The Presidential coach followed, pulling up only feet behind them.
The coaches followed the locomotive into the "six-foot" ripping up some 25 yards of track.
And we couldn't back out because two more coaches had followed us into the block, as well as several cars.
Or maybe at some point in the next millennium, Jauron's way of thinking will be the one most coaches follow.
The way Cooper related the conversation, the coach was following the directive of a quarterback.
One wonders how many more coaches will willy-nilly follow in this path.
And don't be shocked when more coaches follow suit in the coming years.
"A coach can't follow a kid everywhere he goes," said Chaney.
In the 1920s and 1930s, many coaches followed his lead completely.