Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This proposition appears doubtful. Overton acted in accordance with his school bosses’ desires. They wanted a top football team and he did as promised. Great players don’t grow on trees and he did what he had to to get them to Hayfield, even if it meant some kids were listed as homeless or living at Planet Fitness. And Overton went to a place where residency and associated rules don’t matter. If he doesn’t succeed in the marketplace at St James, well, he will have to deal with that reality. The culprits here are the FCPS administration who lost perspective in their quest to chase the community cultural god known as football.
oh pleeeeeeaaaasssseeee. OVERTON wanted to coach a top football team and trashed two high school programs on his way to work at a fancy Gold's Gym.
Former NCAA scholarship athlete here. I am sure you have a similar background. Virtuallty every scandal I came across as the fingerprints of an administration on it. Coaches get away with exactly what administrators let them. In Hayfield's case Overton did what the principal and the region superintendent wanted. I am sure with your experience in top level athletics would on reflection cause you to agree.
Not sure why the angst over Overton’s latest assignment. If you want to do what he does he is at the right place. He either succeeds or fails with that business model. From a typical DCUM parent’s perspective, the St James thing seems nuts. But DCUM is a narrow slice of the culture and not tied in with the people who consider St James.
Sorry, was this written with CHAT GPT? I couldn't make sense of any point you were trying to make.
Overton set out to cheat, got caught, and slunk off to work at a gym. Hopefully the stink of the scandal will keep him from any attempt at employment with real schools in the future.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Bumping this thread so it stays near the top of the FCPS forum. I'm sure Reid et al are hoping it just drops off everyone's radar. Don't let it. That report needs to be released.
Why? Complaining here won't do anything. You are assuming education leaders live and die by this forum.
No legit organization is going to make decisions based on anonymous forums.
Anonymous wrote:Bumping this thread so it stays near the top of the FCPS forum. I'm sure Reid et al are hoping it just drops off everyone's radar. Don't let it. That report needs to be released.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This proposition appears doubtful. Overton acted in accordance with his school bosses’ desires. They wanted a top football team and he did as promised. Great players don’t grow on trees and he did what he had to to get them to Hayfield, even if it meant some kids were listed as homeless or living at Planet Fitness. And Overton went to a place where residency and associated rules don’t matter. If he doesn’t succeed in the marketplace at St James, well, he will have to deal with that reality. The culprits here are the FCPS administration who lost perspective in their quest to chase the community cultural god known as football.
oh pleeeeeeaaaasssseeee. OVERTON wanted to coach a top football team and trashed two high school programs on his way to work at a fancy Gold's Gym.
Former NCAA scholarship athlete here. I am sure you have a similar background. Virtuallty every scandal I came across as the fingerprints of an administration on it. Coaches get away with exactly what administrators let them. In Hayfield's case Overton did what the principal and the region superintendent wanted. I am sure with your experience in top level athletics would on reflection cause you to agree.
Not sure why the angst over Overton’s latest assignment. If you want to do what he does he is at the right place. He either succeeds or fails with that business model. From a typical DCUM parent’s perspective, the St James thing seems nuts. But DCUM is a narrow slice of the culture and not tied in with the people who consider St James.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This proposition appears doubtful. Overton acted in accordance with his school bosses’ desires. They wanted a top football team and he did as promised. Great players don’t grow on trees and he did what he had to to get them to Hayfield, even if it meant some kids were listed as homeless or living at Planet Fitness. And Overton went to a place where residency and associated rules don’t matter. If he doesn’t succeed in the marketplace at St James, well, he will have to deal with that reality. The culprits here are the FCPS administration who lost perspective in their quest to chase the community cultural god known as football.
oh pleeeeeeaaaasssseeee. OVERTON wanted to coach a top football team and trashed two high school programs on his way to work at a fancy Gold's Gym.
