
WSJ Photo by Walt Unks
http://www.journalnow.com/sports/asu/fo ... 1785d.html Feature by Bret Strelow
Saint3333 wrote:You can have passion and drive, but still be smart about it. Having a reputation as someone that gets a personal foul a game isn't a positive for him. As a fringe NFLer he must learn to control himself. He isn't going to be good enough to get away with that crap at the next level.
I may be in the minority here, but that drove me crazy the last two years.
You must have blocked out the one from the Troy game. Understandable coping mechanism. But yes, the reputation gets exaggerated a bit sometimes.TheMackAttack wrote:Saint3333 wrote:You can have passion and drive, but still be smart about it. Having a reputation as someone that gets a personal foul a game isn't a positive for him. As a fringe NFLer he must learn to control himself. He isn't going to be good enough to get away with that crap at the next level.
I may be in the minority here, but that drove me crazy the last two years.
I'm pretty sure that Parker Collins only got one personal foul flag last year. If you take away the very first drive of the season, he went 13 games without one. Maybe he has that reputation because people keep saying things like that without actually considering the facts.
If he is playing hard, as he often is, he likely has his sights set on a goal before the play ends. When the whistle blows it's hard to pull up 300 lbs, and now knowing he runs close to a sub 5 second 40, makes it even more understandable.Saint3333 wrote:You would be wrong.
He had one in a four point loss to Troy. He had a personal foul, which was a cheap shot after the whistle that pushed us back from their 39 to our 46 late in the game. The definition of undisciplined play in a critical point of a game.
Be nasty in between the whistles, be smart once it blows.
Didn't mean to pile on, EHA beat me to it.
BS. Go back and watch that Troy play and then try and post that with a straight face.ericsaid wrote:If he is playing hard, as he often is, he likely has his sights set on a goal before the play ends. When the whistle blows it's hard to pull up 300 lbs, and now knowing he runs close to a sub 5 second 40, makes it even more understandable.Saint3333 wrote:You would be wrong.
He had one in a four point loss to Troy. He had a personal foul, which was a cheap shot after the whistle that pushed us back from their 39 to our 46 late in the game. The definition of undisciplined play in a critical point of a game.
Be nasty in between the whistles, be smart once it blows.
Didn't mean to pile on, EHA beat me to it.
It takes that kind of attitude when you began your career on a team that would've been considered the underdog more often than not.
See "JGthatsme" response as rebuttal with explanation.Saint3333 wrote:BS. Go back and watch that Troy play and then try and post that with a straight face.ericsaid wrote:If he is playing hard, as he often is, he likely has his sights set on a goal before the play ends. When the whistle blows it's hard to pull up 300 lbs, and now knowing he runs close to a sub 5 second 40, makes it even more understandable.Saint3333 wrote:You would be wrong.
He had one in a four point loss to Troy. He had a personal foul, which was a cheap shot after the whistle that pushed us back from their 39 to our 46 late in the game. The definition of undisciplined play in a critical point of a game.
Be nasty in between the whistles, be smart once it blows.
Didn't mean to pile on, EHA beat me to it.
It takes that kind of attitude when you began your career on a team that would've been considered the underdog more often than not.
Yes exactly and I want a guy like this on my team and I think the coaches did too!JGthatsme86 wrote:You guys kill me. Parker was one of my favorite players during his career. A tough kid with a chip on his shoulder that is driven to win= A poster child for App State football. If I am an NFL scout, I would rather have a player that you need to "tone down" a bit over a player with less motor any day. A few of questionable plays don't offset the amount of rushing yards directly attributable to his blocking during his career. Good luck on achieving your dream, young man!
there is a difference in someone trying to deliberately cheap shot hurt someone and someone who is looking you in the face and knocking your block off.Saint3333 wrote:I guess those Elon players that played well after the whistle during the AE years were ok too, can't have it both ways.
I'm obviously in the minority on this subject, but this looks like rationalization to me because he's our guy. He wasn't always looking them in the face. You can be "nasty" but smart when the whistle blows.Rekdiver wrote:there is a difference in someone trying to deliberately cheap shot hurt someone and someone who is looking you in the face and knocking your block off.Saint3333 wrote:I guess those Elon players that played well after the whistle during the AE years were ok too, can't have it both ways.