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Next Man Up

CloakNNNdagger

Hall of Fame
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I find this little piece of historical information interesting.:

Dungy also learned from Noll that it takes all 53 of the players on the team to win so that a coach should train the 33rd player on the roster as he would the third player, which has become the spine of Dungy's own coaching philosophy,[27] which is the Next Man Up theory of calm coaching.[28] Dungy stressed that a team should have a thought process, a philosophy and the conviction to stick with it, even if the personnel changes during the games because of injuries.[29] Dungy said:

Chuck's philosophy was to convince every guy on the team that his role was important. If you came in as a free agent and were just a gunner on the punt team or the third safety, you were doing something the team needed to win...It was his way of emphasizing that no one is irreplaceable. You have to coach everybody the same way. If Joe Greene goes out, Steve Furness goes in and we're not going to change anything. Chuck never panicked when someone got hurt or held out. We can still function. That made a big impression on me.[27]

I find this next little piece of historical information to be very eerie.

A book that was published October 17, 2005:

Next Man Up: A Year Behind the Lines in Today's NFL


Despite - or perhaps because of - its immense popularity, the NFL remains one of the most secretive sports societies in America. John Feinstein goes behind the scenes of this closed sport as he takes his readers through an NFL season - all the ups and downs, the procession from 100 degree heat in training camp to frigid cold in January and the week-to-week pressures faced by the coaches and players - in an illuminating and entertaining look at the most lucrative sport in America. NEXT MAN UP highlights the Baltimore Ravens, one of the most watched and dramatic NFL teams in recent years. Like many teams, the Ravens have faced extreme obstacles - in their case, players in prison, under indictment, and injured - but they've still managed to play at an extremely high level, winning their first Super Bowl in 2001 against the New York Giants. From the first strategy sessions of a new season to the last down of the final game, John Feinstein reveals the intensity, spirituality, and the near life- or-death drama of professional football as it's never been revealed before.
 
next-man-up-stop-2-69.jpg



I find this little piece of historical information interesting.:



I find this next little piece of historical information to be very eerie.

A book that was published October 17, 2005:

Next Man Up: A Year Behind the Lines in Today's NFL

:thinking:

Yeah, I definitely feel dirty.
 
This who next man up thing is getting ridiculous. This is not the Texans philosophy. This is the sporting worlds philosophy...

Why are you people going gaga over a free t-shirt that says next man up sponsored by radio row? If I am wearing Texans gear it is going to be a sharp looking Texans shirt without sponsors, or a jersey.
 
This who next man up thing is getting ridiculous. This is not the Texans philosophy. This is the sporting worlds philosophy...

Why are you people going gaga over a free t-shirt that says next man up sponsored by radio row? If I am wearing Texans gear it is going to be a sharp looking Texans shirt without sponsors, or a jersey.

Geez.....who dooked in your pudding?

It's Friday hoss. Go drink a beer for lunch!
 
This who next man up thing is getting ridiculous. This is not the Texans philosophy. This is the sporting worlds philosophy...

Why are you people going gaga over a free t-shirt that says next man up sponsored by radio row? If I am wearing Texans gear it is going to be a sharp looking Texans shirt without sponsors, or a jersey.

T-shirt? What t-shirt?
 
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