I've never played college football, but is this a "typical" punishment for this kind of alleged behavior? It sounds a little "Go to the hole" prison-style punishment. (Oz anybody?)By Don Williams on December 28th, 2009 73 Comments Printer-Friendly
The player suffered a concussion at practice on Dec. 16 and Leach thought the player was faking.
The next day at practice, the player was ordered to stand in a shed. Leach had him watched and when he sat down, Leach had things removed from the shed so he could not sit down.
Two days later, Leach had the player stand in a dark room for three hours.
According to Meyer, Tebow is not allowed to read or watch television "until later in the week -- maybe Thursday." Meyer said that UF's general protocol for players with concussions is a "non-stimulus environment, like a dark room, and rest as much as you can."
The kid is being punished for following Doctors orders. The ball was dropped all around. I'm sure the training staff new he visited the doctor. There is a daily injury report for injury for legal reasons. If Mike Leach chose not to read the report (unless there was no injury report) and took it to an extreme because he was upset with the kid's concussion that's wrong. Don't get me wrong I all for the tough love aspect of FB. We just need to be smart with handling head injuries.The only thing that pisses me off about this is that he didn't let the kid sit down.
Other than that, I don't see what the big deal is.
Wow...pretty interesting read there.This pretty much explains the whole situation, and I don't doubt a word of it:
http://mbd.scout.com/mb.aspx?s=188&f=1650&t=5362438
So basically, Adam James wanting special treatment (transfer to SMU despite Leach's long-standing transfer policy) and Meyer's personal hatred for Leach combine to get Leach kicked out of town. I actually feel bad for Tech fans because I have very little doubt that Tech will fall into mediocrity without Leach, and probably won't get out of it for many years.