Mark Mangino

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  • Esjay
    Luck2Hilton
    • Feb 2009
    • 2328

    Mark Mangino

    When I first heard about this story I thought it was just another case of players and their parents being pussies. Doesn't seem to be true, if Mangino said these things that calls for a big WTF in my opinion .. you don't say shit like that to anybody, let alone your players who you expect to play hard..

    Former Kansas football players are speaking out about an investigation into allegations coach Mark Mangino has verbally abused or had inappropriate physical contact with players.

    Former Jayhawks linebacker Mike Rivera, who plays for the Tennessee Titans, said Wednesday night he could not speak about the allegations. He plans to have a formal interview on the matter with representatives from Kansas in the next few days.

    But five of Rivera's former teammates said they were not surprised by the investigation launched by athletic director Lew Perkins. And some relayed personal experiences with Mangino.

    Former Kansas wide receiver Raymond Brown, a senior last season, said Mangino would often "say personal, hurtful, embarrassing things in front of people."

    Brown cited two examples. He said that once, his younger brother had been shot in the arm in St. Louis. Then came a game.

    "I dropped a pass and [Mangino] was mad," Brown said. "And I said, 'Yes, sir. Yes, sir.' The yelling didn't bother me. But then he said, 'Shut up!' He said, 'If you don't shut up, I'm going to send you back to St. Louis so you can get shot with your homies.' I was irate. I wanted to hurt him to be honest with you."

    Brown said another teammate had confided in the team that his father was an alcoholic and the player dreamed of becoming a lawyer.

    "One day, [Mangino] said in front of the entire team, 'Are you going to be a lawyer or do you want to become an alcoholic like your Dad?' " Brown said.

    Said former Kansas wide receiver Marcus Herford, also a senior last season: "I remember that. Very vividly. [Mangino] would take your personal business and he would attack you with it. There's nothing wrong with being a disciplinarian. But there is a way to handle your players and keep them motivated. His way was to demotivate you and make you feel as low as you can go."

    Herford said he was not surprised by the allegation Mangino had poked senior linebacker Arist Wright in the chest at a walk-through prior to the Oct. 17 Colorado game.

    "I remember one time he grabbed [former offensive lineman] Anthony Collins and Anthony threw his arm down," Herford said. "I mean, to put your hands on another man? There is no reason to ever do that. And Anthony was very angry. Mangino was screaming. And Anthony was like, 'You're not going to do me like that.' "

    Said Brown: "I don't know if poking and grabbing is physical abuse. Sometimes Mangino maybe goes over the edge. I have seen him run up to a player and push a player. Sometimes he gets in your face and you feel like, 'OK, now you're in my bubble.'"

    Said former Kansas running back Jocques Crawford, who played one season before transferring to Tennessee Tech: "Every other day, he'd get in somebody's face and be pushing them on the shoulder pads. He tried to provoke us to get us to snap. His whole motto was to 'break you down to build you up.' One time I felt he'd gone to far with Mike [Rivera.]"

    Crawford said he left, in part, because, "I felt disgraced by my coach."

    "At halftime, he could pick out players one by one and talk about their flaws," Crawford said. "He got to me and he says, 'We have a guy on the team that says he's going to rush for 2,000 yards and he's not shown me s---. After I arrived, players told me, 'You have two weeks until you see the real Mangino come out.' Some of the things he would say or do were totally outrageous."

    "He'd say things like, 'I'll send you back to the street corner where you came from,' " Herford said.

    "He'd say, 'This is Kansas, you're not back home,' " Crawford said. "He'd say, 'You're not back with your homies. If you're not careful you'll be watching the game in the stands with your homies. You'll be back in that neighborhood.' "

    Former Kansas defensive lineman Russell Brorsen said that though he's "not surprised that people are coming out of the woodwork now," he believes Mangino is a "hard-nosed, demanding, disciplinarian."

    "I'm not going to deny that some of those things didn't happen," Brorsen said. "But I think part of the problem here is you have four or five years worth of stuff hitting the fan within a period of three or four days. I think [Mangino] could get pretty intense. And I think there was swearing. But my personal opinion is it's not much worse than what you would get at another university."

    Said Herford: "Everything the players have been going through, for years, in my opinion, has been covered up by the winning. If somebody was to bring it up, they would have said, 'Well, it's working, because you're winning.' We've seen this all along. His coaching style has never been accepted by his players. It's just now, it's blowing up."

    As the investigation continues, Mangino told reporters Wednesday night that he expects to coach against No. 2 Texas on Saturday.

