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Favorite team: | LSU ![]() |
Location: | Metairie |
Biography: | |
Interests: | Blues, |
Occupation: | Musician |
Number of Posts: | 2843 |
Registered on: | 12/4/2016 |
Online Status: | Not Online |
Recent Posts
Message
re: Officiating was actually pretty good last night
Posted by Old on 11/10/19 at 8:31 am
quote:Only because we won THE GAME. THIS TIME :pimp:
the refs let the guys play for the most part, i have no complaints.
re: Final score of 46-41 is misleading.
Posted by Old on 11/10/19 at 8:06 am
quote:
The game was really never that close. I thought LSU beat the brakes off of Bama but the score shows a closer game. Fluke punt return by Waddle and Smith's last TD made the score close. That Bama D is trash!!
I.N.A.C.C.U.R.A.T.E.
THEY WERE CLOSE MORE THAN ONCE. VERY
re: Officiating was actually pretty good last night
Posted by Old on 11/10/19 at 8:00 am
quote:Because PRESIDENT TRUMP WAS THERE. S.T.U.P.I.D. A.S.S.
Officiating was actually pretty good last night
re: After given Finebaum credit last night, I take it back with the most stupid....
Posted by Old on 11/10/19 at 7:52 am
quote:PAUL FINEBAUM IS A (sun) LEO (LION) (moon) SCORPII (SCORPION) =
After given Finebaum credit last night, I take it back with the most stupid....
P.O.I.S.O.N. :usa:
'TIGERS' A Mascot With History
Posted by Old on 11/4/19 at 1:33 pm
LINK :geauxtigers:
No One Is Auburn (expletive)
Posted by Old on 10/22/19 at 3:56 pm
Paul Finebaum rips into Michigan’s Jim Harbaugh...again
Posted by Old on 10/21/19 at 6:05 pm
LINK
AP
Michigan head coach Jim Harbaugh talks with wide receiver Donovan Peoples-Jones during the first half of an NCAA college football game against Wisconsin Saturday, Sept. 21, 2019, in Madison, Wis. Wisconsin won 34-14. (AP Photo/Andy Manis)
187
By Ryan Zuke | rzuke1@mlive.com
The ESPN analyst lambasted the Michigan head coach once again Wednesday morning on the show, “First Take,” saying he is “a fraud and a charade” after the Wolverines’ 35-14 loss to Wisconsin on Saturday.
With Michigan playing five more ranked opponents this season -- No. 5 Ohio State, No. 10 Notre Dame, No. 12 Penn State, No. 14 Iowa and No. 25 Michigan State, Finebaum doesn't envision the team earning any statement wins in 2019.
"I don't see what he is going to be able to do to beat a really good team," Finebaum said on the show with colleagues Stephen A. Smith and Max Kellerman. "He might beat some of the average teams on the schedule, but how is he going to beat a Notre Dame, or win at a Penn state or Ohio State? I've seen no imagination. I've regression in this program. I've seen stubbornness...
"He no longer has that ability. I am going to quit trying to prop him up because he was once good. He no longer is elite."
RELATED: Josh Uche on fixing Michigan’s early-season woes: ‘Winning cures everything’
Finebaum’s criticism of Michigan’s fifth-year coach is nothing new. He once called Harbaugh the Donald Trump of college football in 2016 after the Wolverines announced they will be holding spring break practices at IMG Academy in Florida.
AP
Michigan head coach Jim Harbaugh talks with wide receiver Donovan Peoples-Jones during the first half of an NCAA college football game against Wisconsin Saturday, Sept. 21, 2019, in Madison, Wis. Wisconsin won 34-14. (AP Photo/Andy Manis)
187
By Ryan Zuke | rzuke1@mlive.com
The ESPN analyst lambasted the Michigan head coach once again Wednesday morning on the show, “First Take,” saying he is “a fraud and a charade” after the Wolverines’ 35-14 loss to Wisconsin on Saturday.
