It is OK to question things. Just not on a public sports message board, apparently. Or even the paid boards, I guess.Not a troll. Pollard has done good things, no doubt. He has also been passed by with his feet in cement by the modern world of college athletics. It is OK to discuss what this has done to our major programs. It is also OK to wonder why we're using NIL funds for non-revenue generating sports at the expense of football and basketball; why no one can question his supreme control; why the fans better believe everything he says; why outgoing coaches throw him a bone and most assume that means they loved working with him (just like some politicians); and why his most recent coaching search was done to "preserve continuity" and obviously did nothing of the sort; and why our student-athletes don't trust a word he says. It is OK to question all of these things while recognizing he has done good for ISU.
Because that is not "constructive" - did I get that right?
It is tough to break from 2 decades of cult-narrative training though. My favorite of the training tenets are - when anything "bad" happens - especially the losing of legendary coaches - this messaging must be pushed relentlessly until the heat dissipates and all accountability, and responsibility either just magically vanishes into the ether or has shifted to the "ousted" legendary coach:
- "There is nothing the AD could have done!"
- "We just don't have the money! We just don't have the donors!"
- "Everyone is just looking for a villain!"
- "It was [insert historic coaching legend here]'s dream to leave for [insert whatever job or pro league they left us for] - repeat - nothing could have stopped them from leaving! The AD did everything they could but there were no options!"