Deion Sanders Says He Couldn't Coach in NFL Because of Practices

Street Knowledge

Superstar
Supporter
Joined
May 2, 2012
Messages
25,016
Reputation
2,013
Daps
60,094
Reppin
NYC
Despite many rumors and countless hours of television segments spent on said rumors, Colorado Buffaloes head coach Deion Sanders is not going to be an NFL coach for the 2025 season. A brief dalliance with the Dallas Cowboysafter they parted ways with Mike McCarthy appeared to be the closest Sanders got, and even that wasn't that close. On the latest episode of his Tubi show, We Got Time Today, Sanders gave a glimpse into why he's sticking around at the college level.

Chatting with host Rocsi Diaz and former teammate and current ESPN color commentator Troy Aikman, Sanders bemoaned the difference in practice intensity nowadays, saying back in his era he competed just as hard in practice as he would a game. He highlighted the contrast as the reason he couldn't stand to coach at the highest level.

"That’s the way we practiced,” Sanders said, per Pro Football Talk. "I know it’s cute but I couldn’t coach pro ball. The way they practice, the way they go about it, I couldn’t take it as a man and as a football enthusiast. I care about the game. The game is still providing for Troy and I. There’s no way I could allow that to happen on my watch. That would be tough."

While it's difficult to gauge the potential difference in effort from outside the building NFL practices have undeniably gotten less intense in this era because of changes to the CBA. The NFL Players Association worked tirelessly over the years to enforce non-contact practices during OTAs, for example, and pushed back the start of training camp to ensure players get the maximum amount of recovery time in the offseason.

All this doesn't sit well with Sanders, it would seem. And it may even be enough to dissuade him from future NFL flirtations.

 

Remote

Veteran
Supporter
Joined
Aug 29, 2013
Messages
81,023
Reputation
24,804
Daps
366,168
I don't think practice is about intensity.

Practice is about technique, strategy and repetition.
Occasionally or as you're nearing the game, you might ramp things up. Going full tilt on a regular basis in practice is likely a bad idea...or at best offers a marginal or negligible benefit.

This sounds like either revisionist history about Deion's own practice habits during his career...or it's one of those "we had to go hard and suffer in practice, so all you kids will too"
 

who_better_than_me

Time to go!!
Joined
May 3, 2012
Messages
26,662
Reputation
1,177
Daps
40,312
Reppin
NULL
I don't think practice is about intensity.

Practice is about technique, strategy and repetition.
Occasionally or as you're nearing the game, you might ramp things up. Going full tilt on a regular basis in practice is likely a bad idea...or at best offers a marginal or negligible benefit.

This sounds like either revisionist history about Deion's own practice habits during his career...or it's one of those "we had to go hard and suffer in practice, so all you kids will too"
nah the best teams go hard in practice. Only thing you don’t do is touch the qb.
 

Red Money

All Star
Joined
May 24, 2022
Messages
2,074
Reputation
3
Daps
3,062
He would have to actually do some coaching

Head coach is the CEO....they don't usually do the dirty work. They set the coaching vision and hire the guys to execute said vision.

Timeouts can come into play, but you can hire a clock guy as well.
 

L&HH

Veteran
Joined
May 18, 2012
Messages
53,304
Reputation
5,830
Daps
161,779
Reppin
PG x MD
It's funny cause in that Boys Will Be Boys book it talks about how Deion completely half assed practice. Funny hearing him say how he practiced as hard as he played in games.
He’s just a talker that says what sounds good. Now that his sons are gone and he has no vested interest anymore if shyt is looking shaky at Colorado and he gets a NFL offer he likes, he’s taking it.
 
Top