Just sayin...
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I think any objective person would think it is FAR from obvious that Harbaugh is a better coach than Tomlin.
By the way, all these coaches, in fact nearly everyone ever associated with the NFL is a fountain of cliches. I think they send them all to some special school to learn how to repeat them.Comment
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I think any objective person would think it is FAR from obvious that Harbaugh is a better coach than Tomlin.
By the way, all these coaches, in fact nearly everyone ever associated with the NFL is a fountain of cliches. I think they send them all to some special school to learn how to repeat them.
The goal of players and coaches in press conferences is to say lots of words that don't mean anything.Comment
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There's a link in my sig that goes through the data if you're interested in reading it.Comment
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I think any objective person would think it is FAR from obvious that Harbaugh is a better coach than Tomlin.
By the way, all these coaches, in fact nearly everyone ever associated with the NFL is a fountain of cliches. I think they send them all to some special school to learn how to repeat them.How is it possible to have the best owner, best front office, best gm, best HC, good/great drafts every year and good FA acquisitions every year, but only have 3 playoff wins in 14 years?Comment
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Let me remind you that you called him "captain cliche" which I assume meant you believe Tomlin repeats the SAME stuff that others do. He does. They all say the same non-responsive stuff. It's only interesting when coaches spazz out on something which, to his credit, I don't think I've ever seen Tomlin really do.Comment
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Let me remind you that you called him "captain cliche" which I assume meant you believe Tomlin repeats the SAME stuff that others do. He does. They all say the same non-responsive stuff. It's only interesting when coaches spazz out on something which, to his credit, I don't think I've ever seen Tomlin really do.How is it possible to have the best owner, best front office, best gm, best HC, good/great drafts every year and good FA acquisitions every year, but only have 3 playoff wins in 14 years?Comment
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Let me chew on it. Taste it. Enjoy it. Swallow it. Digest it. And get back to you. Obviously I know it probably tastes like it smells.sigpicComment
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"and things of that nature" would not be considered a cliche. It's more of a verbal tic, similar to "ya know?" or the famous Pittsburgh verbal tic "n'at." It's the way he talks, knaw what I'm sayin'?
"boomerang" is not a NFL cliche that I'm aware of. The way Tomlin used it was as a metaphor, which does not make it a cliche. My subjective opinion is that it's not a bad metaphor for describing situations in which a player will receive a second chance, and better be ready or its will be his last.
"unleash hell" - I'm sure Tomlin regrets this one, and has probably never used it again. Young coach learns his lesson about making predictions in the NFL. This seems to be very old news to be raised here continuously the way it is.
"defend every blade of grass" - this may be a NFL cliche, but I doubt it rises to that level. Whatever it is, seems pretty mundane, and hardly worthy of criticism.
The two Tomlin phrases that strangely neither of you cited are "the standard is the standard" and "next man up." The former may be a cliche now (and actually Tomlin may have invented it). It's also called a truism or tautology, which automatically makes it stupid to me, but by NFL standards, it's downright witty. "next man up" is probably the only consistent cliche I've seen Tomlin use.Comment
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