With Michigan playing five more ranked opponents this season -- No. 5 Ohio State, No. 10 Notre Dame, No. 12 Penn State, No. 14 Iowa and No. 25 Michigan State, Finebaum doesn't envision the team earning any statement wins in 2019.
"I don't see what he is going to be able to do to beat a really good team," Finebaum said on the show with colleagues Stephen A. Smith and Max Kellerman. "He might beat some of the average teams on the schedule, but how is he going to beat a Notre Dame, or win at a Penn state or Ohio State? I've seen no imagination. I've regression in this program. I've seen stubbornness...
"He no longer has that ability. I am going to quit trying to prop him up because he was once good. He no longer is elite."
RELATED: Josh Uche on fixing Michigan’s early-season woes: ‘Winning cures everything’
Finebaum’s criticism of Michigan’s fifth-year coach is nothing new. He once called Harbaugh the Donald Trump of college football in 2016 after the Wolverines announced they will be holding spring break practices at IMG Academy in Florida.
quote:
Paul is a venereal disease!
re: Paul Finebaum is the worst mouth on TV
Posted by Old on 10/17/19 at 4:54 pm
quote:tHE UNI-SEXED KID.
Paul Finebaum is the worst mouth on TV
re: Your favorite LSU - Florida moment
Posted by Old on 10/8/19 at 12:34 pm
re: LSU-Auburn is a lock for 2:30pm CBS
Posted by Old on 10/8/19 at 12:30 pm
quote:
LSU-Auburn is a lock for 2:30pm CBS
If Malzahn loses this game he will be terminated as AU head coach. REDNECK BS
Gus Mahlzahn
re: What’s the loudest you’ve heard Death Valley?
Posted by Old on 10/8/19 at 12:25 pm
quote:
What’s the loudest you’ve heard Death Valley?
I have to list more than one:
LSU vs Auburn 2005 (Baton Rouge) . AU, in a losing effort late in OT versus LSU. This after dominating for 3 quarters missed a OT 3 point'r giving LSU the win. At that moment it sailed wide left that stadium blew my head off its neck.
LSU vs UGA 2003 . The last play of the second quarter LSU scored a TD to take a 7-3 lead into halftime earning themselves the momentum in a tight game. S. Carey following his blocks on a clutch run to score. Louder than a jet engine full throttle was that play.
:geauxtigers:
re: Drew's injury a Blessing in Disguise for this teams Championship hopes?
Posted by Old on 10/4/19 at 5:13 pm
quote:A BLESSING :whodat:
Drew's injury a Blessing in Disguise for this teams Championship hopes?
re: Auburn vs. Florida, who you got and why?
Posted by Old on 10/4/19 at 5:09 pm
quote:We need to vacate the SEC. Why? Both are crooked.
Auburn vs. Florida, who you got and why?
I'll take AU. Franks is out until next season as I heard it.
re: Name one player (former or current) you want on your side in a bar fight
Posted by Old on 10/4/19 at 5:04 pm
quote:TOMMY CASANOVA :geauxtigers:
Name one player (former or current) you want on your side in a bar fight
re: Who is the best coach in LSU football history?
Posted by Old on 10/4/19 at 5:03 pm
quote:CHARLES MCCLENDON + A ALL AMERICAN DEFENSIVE END FOR THE KENTUCKY WILDCATS WHO WAS VOTED MVP OF THE 1951 SUGAR BOWL. KENTUCKY WAS RANKED #1 AND REMAINED #1 AFTER THE 13-6 VICTORY OVER OKLAHOMA. :usa:
Who is the best coach in LSU football history?
re: Anybody ever take the train from Nola to Tuscaloosa?
