Please pay your respects and admiration to Coach Sherrill for all he did for Miss State. Despite being a Alabama graduate, Jackie was the best coach in our history. Simply the finest coach we ever had or will ever see in Starkville, MS.
I thought his clown fetish was weird.
This thread provides a good opportunity to distinguish between "fetish" and "fascination."
Please pay your respects and admiration to Coach Sherrill for all he did for Miss State. Despite being a Alabama graduate, Jackie was the best coach in our history. Simply the finest coach we ever had or will ever see in Starkville, MS.
Fist time I saw JWS at MSU, I was camped outside the Hump for the LSU game that would decide the SEC championship in '91. He was giving out doughnuts. The thing I liked most about JWS was that he did not take BS off of anyone, and that included programs that thought they were better than MSU or him. He absolutely loved sticking it to the "big deal" teams.
Glad JWS ran that sorry *** Joe Lee off. His defense was ******.
I loved the Jackie era. His first year was also my first year at State. The 90s were a great time to be in Starkville because of him (and basketball and baseball to be fair)
Anyway, his daughter married a frat-brother of mine. She was always very cool/nice. Jackie would come by the PhiDelt house after home games and greet us - it was awesome.
A few years after I graduated (around 2001), I dropped a friend off at the Austin airport and recognized his wife on the sidewalk. I introduced myself, said that her daugher and son-in-law were friends of mine. Jackie was about 50 yards away, about to walk into the airport. So his wife yells to him (I didn't ask her to), and points to me. He immediately turns around, walks all the way back to me, and we talked for a few minutes. It was awesome - she didn't have to call him over, and he didn't have to turn around, but they did.
Whatever you want to call it, it was just weird.
Anyway, his daughter married a frat-brother of mine.
This is an unpopular opinion. But it is the right one.Actually, he wasn't the the best football coach, Mullen was. He also got us on probation...but you're entitled to your opinion just like I am..thx anyway
I agree with this 100%I agree with the premise. Say what you want, but it was JWS's work that made us matter in football. Prior to Jackie, MSU football did not matter. We played in a run-down, tiny stadium and seldom drew much of a crowd. The television networks hated putting us on TV but had to occasionally because of the SEC contracts. Prior to JWS, we had suffered through the misery that was the Rocky years and the latter part of the Bellard era. We were the whipping boy for the school up north. We had only won 14 games in the past 5 seasons and had not had a winning SEC record for 10 years. Along comes Jackie...
He started out with a victory over Texas who was the defending SW Conference champion. People immediately began to take notice of MSU. Fans started buying tickets and coming to the games again. He got under the skin of the "Mississippi" rebels. He guided MSU to three victories over Alabama--something no other coach in modern history has ever done. He took us to the SEC title game for the first time ever. While his career ended badly with a railroad job by the NCAA and from personal tragedies in JWS's life, he turned the program in the right direction. It is because of him that we started having fans that cared, excitement for the program, and stadium expansion. JWS did for MSU football what Ronald Reagan did for the cold war. Jackie put the wheels in motion for the successes we are enjoying today. I will forever be grateful to Jackie. Godspeed to him.
Is it?This is an unpopular opinion. But it is the right one.
Jackie also won an SEC West title because of the slightly easier road. Things even out. Very very similar results from both guys. That is a compliment to Mullen. Mullen also had much more money and facilities to burn.Jackie coached in a VERY different and mediocre SEC West than the one Mullen coached in.
I agree with this 100%