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The former Dallas Cowboys corridor, Sherman Williams, was in charge of a Alabama high school soccer team that lost 100-0 last week.
Williams is the chief coach of Murphy High School. The team suffered unequal defeat against Williamson High School, which was the number 2 classified in class 5a in the state.
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The Sherman Williams corridor of the Dallas Cowboys in Action during the Mini Camp in Valley Ranch, Texas, on May 7, 1998. (Stephen Dunn/Allsport)
The former NFL player received a violent reaction on social networks for defeat. He allegedly decided not to have the referees in the game. Keep the clock in operation to finish the game faster. On Wednesday, he responded to fury in a Facebook post.
“Below 73-0 in the middle, I looked at each of my 39 children in my eyes and asked if they wanted to continue. 100% said yes! So that’s what we did. I love my children,” he wrote in a publication. “He gave everything.”
Williamson’s chief coach, Antonio Coleman, told Al.com that he asked the referees to continue running the watch with his team by 73-0 in the part-time.

The Dallas Cowboys corridor, Sherman Williams (20), obtains a touchdown against the Cincinnati Bengals at the Riverfront Stadium on December 14, 1997. (Matthew Emmons/USA Today Sports)
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“I asked the referee,” Coleman told The Outlet. “He said it’s fine. He asked me if I had trouble going to the eight -minute rooms. I said no. He went to ask Sherman, and said he didn’t want to run the clock.”
Williams said a clock in execution last week, but he did not say if he decided to accept implementing it.
“A clock was suggested in execution, but they didn’t give us a race watch,” he said, through Al.com. “They continued wanting to stop the clock, and that’s fine. It’s football. It’s a 48 -minute game. I wasn’t asking for any favor. We have to go out and continue training and playing until there are zeros on the clock.”
Williams is in his first year as chief coach at Murphy High School.

Alabama Crimson Tide Tailback Sherman Williams (20) carries the ball during the 1993 Sugar Bowl at the Superdome on January 1, 1993. (PHOTOS RVR/USA Today Sports)
He played with the Cowboys from 1995 to 1999. He was in the winning team of the Super Bowl of the Cowboys during the 1995 season. Alabama’s former leading played in 60 games and ran for 1,162 yards and four touchdowns.