I just heard on ESPN that Petrino left a note to the ATL players saying he quit

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Anyone else hear this? If this is true I will root for Arkansas to sink to the bottom of the SEC for years to come. They should suck plenty next year anyway without 75% of their offense.

I also think Atlanta will play more inspired football this weekend.
 

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I can understand being upset with a college coach leaving after all these are guys he recruited and told that he had great plans for them.

A pro coach? Hell this is big business every player was drafted, has an agent and is getting all he can from the team. ???
How can the coach leaveing be viewed as a betrayal by anyone? Its just business damn it.

Can I add that I support NO pro team. Be like rooting for Exxon.
 

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I can understand being upset with a college coach leaving after all these are guys he recruited and told that he had great plans for them.

A pro coach? Hell this is big business every player was drafted, has an agent and is getting all he can from the team. ???
How can the coach leaveing be viewed as a betrayal by anyone? Its just business damn it.

Can I add that I support NO pro team. Be like rooting for Exxon.

The Atlanta players are thrilled to get rid of this clown. Point being, be a man and tell your team face-to-face. I really can't believe he left a note, he would be better served to not say anything.

Dear Guys,

My family wants to move to Arkansas and I don't think I'm cut out for this pro gig. So I guess I'm jumping ship since the boat is sinking pretty fast. Thanks for all the good times. Oh, and sorry to the guys I cut or fined.

XOXOXOXOXO

Bobby
 

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Falcons feel betrayed by Petrino

Players unhappy with coach's sudden departure

Posted: Wednesday December 12, 2007 5:46PM; Updated: Wednesday December 12, 2007 8:19PM

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Bobby Petrino wrote a short letter to the Falcons players.
AP


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</TD><TD class=cnnIEtitle width="99%">RELATED</TD></TR><TR><TD class=cnnIEcontent colSpan=2>• DT Jackson calls Petrino 'coward'

