are never, ever going to be able to successfully convince some people that it isn't the big, bad media that is UNC's worst enemy, but rather UNC itself. The true enemy of UNC is that there is a real, deep-seated cultural problem at the University of North Carolina, at least among the power brokers (top university leaders/administrators, trustees, top benefactors).
Every single one of these people in positions of influence values style over substance. Every single one of them values winning the press conference, winning the headlines, being able to hob-knob with "famous" people, etc. over actually putting in the hard work, the tough work, the grunt work, the thankless work, the work away from the spotlight. These folks always want to take a shortcut to success. They don't want to grind for it. That soft, flashy, style over substance, "to seem rather than to be" country club atmopshere that everyone bitched about under Mack Brown? Guess what. It wasn't all Mack- it was just as much, if not more, the people who hired him and continued to support him against all evidence otherwise. These same people are the ones who followed up their Mack mistake with an even more colossal mistake in forcing Bill Belichick upon us all even though quite literally every. single. other. professional. franchise. within the organization in which Belichick had spent quite literally his entire career, wouldn't touch him with a 50-foot pole.
I hate to be so blunt, but UNC is always going to suck in football as long as the folks in charge continue to behave this way. UNC is going to continue to get its ass kicked on the field by other programs and universities- many of which we routinely out-talent if you believe the recruiting rankings- that have way better program and institutional cultures than we do.
UNC does not *have* to have a shitty football program. It is our choice to have a shitty football program. We make that choice every single time we allow a small subset of boosters to make coaching hires. We make that choice every single time we allow politicians to get involved in our coaching searches. We make that choice every time we decide that we want a flashy big name (even if that flashy big name has been long out of work, has long lost their fastball, and wouldn't be hired by literally any other institution with an ounce of self-respect) at the expense of someone without the big name but who has worked their tail off and grinded their way up through the college coaching ranks the hard way.
Maybe one day it will change- anything is possible, after all- but it will not change anytime soon so long as people like John Preyer and a few wealthy boosters and political lapdogs like Lee Roberts are the ones running the show. The state motto of North Carolina is "to be rather than to seem" and it's such a shame that the state's flagship institution works so hard to be the exact antithesis of that motto. I love my alma mater with all of my heart and I am forever deeply grateful that it changed my entire life trajectory, skyrocketed my upward socioeconomic mobility, and was the place I met my wife and a handful of lifelong best friends. But I am just calling balls and strikes as I see them, and as I currently see them, UNC is far away from living up to its full potential because the leadership at the top is spectacularly awful.
Every single one of these people in positions of influence values style over substance. Every single one of them values winning the press conference, winning the headlines, being able to hob-knob with "famous" people, etc. over actually putting in the hard work, the tough work, the grunt work, the thankless work, the work away from the spotlight. These folks always want to take a shortcut to success. They don't want to grind for it. That soft, flashy, style over substance, "to seem rather than to be" country club atmopshere that everyone bitched about under Mack Brown? Guess what. It wasn't all Mack- it was just as much, if not more, the people who hired him and continued to support him against all evidence otherwise. These same people are the ones who followed up their Mack mistake with an even more colossal mistake in forcing Bill Belichick upon us all even though quite literally every. single. other. professional. franchise. within the organization in which Belichick had spent quite literally his entire career, wouldn't touch him with a 50-foot pole.
I hate to be so blunt, but UNC is always going to suck in football as long as the folks in charge continue to behave this way. UNC is going to continue to get its ass kicked on the field by other programs and universities- many of which we routinely out-talent if you believe the recruiting rankings- that have way better program and institutional cultures than we do.
UNC does not *have* to have a shitty football program. It is our choice to have a shitty football program. We make that choice every single time we allow a small subset of boosters to make coaching hires. We make that choice every single time we allow politicians to get involved in our coaching searches. We make that choice every time we decide that we want a flashy big name (even if that flashy big name has been long out of work, has long lost their fastball, and wouldn't be hired by literally any other institution with an ounce of self-respect) at the expense of someone without the big name but who has worked their tail off and grinded their way up through the college coaching ranks the hard way.
Maybe one day it will change- anything is possible, after all- but it will not change anytime soon so long as people like John Preyer and a few wealthy boosters and political lapdogs like Lee Roberts are the ones running the show. The state motto of North Carolina is "to be rather than to seem" and it's such a shame that the state's flagship institution works so hard to be the exact antithesis of that motto. I love my alma mater with all of my heart and I am forever deeply grateful that it changed my entire life trajectory, skyrocketed my upward socioeconomic mobility, and was the place I met my wife and a handful of lifelong best friends. But I am just calling balls and strikes as I see them, and as I currently see them, UNC is far away from living up to its full potential because the leadership at the top is spectacularly awful.