Posted by Old on 10/4/19 at 4:58 pm
quote:E.X.C.E.L.L.E.N.T. price, hotel, people, a true joy
Me and a buddy are heading to t-town for the bama game and were thinking about doing this. Anybody have a review? Can you drink on it? Is it comfortable? TIA
I attended #2Alabama versus #5LSU 2005 :usa:
re: Finebaum just put LSU on upset alert
Posted by Old on 10/3/19 at 5:37 pm
quote:Ah this
Finebaum has never played football in his life
After Jim Delany's silly 'slippery slope' remark, here are 9 potential effects of 'pay-for
Posted by Old on 10/3/19 at 7:37 am
LINK
Big Ten commissioner Jim Delany spent part of Wednesday morning railing against California Senate Bill 206, which will make it illegal for the NCAA to punish college athletes who profit off their name, image and likeness.
Jim Delany holding a sign: Big Ten commissioner Jim Delany speaks to media members during the Big Ten Football Media Days event on July 18, 2019 at the Hilton Chicago in Chicago, IL. (Getty)
© Provided by Oath Inc. Big Ten commissioner Jim Delany speaks to media members during the Big Ten Football Media Days event on July 18, 2019 at the Hilton Chicago in Chicago, IL. (Getty)
Such a law, which was signed by Gov. Gavin Newsom on Monday, pains the sensibilities of college administrators such as Delany, who view all money coming into college athletics as something he, and people like him, should control.
“I think the law of unintended consequences and the law of slippery slope apply here,” said Delany.
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He’s right that no one is certain how all of this might turn out, although slippery slope is an interesting phrase. Probably everything looks like a slippery slope when you’re standing on a house of cards built out of $100 bills. Delany, after all, recently had a bonus clause in his contract kick in that should exceed $20 million, which comes on top of his multimillion-dollar base salary.
If you are looking for a slippery slope it came whenever so-called amateur sports became such a big, unapologetic business that a guy like Jim Delany could reap $20 million bonuses. That was the real point of no return. That’s when SB 206, in some form, became reality.
College athletics is flat-footed and in a panic right now because guys such as Delany — not to mention fellow multi-millionaires Mark Emmert from the NCAA or Bob Bowlsby from the Big 12 or Larry Scott from the Pac-12 — did nothing to prevent, let alone plan for, this day.
As the drum beat for NIL rights has grown through the years via federal trials, public opinion and slow-moving legislatures, college sports’ leadership mostly just regurgitated whiny statements, obstruct progress and lawyer up. Well, that and negotiate new bonus deals for themselves (of course).
As the current gold rush of revenue has flooded into college athletics, they could have made moves toward the middle here. Better compensation for athletes. A limited NIL package. Some kind of revenue sharing. More scholarships for non-revenue sports.
Instead, they did almost nothing. They even had to get dragged, kicking and screaming, just to dole out a few hundred bucks in cost-of-living stipends. It wasn’t until 2015 that they’d even allowed that … and it came with similar predictions of doom.
So Delany et al failed miserably running the business they were paid handsomely to run, leaving Gavin Newsom, LeBron James and a lot of politicians to upend everything. What comes next is anyone’s guess, yet after two days of talking to administrators, coaches, agents and former players, here are a few perhaps unexpected possibilities.
Not all of them are bad. Many in college sports are optimistic that things will actually be better. Even coaches in Delany’s own league roll their eyes at his comments. A slippery slope … or progress?
1. Athletic departments are going to have to be organized (if it’s legal)
It makes sense to try to run this. Line up top boosters for endorsement and sponsorship opportunities to be handed down to the players. Scholarships could even come with guarantees of money for the players and add consistency to the recruiting process.
One athletic director noted that his school would need to set something up for non-glamour-position football players — “Everyone will want to sponsor the quarterback, but you need someone to block.”
Even mid-major basketball coaches figure that a decent recruit will be worth a $5,000-$10,000 promise. Since there is no business that would want to pay that much for an otherwise anonymous player, the school will have to facilitate by pooling money.
The rub? Title IX. Can a school round up boosters and businesses if 95-plus percent of the money goes to male athletes? No one is sure.
2. Certain mid-majors can benefit
The most valuable thing on the recruiting trail has been conference affiliation. Top players tend to sign with teams in the top leagues. Now? Perhaps not.
