Favorite team:LSU 
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Number of Posts:189
Registered on:11/6/2006
Online Status:Not Online

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I’ll have to get Q down to Louisiana for one of the games to come tailgate!
Yes. What the hell is going on???? I’m so lost.
quote:

OP when does voting close?


October 6th 4pm Central.

We have plenty of time to get Q to the top
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What county?


They live in woodford county.
My grandfather played football at LSU with YA Tittle! :cheers:

2023 Garden and Gun Photo Contest Help

Posted by lsustax on 9/8/23 at 3:39 pm
My cousin who lives in Kentucky(graduated from LSU) submitted a picture to 2023 Garden and Gun Good Dog Photo Contest. Need some help getting her some votes. Dog's name is Q. She only has 91 votes got a long way to go any votes will help. Thanks!



Top vote getter 2100

Q currently at 166


Photo Contest
I think you can vote once per hour per device. Thanks for all your help already at 114
Looks like we got some competition!
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Posted by lesserof2weevils online on 9/10/23 at 10:31 pm to LegendInMyMind Well they found us, and said no way can “tigerdipshits” beat them. So I hope we can deliver.


Ar15.com “goober” 5704

Tigerdroppings.com “Q” 6802



You can vote once per hour*

My cousin who lives in Kentucky(graduated from LSU) submitted a picture to 2023 Garden and Gun Good Dog Photo Contest. Need some help getting her some votes. Dog's name is Q. She only has 91 votes got a long way to go any votes will help. Thanks!



Photo Contest
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Also, at 10:01 pm local time, the lights of the Las Vegas Strip will go dark for 10 minutes to remember the victims.


A mini purge...

re: Official CryptoTalk Thread

Posted by lsustax on 11/28/17 at 3:25 pm
Please add @lsustax

Thank you!
My grandfather played in the 44 orange bowl. It would be nice to see the trophy and it not be on a shelf 20 ft in the air in the football ops. building. So many of those trophies you can't see at all.
Field of Dreams shite right there...
they are all going in the water now.....
Something is gong on down on the beach in galveston. About 20 people gathered around. LINK
Rain and flood are not the same thing

re: D-Day: June 6, 1944

Posted by lsustax on 6/5/17 at 12:27 pm


Joe Nagata

On Jan. 1, 1944 – the height of World War II – Tiger coach Bernie Moore inserted Nagata, a Japanese-American, at fullback in the Orange Bowl game against Texas A&M. Nagata was not a proto-typical fullback. He was a slender, 165-pound wingback. It was his ball-handling skills and footwork that Moore wanted in the lineup rather than a fullback whose strength was blocking and power running.

It was a surprising move by the LSU staff. Steve Van Buren, who would later be elected to the Pro Football Hall of Fame, was LSU's primary weapon. In the third game of the regular season, Texas A&M focused its defense on stopping Van Buren, and A&M won, 28-13.

World War II shut down many college programs, so the Orange Bowl scheduled a rematch between the Aggies and LSU's 5-3 Tigers. Van Buren, one of the nation's most productive running backs, was the drawing card.

Moore hoped that tweaking the Tiger offense might puzzle A&M the second time around. Nagata took direct snaps from center in LSU's version of the "Notre Dame box." He stepped forward, pivoted left or right, and handed off to Van Buren. This action froze the A&M linebackers for an instant, allowing Van Buren to capitalize on his explosive speed. This ploy, as well as Nagata's occasional bursts up the middle on the spinner series, provided the necessary distraction. Van Buren gained 160 of LSU's 181 yards rushing. The Tigers won, 19-14, a satisfying victory for Moore and his collection of 4-Fs.

The Orange Bowl trip was one of the highlights of Nagata's LSU years. Just getting back to Baton Rouge was a challenge for the team. War-time troop movements kept the Tigers from returning by train, so Baton Rouge banker Lewis Gottleib solved the problem by purchasing 18 used cars to transport the players. He later sold the cars at his automobile agency.

Nagata enjoyed telling of the eventful ride home.

"We ran out of gas rationing stamps and couldn't buy gas," Nagata once told this writer. "At every gas station we came to, we had to beg the station manager to sell us one gallon of gas, then go across the street and beg another station to sell us a gallon of gas. We did that repeatedly. It took us a lot longer to get home."

"Our car broke down at one point," Nagata said. "It took a couple of days to get it fixed. But we enjoyed swimming in the Gulf of Mexico while we were waiting."

The Reality of War

The inconvenience of war as a civilian soon transformed into the reality of war as a combatant for Nagata.

The Nisei, Japanese-Americans, were allowed to enlist in the Army and be assigned to the 442nd Regimental Combat Team. By the fall of 1944, Nagata was fighting in the mountains of northern Italy with the 442nd, trying to dislodge the Germans from Italy's "Gothic Line," a series of mountainous fortresses defended by 2,300 machine-gun nests and preventing the Allies from entering the Po River Valley, where the Allied superiority in tanks would be exploited.

In 20 months and in seven major campaigns in Italy, France, and Central Europe, the 442nd was awarded 18,143 individual metals – including 9,486 Purple Hearts – for an outfit with a maximum strength of 4,500 men.

"I was no hero," Nagata told Marty Mulé of the Times-Picayune. "They kept telling us to take the high ground, and the high ground always had a lot of Germans."

Let the record show that Nagata was awarded the Bronze Star and the Infantry Combat Medal, two decorations always associated with combat. He was involved in three campaigns with the 442nd Regimental Combat team, including the Po Valley campaign, and awarded eight medals in his tour of duty.



Author Bud Johnson, director of the Andonie Sports Museum, is a former LSU Sports Information director and author of "The Perfect Season: LSU's Magic Year – 1958."