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</TD><TD class=cnnStoryCLpad><SCRIPT type=text/javascript>adsonar_placementId=1292993;adsonar_pid=769768;adsonar_ps=-1;adsonar_zw=300;adsonar_zh=175;</SCRIPT><SCRIPT>cnnad_createSL();</SCRIPT><SCRIPT language=JavaScript src="http://js.adsonar.com/js/tw_cnn_adsonar.js"></SCRIPT><FORM id=qas_frm name=qas_frm action="" method=get target=""> </FORM></TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>FLOWERY BRANCH, Ga. (AP) -- Coward. Quitter. Hypocrite. And those were some of the nicer things the Atlanta Falcons had to say about their former coach on Wednesday.
Bobby Petrino left behind a bitter team and a boss who felt betrayed, skipping town to return to the college ranks with not so much as a face-to-face meeting with his players.
"I feel like I've been sleeping with the enemy," safety Lawyer Milloy moaned.
The Falcons watched him on television the previous night, yukking it up at a giddy, late-night news conference in Arkansas, then showed up at their lockers to find an 86-word letter from their ex-coach, whose tenure in the NFL lasted all of 13 games.
"Atlanta Falcons Players," it began.
"Out of my respect for you, I am letting you know that, with a heavy heart, I resigned today as the Head Coach of the Atlanta Falcons. This decision was not easy but was made in the best interest of me and my family. While my desire would have been to finish out what has been a difficult season for us all, circumstances did not allow me to do so. I appreciate your hard work and wish you the best.
"Sincerely, Bobby Petrino."
While the aloof Petrino had few friends in the locker room, and there was actually a sense of relief he was gone, the Falcons (3-10) felt totally abandoned in a season where so much already has gone wrong.
First, Michael Vick.
Now, this.
"It got to the point where guys really didn't care if he left or not," running back Warrick Dunn said. "But the way he decided to leave, to me, was just not right."
Falcons owner Arthur Blank sounded as though he had just been stabbed in the back. He got a call late last week from Dallas owner Jerry Jones, an Arkansas alumnus, to say the school was interested in talking to Petrino about its coaching vacancy.
Blank said he told Jones the Falcons had no intention of letting the Razorbacks speak with their coach, and general manager Rich McKay confirmed that position in follow-up calls with Jones.
That was followed by a series of meetings over the weekend in which Petrino laid out some areas of concern, and the Falcons thought they had addressed them all. In fact, Blank said he met again with the coach on Monday, just hours before Atlanta's 34-14 loss to the New Orleans Saints, to make sure he wasn't planning to leave.
"He stood up, we shook hands and he said, 'You have a head coach,' " Blank said.
Twenty-four hours later, Petrino submitted his resignation, hopped on a plane to Arkansas and signed a deal as Razorbacks coach for less money than his five-year, $24 million deal with the Falcons.
"The best way to describe the way we feel," Blank said, "is betrayed."
The Falcons hastily chose secondary coach Emmitt Thomas to run the team on an interim basis for the final three games; he becomes the first black head coach in team history.
McKay said he would get to work Wednesday night going over the list of potential candidates for the permanent job, a task he never expected to be doing just 11 months after hiring the last coach.
Petrino had little to say about his short tenure in Atlanta during his news conference in Fayetteville, alluding to it briefly when asked how tough it was to deal with the loss of Vick, who pleaded guilty to dogfighting charges and was sentenced Monday to 23 months in prison.
"It was a difficult thing, there's no question about that, and everybody has difficulties," Petrino said. "What I want to focus on is the future and move on."
Blank said he has no reason to believe that Jones was involved in Petrino's sudden resignation, and McKay said NFL tampering rules don't apply to college jobs anyway. NFL spokesman Greg Aiello said the league didn't have enough information to comment.
During his final days with the Falcons, Petrino expressed to both Blank and McKay his concerns about dealing with pro athletes. There were plenty of warning signs he wasn't coping well with players who weren't afraid to speak their minds or question the coaching staff.
"This league is not for everybody," Milloy said. "This league is for real men. I think he realized he didn't belong here."
A couple of Pro Bowlers, DeAngelo Hall and Alge Crumpler, had openly criticized Petrino's domineering tactics. Plenty of others expressed their frustration in private.
"We're not college kids," said Dunn, a 32-year-old, 11-year veteran. "I'm a professional, grown man. Look at me eye to eye. Talk to me. But Bobby wasn't like that."
Dunn said Petrino's rules ranged from a ban on televisions in the locker room at the team's training complex to frowning on any loud talking at team dinners when the Falcons were on the road.
"It got to the point where I never went down to team dinners to eat because I was not going to sit there in silence," Dunn said. "It's a joke. You tell kindergartners things like that."
The first sign of trouble was Hall's sideline confrontation with Petrino in Week 3, which led to the cornerback being fined $100,000 and held out for the first half of the next game.
A couple of weeks later, Crumpler complained about Petrino's offense and said the veterans felt they were being phased out. Those concerns came to a head when 35-year-old Grady Jackson, one of the team's most effective interior linemen, was surprisingly cut during the bye week.
"It just shows his true color, like a coward with a yellow stripe down his back," said Jackson, who now plays with the Jacksonville Jaguars.
Around the league, others took note of Petrino's shocking departure.
"He snuck out in the middle of the night like the Baltimore Colts did," said Kansas City Chiefs running back Kolby Smith, who played for Petrino at Louisville.
Even some of Petrino's fellow coaches were dismayed by his tactics.
"For my profession, I'm always very disappointed when things like this happen," Baltimore's Brian Billick said. "Kind of leave it at that. This profession needs to handle itself better at times."
The Falcons were particularly upset about Petrino's jovial demeanor at his first news conference in Arkansas, where he even participated in the school's "calling the hogs" cheer. It was the first time any of the players could remember him smiling.
"The slap in the face was ultimately when he showed up at a 11 o'clock, or whatever time it was in Arkansas, doing the 'pig sooey' hog call," Milloy said. "It seemed like was right in rhythm with the beat. He had been practicing."
All Petrino left on his way out the door was that letter.
Milloy had a copy of it taped above his locker, with a red "X" through Petrino's words and the player's own assessment written in: "Coward." Center Todd McClure didn't even bother keeping his copy.
"I think it's already in the trash," he said bitterly.
Defensive end Jamaal Anderson, the Falcons' first-round pick from Arkansas, was asked what he would tell his alma mater about its new coach.
"One word: Disloyal," Anderson replied.
 