Are you better off being the starting quarterback at Boise State, where by definition you become the biggest star in a metro area that is approaching 1 million (let alone the entire state) or just another guy battling for a job at USC (where, in Los Angeles, no one will know your name). How about Oregon State?
In the past, USC won all those recruiting battles. Even Oregon State won most of them. Now? Places such as Boise State, or even lower-level programs in major conferences such as Iowa State or Indiana or Wake Forest are not broke. Maybe they can’t win every bidding war against the Clemsons and Alabamas, but they might be able to win more now than in the past.
“I think a school such as Boise can do really well,” one athletic director said. “When everyone was offering the same package -- a scholarship, room and board — then conference membership mattered. Now that they can, at times, offer more money, playing in the Mountain West rather than the Pac-12, it matters a lot less.”
3. Does Alabama really have all the money?
It has a lot. And no other professional teams in the state to divert attention. Ditto for Clemson and a lot of others. But these are still schools in small towns in comparatively poor Southern states. If the system shifts, making pure money matter more than things like stadium size and tradition, then what stops schools in wealthier areas such as the Northeast, Chicago or the Bay Area from making significant gains?
4. Here come the basketball schools
Some athletic programs are so big and have so many fans that they won’t lack for money to spread around. Ohio State. Texas. Michigan. Florida.
For a lot of others though, a priority is going to be paid to football, not basketball or other sports. For a school that cares mostly, or exclusively, about basketball, especially in a major city with lots of businesses and corporations, this could be a boon.
Villanova (and Philadelphia) has money. Georgetown (and Washington D.C.) has money. Memphis, for example, is going to spend top dollar on hoops, while local SEC rivals (Ole Miss, Miss State, Arkansas and Tennessee) will be focused on football.
Gonzaga, Wichita State and others will continue to be all basketball and offer mid-sized communities where the point guard can be the biggest star in the region. That can suddenly matter a lot more than what league someone is playing in.
:rolleyes: :usa: :pimp: :confused:
Big Ten commissioner Jim Delany spent part of Wednesday morning railing against California Senate Bill 206, which will make it illegal for the NCAA to punish college athletes who profit off their name, image and likeness.
Jim Delany holding a sign: Big Ten commissioner Jim Delany speaks to media members during the Big Ten Football Media Days event on July 18, 2019 at the Hilton Chicago in Chicago, IL. (Getty)
© Provided by Oath Inc. Big Ten commissioner Jim Delany speaks to media members during the Big Ten Football Media Days event on July 18, 2019 at the Hilton Chicago in Chicago, IL. (Getty)
Such a law, which was signed by Gov. Gavin Newsom on Monday, pains the sensibilities of college administrators such as Delany, who view all money coming into college athletics as something he, and people like him, should control.
“I think the law of unintended consequences and the law of slippery slope apply here,” said Delany.
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Extend Joint Care For Dogs
SEE MORE
Ad by EXTEND PETS
He’s right that no one is certain how all of this might turn out, although slippery slope is an interesting phrase. Probably everything looks like a slippery slope when you’re standing on a house of cards built out of $100 bills. Delany, after all, recently had a bonus clause in his contract kick in that should exceed $20 million, which comes on top of his multimillion-dollar base salary.
If you are looking for a slippery slope it came whenever so-called amateur sports became such a big, unapologetic business that a guy like Jim Delany could reap $20 million bonuses. That was the real point of no return. That’s when SB 206, in some form, became reality.
College athletics is flat-footed and in a panic right now because guys such as Delany — not to mention fellow multi-millionaires Mark Emmert from the NCAA or Bob Bowlsby from the Big 12 or Larry Scott from the Pac-12 — did nothing to prevent, let alone plan for, this day.
As the drum beat for NIL rights has grown through the years via federal trials, public opinion and slow-moving legislatures, college sports’ leadership mostly just regurgitated whiny statements, obstruct progress and lawyer up. Well, that and negotiate new bonus deals for themselves (of course).
As the current gold rush of revenue has flooded into college athletics, they could have made moves toward the middle here. Better compensation for athletes. A limited NIL package. Some kind of revenue sharing. More scholarships for non-revenue sports.