Former NCAA scholarship athlete here. I am sure you have a similar background. Virtuallty every scandal I came across as the fingerprints of an administration on it. Coaches get away with exactly what administrators let them. In Hayfield's case Overton did what the principal and the region superintendent wanted. I am sure with your experience in top level athletics would on reflection cause you to agree.
Not sure why the angst over Overton’s latest assignment. If you want to do what he does he is at the right place. He either succeeds or fails with that business model. From a typical DCUM parent’s perspective, the St James thing seems nuts. But DCUM is a narrow slice of the culture and not tied in with the people who consider St James.
Sorry, was this written with CHAT GPT? I couldn't make sense of any point you were trying to make.
Overton set out to cheat, got caught, and slunk off to work at a gym. Hopefully the stink of the scandal will keep him from any attempt at employment with real schools in the future.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This proposition appears doubtful. Overton acted in accordance with his school bosses’ desires. They wanted a top football team and he did as promised. Great players don’t grow on trees and he did what he had to to get them to Hayfield, even if it meant some kids were listed as homeless or living at Planet Fitness. And Overton went to a place where residency and associated rules don’t matter. If he doesn’t succeed in the marketplace at St James, well, he will have to deal with that reality. The culprits here are the FCPS administration who lost perspective in their quest to chase the community cultural god known as football.
oh pleeeeeeaaaasssseeee. OVERTON wanted to coach a top football team and trashed two high school programs on his way to work at a fancy Gold's Gym.
Former NCAA scholarship athlete here. I am sure you have a similar background. Virtuallty every scandal I came across as the fingerprints of an administration on it. Coaches get away with exactly what administrators let them. In Hayfield's case Overton did what the principal and the region superintendent wanted. I am sure with your experience in top level athletics would on reflection cause you to agree.
Not sure why the angst over Overton’s latest assignment. If you want to do what he does he is at the right place. He either succeeds or fails with that business model. From a typical DCUM parent’s perspective, the St James thing seems nuts. But DCUM is a narrow slice of the culture and not tied in with the people who consider St James.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This proposition appears doubtful. Overton acted in accordance with his school bosses’ desires. They wanted a top football team and he did as promised. Great players don’t grow on trees and he did what he had to to get them to Hayfield, even if it meant some kids were listed as homeless or living at Planet Fitness. And Overton went to a place where residency and associated rules don’t matter. If he doesn’t succeed in the marketplace at St James, well, he will have to deal with that reality. The culprits here are the FCPS administration who lost perspective in their quest to chase the community cultural god known as football.
oh pleeeeeeaaaasssseeee. OVERTON wanted to coach a top football team and trashed two high school programs on his way to work at a fancy Gold's Gym.
Anonymous wrote:This proposition appears doubtful. Overton acted in accordance with his school bosses’ desires. They wanted a top football team and he did as promised. Great players don’t grow on trees and he did what he had to to get them to Hayfield, even if it meant some kids were listed as homeless or living at Planet Fitness. And Overton went to a place where residency and associated rules don’t matter. If he doesn’t succeed in the marketplace at St James, well, he will have to deal with that reality. The culprits here are the FCPS administration who lost perspective in their quest to chase the community cultural god known as football.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:City of Fairfax School Board just slammed Reid for her incompetence in not bringing the allegations relating to Fairfax HS to a conclusion.
It’s nice that a few officials call out Reid for her incompetence. God knows the likes of Sandy Anderson, Karl Frisch, and Robyn Lady never will.
link?
https://www.cityoffairfaxschools.org/apps/news/article/2165906?categoryId=15762
My favorite part is how the Fairfax story was insanely spun up.
Kid on JV moved to Fairfax zone, and family was friends with a coach. The coach loaned them some money for rent. The kid didn’t play much or at all.
Kid then goes to St James and tells coaches about the story who blow it the F up.
Explain how I got the above story wrong please lol. Violation? Sure. Same level as Hayfield almost tripling the number of homeless kids over two years at the school to play football? Hahaha. Ok.