    "I have not done anything that's inappropriate," Mangino said. "I have been in this conference for nearly 20 years, and what I can tell you is that our coaching intensity does not largely differ from the other Big Eight and Big 12 teams that I have observed. We have handled this program in terms of intensity and holding players accountable the same since 2002 to today. Nothing's changed. Absolutely nothing has changed."
    What are your guys thoughts on this? Is he just being a hardass because the thinks that's what the team needs or did he cross the line with those comments?
  • Senser81
    VSN Poster of the Year
    • Feb 2009
    • 12804

    #2
    This isn't news. The only reason this is being brought up is because Kansas has severely underachieved this year.

    Comment

    • Esjay
      Luck2Hilton
      • Feb 2009
      • 2328

      #3
      Originally posted by Senser81
      This isn't news. The only reason this is being brought up is because Kansas has severely underachieved this year.
      Well it's the first I've heard of it. I don't follow Kansas football.

      Comment

      • Senser81
        VSN Poster of the Year
        • Feb 2009
        • 12804

        #4
        Originally posted by Esjay
        Well it's the first I've heard of it. I don't follow Kansas football.
        Who does?

        Comment

        • longhornfan
          Carpe Diem
          • Mar 2009
          • 732

          #5
          I really don't have anything to add besides these two photos.


          Comment

          • RyanLeaf16
            #DoSomething
            • Feb 2009
            • 3211

            #6
            I wonder if anyone remembers when Mangino came under fire for verbally assaulting a referee during his son's high school football game. This would lend some credibility to the players stories and show that Mangino may have a very, very short temper.
            Maddon & Friedman: Pissing off the AL East since 2008

            Comment

            • Goober
              Needs a hobby
              • Feb 2009
              • 12271

              #7
              I don't see a problem there.

              Comment

              • jaxjaggywires
                Eradicator!!
                • Feb 2009
                • 1693

                #8
                My question is...how have Mangino's knees not completely given out by now?
                ...in my pants
                Fred Taylor for the HOF!
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                • Senser81
                  VSN Poster of the Year
                  • Feb 2009
                  • 12804

                  #9
                  Originally posted by jaxjaggywires
                  My question is...how have Mangino's knees not completely given out by now?
                  Mangino's knees are made of the same substance which hold up the skin on Charlie Weis' cheekbones.

                  Comment

                  • jaxjaggywires
                    Eradicator!!
                    • Feb 2009
                    • 1693

                    #10
                    I mean seriously...how is he not a spokesman for this place yet? It's gotta be coming soon...
                    ...in my pants
                    Fred Taylor for the HOF!
                    Facebook - Twitter

                    Comment

                    • Rayman
                      Spic 'n Spanish
                      • Feb 2009
                      • 4626

                      #11
                      Anybody read Jason Whitlock's take on this?

                      I lol'd



                      Weight issues are root of Mangino's problems
                      By JASON WHITLOCK
                      The Kansas City Star

                      It’s the weight. That’s why Mark Mangino’s job is in jeopardy. That’s why Lew Perkins held a paper-trail meeting with Kansas football players Monday night.

                      If this is the end for Mark Mangino’s head-coaching career at Kansas — and it should be — his inability to deal with his weight problem is the cause.

                      This column is not an attempt to shame, embarrass or ridicule Mangino. As you know, I’m overweight. I’m a shade over 6 feet tall and this morning, I weighed 325 pounds. (Oh, that hurt to write.) I’ve been heavier. Much.

                      I can relate to Mangino’s struggle. He’s three or four inches shorter than me, and he weighs anywhere from 450 to 500 pounds. He’s a public figure in a demanding, high-stress job.

                      The weight and the stress form a perfect recipe for depression. They can put your mind in a very negative place. They can make you moody and volatile.

                      Football is a violent game, oftentimes coached by grown men who strain to control their emotions. For every Bill Snyder, there are a handful of Mike Stoops, especially among assistants.

                      We’ve known since his arrival at Kansas that Mangino labors to contain his temper. He berated refs at his son’s high school football game. We’ve watched him verbally undress his players on the sideline. We’ve seen assistant coaches bolt the program and heard the behind-the-scenes stories about the abuse they endured from their head coach.

                      In more than seven years of covering Mangino’s Jayhawks, I’ve never heard anyone associated with the program describe him as “happy.”

                      Mangino coaches from an angry place. It’s not surprising, to me, given his weight problem.

                      You might be inclined to dismiss the alleged complaints of a few current and former Jayhawks who grumble that Mangino is physically and verbally abusive to his players. You might think it’s no big deal that a coach yells, cusses and puts his hands on his players.

