"My son is not a quitter but that is how he has been painted up here," Newton said.
He left midway through the season, when things got tough. Sorry Jack, that's a full-fledged quitter.
"He left because the coach didn't respect him.
I don't like my boss sometimes either. Sometimes I think his judgment calls are wrong. Often times I think he doesn't appreciate me and that I'm not being paid enough compared with what I offer to my employer. Things have been tough this year, just like the Knights, but I've stuck at it by lifting my intensity. I hang in there because:
a) It's the gutsy thing to do
b) It's his backside that hangs out to dry if it all goes pear-shaped.
c) It makes me a stronger person and a better employee.
It's not about the relative respect a coach affords a player, Jack. It's about how a player copes with the realisation that he's not doing as well as he thinks and how he copes with constructive criticism. Clint couldn't handle being told he wasn't the greatest thing since slice bread. I have no time for people who let down my football team, not through bad performance but a bad attitude.
But it's not personal, unlike the way the Newtons have conducted themselves.