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Aww, Kelly not happy with Jack. Dissapointed Jack said he has his back

theskibro

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Aug 24, 2003
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Notre Dame's Kelly 'disappointed' in AD's vote of confidence



© Matt Cashore-USA TODAY Sports (file photo) Notre Dame Fighting Irish head coach Brian Kelly waits with his players before the game against the Syracuse Orange at MetLife Stadium on Oct. 1. Notre Dame coach Brian Kelly expressed Tuesday that he was "disappointed" to receive a vote of confidence from athletic director Jack Swarbrick last Friday.

The Fighting Irish are saddled with an underachieving 2-5 record and Swarbrick addressed speculation pertaining to Kelly's status by insisting that "Brian will lead this team out of the tunnel opening day next year."


The 55-year-old Kelly said he saw no need for such a statement.

"Anytime that your athletic director has to come out and say that, as a head coach you're disappointed that any comments like that have to be made," Kelly said at a press conference. "I didn't ask him. That was his decision, but, you know, I clearly understand what he was doing.

"He was probably sick and tired of being sick and tired, too. But for me, it's disappointing, you know, certainly that you have to make those comments."

Notre Dame was a preseason Top 10 selection before the disappointing season began with a double-overtime loss to Texas. After beating Nevada, the Fighting Irish followed with losses to a down Michigan State squad and Duke to sit 1-3.

Norte Dame beat Syracuse before scoring 13 total points the next two weeks in losses to North Carolina State and a Stanford team playing well below expectations. The Fighting Irish had a bye last Saturday.

Kelly, in his seventh season as Notre Dame coach, is certainly aware that 2-5 is well beneath the standards of the tradition-laden program.

"We don't spend time talking about worst or bad or all-time negative, things of that nature," said Kelly, who has a 57-28 mark with the Fighting Irish. "We are who we are. We're 2-5. We know where we are. That's not really going to be a solution to us.

"If I've got to get them motivated to be successful by using, 'You guys don't want to be one of the all-time losingest football teams,' then we recruited the wrong guys.

"... I don't have to hit them in the nose with a newspaper and remind them of that. We don't talk about that. We talk about, how do we get a win?"

The Fighting Irish host Miami this Saturday. Kelly has won at least eight games in every season of his Notre Dame tenure so a sixth loss would represent a new low.

He also signed a contract extension through 2021 last January so it would also be one hefty price to dismiss him after a down campaign.

Swarbrick certainly would consider the long-term commitment in any decision that must be made.

"Just as I wouldn't single out any individual player, it's unrealistic to say, 'Oh, the result of this lays solely at the feet of the head coach,'" Swarbrick said last Friday. "I bear responsibility. I'm ultimately responsible for our performance, so all of us are in this together. But I can tell you I continue to have complete confidence in Brian.

"I think you really see what you've got in a coach with how they manage times like this, and I think he has done a great job of it. His focus has been really laser sharp, his relationship with this team is probably as strong as any that I've seen with him at Notre Dame, and those are all positives.

"Neither of us are satisfied with 2-5, but I'm at most of the practices. I'm at training table. I have an office at the Gug (football complex) in addition to my other office. I get to see the program day in and day out and I continue to have great confidence in Brian and confidence in our future as a program."

Notre Dame last had a losing season in 2007 when the Charlie Weis-led team went 3-9.
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You have to feel for the guy. He can't catch a break. Jack and Brian sittin in a tree, s c r e w I n g ND


 
Really, this is a nothing-burger story. BK clearly said he was disappointed that JS had to give a vote of confidence. He didn't say he was disappointed JS gave him a vote of confidence. There's a big difference between the two and context matters. In the actual quote the word "has" made all the difference. BK clearly acknowledged JS had no other choice but to make his "vote of confidence" comments, and he did so because the team is 2-5 and there were plenty of questions floating around about BK's job. Why wouldn't BK be disappointed that JS had to make those comments? Should he be happy about the season and the questions floating around about his job status? And mind you, BK made this statement after he was asked a direct question about how he felt about JS's comments. I think he gave an appropriate answer.

There's plenty of other things to be mad at BK about. Unless a person only sees malice in everything BK says, this really wasn't a story.
 
Exactly bumpdaddy. Thought Kelly's answer was candid and appropriate, lacking his usual self serving spin. The piling on, whether warranted or not, will just continue to get worse unless the team has a remarkable turnaround; and even that won't change most of our minds. Nor should it!
 
Another example of someone spinning what was said... Brian Kelly is clearly saying that he's disappointed to be 2-5 and that because of it, his athletic director has to defend him... He's not angry Swarbrick. He's "disappointed" to be having a bad season. He knows he's going to be on the hot seat.

What should the guy say? The two have a good working relationship and both really want to win. Right now they're not winning. Kelly doesn't feel good about the fact that Jack has to defend him, which is a product of the on field results. He isn't angry at the fact that Jack is defending him. Disappointed in himself and the situation, not in Jack...

This is getting silly.
 
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I posted this in another thread:

Everyone finds rubbernecking an accident irressiable but, being unhappy with Kelly does not exclude feeling compassion.

"well, no BK fan here (shocker huh?), but, there is a recent photo of him and damn this is a toll taking job! And anyone with an ounce of compassion would feel for the guy. I think he gives it a go in '17; but I would not be surprised if he then cited very real family pressures to leave, take a year off to recoup and then weigh his options. For his sake,, no one should wish harm on anyone, I hope he takes stock in how the job affects him beyond football"

(sorry, I did not include a long very excessively overly verbose list of reasons)
 
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