Blow me come out is that the Jayhawks being on Twitter didn’t really hurt anything or anybody. In fact, I’d argue that it did the opposite. Sunglasses Hut
This is a program in dire need of a little love right now and following Daymond Patterson, AJ Steward, Toben Opurum, Tyler Patmon, Lubbock Smith, DJ Beshears or whoever else on the KU football team sounded interesting gave us that. Fans were able to interact with players. The players themselves were allowed to be real. And, for 140 characters at a time a few times a day, people got to see a side of these athletes they don’t often see, something more than polished press Cheapest Oakley Sunglasses conference speak or faces hidden behind helmets.
In the long run, this whole
Discounted Oakley Sunglasses thing will probably blow over pretty quickly. It’s Gill’s team and it’s Gill’s rules. What he says goes.
And to the players' credit, those who officially announced they represented officially signing off for a while did so in a classy manner. For my money, though, I think laying down some rules and allowing his players to continue enjoying Twitter would’ve been the right move here. Tell them not to use profanity, not to release information about the team and not to conduct themselves in a manner that might embarass the program. Everything else is fair game. If Patterson wants to tell us that he just hit up Taco Bell, great. If Patmon wants to let people know that he’s more driven than he’s ever been in his life, great. If Steward wants people to know he’s happy about the St. Louis Cardinals’ latest victory, even better.Cutting it out altogether just seems too controlling and misguided. Gill talks often about his desire to help shape and teach young men 18-22 years old. He had a chance to do just that here. Twitter is a real part of the everyday world — especially for people in college — and them comes along equally if it’s here to stay. In order embrace it. Use it equally a teaching consequence. Don’t just dissemble them doesn’t subsist.
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