Shades
30 minutes of ball and we are smokin at the end
- Joined
- Dec 15, 2014
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Dang, this is the kind of coach that players want to run through a wall for.
And you just know that right now Heupel is going through our upcoming schedule with the guys, saying the same thing now as he did as a player below.
A great leader and coach instilling a culture with good habits and a winning attitude.
15-0.
Insert Ric Flair wooo.
Heupel be like this to the SEC:
https://atozsports.com/nashville/sooners-oklahoma-josh-heupel-tennessee-vols-football
And you just know that right now Heupel is going through our upcoming schedule with the guys, saying the same thing now as he did as a player below.
A great leader and coach instilling a culture with good habits and a winning attitude.
15-0.
Insert Ric Flair wooo.
Heupel be like this to the SEC:
https://atozsports.com/nashville/sooners-oklahoma-josh-heupel-tennessee-vols-football
Former Oklahoma player tells unbelievable story about Josh Heupel's toughness and leadership as a player
Zach Ragan
Former Oklahoma Sooners tight end Josh Norman joined Red Dirt Rambles earlier this offseason and he shared some amazing stories about Tennessee Vols head coach Josh Heupel and the leadership/toughness that the former Heisman Trophy runner-up showed during his playing days.
Norman and Heupel were teammates at Oklahoma in 1999 and 2000.
In 2000, just a year after going 7-6, the Sooners beat Florida State in the Orange Bowl to win a national championship and cap a perfect 13-0 season.
During Norman's appearance on Red Dirt Rambles, he discussed the incredible impact that Heupel had on Oklahoma during the Sooners' championship season.
Norman's stories about Heupel touch on his elite leadership abilities and his incredibly underrated toughness.
According to Norman, before the 2000 season started, Heupel stood in front of the team, with tears in his eyes, and made it clear that Oklahoma could run the table.
"I remember the first meeting back in fall camp," said Norman. "Coach (Bob) Stoops said his thing and Josh Heupel got up and spoke.
And he was in tears. He actually pulled up the schedule for the year. He started one by one going down [the schedule]. Some of those teams we played the year before, some we hadn't played yet.
But he was like, 'I don't see anybody on this schedule that we can't beat, we can win every single one of these games' and that just kind of set the pace for the season."
Heupel didn't just inspire belief among his teammates, he also made them better via his work habits and his demeanor -- which is something that Norman used a personal example to illustrate.
".....And I attribute my success, the difference in those years, to Josh Heupel. ..... And so for me, personally, he was a great leader. And I attribute a lot of my success to the relationship that I had with him and actually being his roommate. And the standard that he set within the household."
"And then just as as a team leader, he was a guy you could just count on him," added Norman. "Because you saw what he went [through].
When I tell you that run to the national championship, those last three or four games, honestly, it was hard for him to throw the ball from me to that trash can.
If you go watch the games, he always wore long sleeves. And it was because literally from his wrist all the way up to his armpit -- black and blue. He was jacked up."
"If you go back and watch the first game against Kansas State, shoot both games against Kansas State that year, they ran that 4-6 defense. They were bringing cover zero like 80 percent of the time.
And the air raid ain't known for seven/eight man protections.
You got five or six at the most. They were coming after him. And they were getting to him. He was getting the ball out, but they were lighting his tail up.
And you see that -- literally like peeling him off the ground. And he'd just get up and you could just see the hurt and the pain in his face. But he'd look to the sideline, get the play, walk in the huddle, he'd call it, he'd make the play.
He'd deliver every time. And just hearing that, it does something to you. So he was a great leader, man. We have so much respect for that dude. And that's the reason all of the guys that played with him just love seeing what he's doing even to this day."
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