Instead, they did almost nothing. They even had to get dragged, kicking and screaming, just to dole out a few hundred bucks in cost-of-living stipends. It wasn’t until 2015 that they’d even allowed that … and it came with similar predictions of doom.
So Delany et al failed miserably running the business they were paid handsomely to run, leaving Gavin Newsom, LeBron James and a lot of politicians to upend everything. What comes next is anyone’s guess, yet after two days of talking to administrators, coaches, agents and former players, here are a few perhaps unexpected possibilities.
Not all of them are bad. Many in college sports are optimistic that things will actually be better. Even coaches in Delany’s own league roll their eyes at his comments. A slippery slope … or progress?
1. Athletic departments are going to have to be organized (if it’s legal)
It makes sense to try to run this. Line up top boosters for endorsement and sponsorship opportunities to be handed down to the players. Scholarships could even come with guarantees of money for the players and add consistency to the recruiting process.
One athletic director noted that his school would need to set something up for non-glamour-position football players — “Everyone will want to sponsor the quarterback, but you need someone to block.”
Even mid-major basketball coaches figure that a decent recruit will be worth a $5,000-$10,000 promise. Since there is no business that would want to pay that much for an otherwise anonymous player, the school will have to facilitate by pooling money.
The rub? Title IX. Can a school round up boosters and businesses if 95-plus percent of the money goes to male athletes? No one is sure.
2. Certain mid-majors can benefit
The most valuable thing on the recruiting trail has been conference affiliation. Top players tend to sign with teams in the top leagues. Now? Perhaps not.
Are you better off being the starting quarterback at Boise State, where by definition you become the biggest star in a metro area that is approaching 1 million (let alone the entire state) or just another guy battling for a job at USC (where, in Los Angeles, no one will know your name). How about Oregon State?
In the past, USC won all those recruiting battles. Even Oregon State won most of them. Now? Places such as Boise State, or even lower-level programs in major conferences such as Iowa State or Indiana or Wake Forest are not broke. Maybe they can’t win every bidding war against the Clemsons and Alabamas, but they might be able to win more now than in the past.
“I think a school such as Boise can do really well,” one athletic director said. “When everyone was offering the same package -- a scholarship, room and board — then conference membership mattered. Now that they can, at times, offer more money, playing in the Mountain West rather than the Pac-12, it matters a lot less.”
3. Does Alabama really have all the money?
It has a lot. And no other professional teams in the state to divert attention. Ditto for Clemson and a lot of others. But these are still schools in small towns in comparatively poor Southern states. If the system shifts, making pure money matter more than things like stadium size and tradition, then what stops schools in wealthier areas such as the Northeast, Chicago or the Bay Area from making significant gains?
4. Here come the basketball schools
Some athletic programs are so big and have so many fans that they won’t lack for money to spread around. Ohio State. Texas. Michigan. Florida.
For a lot of others though, a priority is going to be paid to football, not basketball or other sports. For a school that cares mostly, or exclusively, about basketball, especially in a major city with lots of businesses and corporations, this could be a boon.
Villanova (and Philadelphia) has money. Georgetown (and Washington D.C.) has money. Memphis, for example, is going to spend top dollar on hoops, while local SEC rivals (Ole Miss, Miss State, Arkansas and Tennessee) will be focused on football.
Gonzaga, Wichita State and others will continue to be all basketball and offer mid-sized communities where the point guard can be the biggest star in the region. That can suddenly matter a lot more than what league someone is playing in.
:rolleyes: :usa: :pimp: :confused:
re: Texas must have Beat the Sh*t out of our DL
Posted by Old on 9/30/19 at 1:16 pm
quote:AU is d i r t y .
Resting them up b/c the harder games are coming and they will be needed when it really counts.
re: New AP Poll Released - LSU #5
Posted by Old on 9/29/19 at 10:40 pm
quote:I think Texas is as good as all listed.
Notre dame is more legit than Texas... apparently.
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