These were sent to me by two other posters on here.
Apparently, Isaiah Green doesn't like reading negative criticism, so he took to Twitter immediately after the game last night to "LOL" at "all of y'all."
And the two Tweets below give me a better understanding of Levi Brown with the two things I mentioned yesterday that he was doing during the game. I guess he is a jokester all of the time - before the game, while winning, and while getting his ass kicked. And since he retweets the videos of him doing it, I guess he likes the attention it provides, so I'd expect more of it, even while Marshall is getting their ass kicked, until it is stopped by the coaches.
It doesn't mean these are bad kids, but it shows me they aren't being coached well on how to act. Some coaches ban social media, especially Twitter, during the season. I think that is stupid. Part of coaching college kids is teaching them how to act, including on social media, as part of their "job." And to these college kids, a big part of their "job" is playing football. So banning them from that isn't helping teach them or prepare them into maturing into adults. But as a fan, watching players joke around while down 28-0, Tweeting immediately after getting crushed to "LOL" at fans, etc. annoys me. As a coach, it would bother me even more.
Apparently, Isaiah Green doesn't like reading negative criticism, so he took to Twitter immediately after the game last night to "LOL" at "all of y'all."
And the two Tweets below give me a better understanding of Levi Brown with the two things I mentioned yesterday that he was doing during the game. I guess he is a jokester all of the time - before the game, while winning, and while getting his ass kicked. And since he retweets the videos of him doing it, I guess he likes the attention it provides, so I'd expect more of it, even while Marshall is getting their ass kicked, until it is stopped by the coaches.
It doesn't mean these are bad kids, but it shows me they aren't being coached well on how to act. Some coaches ban social media, especially Twitter, during the season. I think that is stupid. Part of coaching college kids is teaching them how to act, including on social media, as part of their "job." And to these college kids, a big part of their "job" is playing football. So banning them from that isn't helping teach them or prepare them into maturing into adults. But as a fan, watching players joke around while down 28-0, Tweeting immediately after getting crushed to "LOL" at fans, etc. annoys me. As a coach, it would bother me even more.