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The city of Atlanta found out what we here in Louisville already knew. Petrino signs a 10 year extension in July of 2006 to coach Louisville, saying this is where he wants to be, and 5 months later he is gone. And thru all of this now, nobody seems to be recalling that a few years ago Petrino went behind everybody's back and went in secret to Auburn, talking to Auburn officials about taking over there even with Tuberville still coaching there, and then flat out denied he ever had any discussions with Auburn, which turned out to be a flat out lie on Petrino's part.

Good luck Arkansas. But I'm afraid you just committed SOOEY-cide.
 

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heres what it boils down to petrino couldnt get his falcon team to run up the scores like he did at louisville and all his bets were losing.
The guy never belonged in the nfl at all. good riddings.
 

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Wow...

I had assumed that he told his players in the lockerroom or practice facility...

Nothing like this.

What a classless and cowardly individual.
 

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i would have him get his balls reattached before he could coach my team
 

THINK OUTSIDE THE BOX.
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The city of Atlanta found out what we here in Louisville already knew. Petrino signs a 10 year extension in July of 2006 to coach Louisville, saying this is where he wants to be, and 5 months later he is gone. And thru all of this now, nobody seems to be recalling that a few years ago Petrino went behind everybody's back and went in secret to Auburn, talking to Auburn officials about taking over there even with Tuberville still coaching there, and then flat out denied he ever had any discussions with Auburn, which turned out to be a flat out lie on Petrino's part.

Good luck Arkansas. But I'm afraid you just committed SOOEY-cide.

I just dont understand why Arkansas in this instance would hire a person like this. Dishonest, unloyal, lying sack of shit scumbag. WHY DID THEY WANT HIM? AND WHY THE HELL WOULD YOU WELCOME HIM WHEN YOU SEE THE TERMS HE LEFT ON? HOLY FUCK THE WORLDS GONE TO SHIT!:smoker2:
 

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The way the Falcons players and fans celebrate Michael Vick, and the way Petrino conducts his business, I'd say the entire group was a perfect fit and I don't feel any pity for any of the parties.
 

We didn't lose the game; we just ran out of time
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Wow, if i was a blue chip high schooler i would commit to Arkansas only to fuck over Petrino on the last day

How can he get any respect from any players after this debacle
 

the way I dunk on you is gonna look unorthodoxed
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i totally agree with every comment in this thread...what a coward and a legit *****...

congrats arkansas...hope u have a good year otherwise bobby may leave u before week 8...fuckin bitch
 

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Dear WC,
I just ate a Dominican girl's ass in Costa Rica. Good times.

Sincerely,
Doberman


:pope:
That's a dancin' pope right there.

I hear the columbians taste like milk chocolate. Let me know if its true. And yes, I'm jealous of you right now, so I'm going to haul my ass upstairs and lay in bed with my grumpy pregnant wife and start the slow 5 month countdown until I'm in your happy shoes again.

:party:
 

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Sean Salisbury was just on ESPN radio w/Freddy Coleman...and he ripped Petrino a new a$$hole...

Salisbury said that Petrino will not win a national championship in the next 5 years at Arkansas...and IF he did...Sean would walk from Connecticut to Fayetteville.

I have seen and heard "Seanny boy" fired up before...but never like this...sounded like he actually wanted to fight Petrino. Called him all kinds of names...and said that no NFL team should ever allow him back in the league.

I enjoyed listening to that...nice job Salisbury!
 

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Now if you were a hot-shot Little Rock All State HS player, would you go to Arkansas to play for a man with this track record?
 

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"This league is not for everybody," safety Lawyer Milloy said. "This league is for real men. I think he realized he didn't belong here."

petrinocoward.jpg


Yes, Lawyer scratched out Petrino's name and wrote in "COWARD." He then eagerly provided it to the Atlanta Journal-Constitution.
 

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