Monday, August 18, 2008

Fletcher Proctor thinks that's crazy!

Fletcher Proctor just thinks that Urban Meyer aka the old bawl coach is crying yet again. First it was that he was SO proud of his team DESPITE getting waxed by LSU in 2005. Then it was crying to get into the BCSCG in 2006, then it was that UGA hurt his feelings with the celebration.
Come on Urban Meyer, just admit that Urban Meyer got out-Urban Meyered.

Fletcher Proctor just wants Urban Meyer to stop with thinking that the celebration was way bigger than it was. Does Fletcher Proctor's memory serve Fletcher Proctor correctly when Fletcher Proctor remembers that the celebration happened IN THE FIRST QUARTER? Couldn't Urban Meyer fire Urban Meyer's troops up RIGHT THEN to win that game? Are you telling Fletcher Proctor that Urban Meyer wasn't good enough as a coach to do that?

Believe Fletcher Proctor or not, but Fletcher Proctor thinks that this year's Urban Meyer team is just USC 2005-06 remixed. That team was ALL offense with NO defense and Fletcher Proctor thinks that's what Urban Meyers team is this year. Urban Meyer has a great offense (that STILL doesn't work against great defenses, see Auburn, LSU, UGA, etc.) and not a lot of defense this year, so it might be YET ANOTHER 9-4, well maybe 10-3 team again this season. Sorry Urban Meyer. Would that get Urban crying again?

Fletcher Proctor just thinks that Urban's elephant-like memory is going to hurt Urban Meyer's team in that Urban Meyer's team will be TOO jacked up to play Urban Meyer's opponent on that first November weekend and Urban Meyer may not EVER forget what happened last year, but Fletcher Proctor thinks that Urban Meyer would serve Urban Meyer's team better to just forget it and move along.

PS, anyone that refers to him/herself in the third person in his/her own autobiography should realize that maybe he/she shouldn't be writing it if the reader needs to be reminded who the book is about. And if a person, say URBAN MEYER still refers to himself in the third person, he deserves to be danced upon as punishment. That's what Fletcher Proctor thinks!

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