                      It’s not that big a deal when the coach loves his players as hard as he pushes them. That’s what’s missing in the Mangino equation. Where’s the love?

                      Beyond X’s and O’s, good coaching is a transference of energy. It takes a massive amount of energy to impact 100 boys on a college campus. At his age (53) and weight, Mangino cannot sustain the necessary energy level to positively influence his players. His team is being engulfed by his negative energy, a dark spirit driven by his excess weight.

                      The signs of this can be seen on and off the field.

                      A loss to Texas on Saturday will be KU’s sixth straight. And the promised “historic” season has turned into a nightmare primarily because Mangino’s prized offense lost its swagger.

                      Part of the rift between the football and basketball players was a byproduct of Mangino’s players mirroring their coach’s mentality about the basketball program. Despite a $2 million-a-year contract and a $33 million football facility, Mangino has always felt undervalued and unappreciated at Kansas.

                      Relieving Mangino of his coaching responsibilities at this moment would be the humane thing to do for his health and a blessing for his career.

                      Two years ago, Mangino peaked, carrying the Jayhawks to 12-1, an Orange Bowl victory and a top-10 ranking. He didn’t get one job offer. It was the weight.

                      If he spent two years away from football addressing his weight problem, applied for a job at 270 pounds, he would be a can’t-miss BCS candidate. Heck, he would be a terrific choice to coach in the NFL.



                      Comment

                      • NAHSTE
                        Probably owns the site
                        • Feb 2009
                        • 22233

                        #12
                        Sounds like he is a houge prick. AKA, a football coach. Half of these guys could go to jail for the shit they put kids through, but if you come forward you look like a pussy. Here's Mangino's defense, where he blames the parents:

                        Kansas coach Mark Mangino defended himself and the Jayhawks' football program on Thursday, speaking on Sports Radio 610 in Kansas City.


                        Kansas coach Mark Mangino defended himself and the Jayhawks football program on Thursday, speaking on Sports Radio 610 in Kansas City.

                        Mangino, who is faced with allegations of verbal abuse and inappropriate physical contact against players, pointed to the team's success on the field and high graduation rates.



                        "We are sending kids out into the world prepared," Mangino told the radio station. "But I can't do the work of some parents, what they should have done before [the players] got to me. Some of these guys are bitter, they are bitter and [the allegations] are about that.

                        "There are some things that happen for 18 years of their lives that I can't change in four years of college. Can't do it. Can't change their behaviors, can't change their attitudes."

                        Kansas athletic director Lew Perkins has launched an investigation into Mangino allegedly grabbing, yelling at and putting his finger in the chest of senior linebacker Arist Wright, who had been laughing during a walkthrough or practice prior to the Colorado game on Oct. 17, two people briefed on the situation told ESPN's Joe Schad on Tuesday night.

                        Since then, several former Kansas players come forward with allegations of verbal abuse.

                        "There are people who want to embarrass the program for their 15 minutes of fame," Mangino told the radio station.

                        Mangino's team started the season 5-0 but has since lost five straight heading into a game at No. 3 Texas on Saturday. He conceded that he's lost the support of "some people around here."

                        Mangino inherited the Kansas program in 2002. Five seasons later, the Jayhawks were 12-1 and won the Orange Bowl over Virginia Tech. He was named Associated Press coach of the year.

                        Comment

                        • Nukleopatra
                          Posts a lot
                          • Nov 2008
                          • 4365

                          #13
                          False accusations.

                          I've met Mark on three occasions, and he was nothing but a respectable, and completely likable guy. We sat around for hours swapping racial jokes about black people.

                          He actually told me a joke, I can honestly say I've never heard before,

                          ''What would you call the Flintstones if they were black?''

                          Answer: ''N*ggers.''

                          He's without a doubt, one of the funniest guys I've ever met, as well.

                          Comment

                          • USCChifan
                            All-Star
                            • Oct 2009
                            • 1172

                            #14

                            My favorite picture of Mark Mangino.

                            Comment

                            • RyanLeaf16
                              #DoSomething
                              • Feb 2009
                              • 3211

                              #15
                              Originally posted by Nukleopatra
                              False accusations.

                              I've met Mark on three occasions, and he was nothing but a respectable, and completely likable guy. We sat around for hours swapping racial jokes about black people.

                              He actually told me a joke, I can honestly say I've never heard before,

                              ''What would you call the Flintstones if they were black?''

                              Answer: ''N*ggers.''

                              He's without a doubt, one of the funniest guys I've ever met, as well.
                              I lul'd
                              Maddon & Friedman: Pissing off the AL East since 2008

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