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Location:Philadelphia, MS
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Interests:LSu Football and Christian Ministry
Occupation:Director of addiction recovery ministry
Number of Posts:34
Registered on:11/24/2019
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Two reasons: a coaching staff asleep at the wheel. They refused the sure thing Sugar Bowl because of a “gentleman’s handshake” from the Cotton Bowl to play Texas. In the meantime ND crept into the picture, and pushed us out. Ole Miss had Archie and the Bowl didn’t want a rematch. Harrah’s in Vegas had only two teams that year that would have been favored against Texas in the Cotton Bowl: Penn State @ 1.0 and LSU @ 2.5.
I bet you don't. This is like something you've never seen, buddy. It's not mid-west or eastern football. Trust me on this.
Because we couldn't get Pat Sullivan away from TCU due to contractual obligations. We hired DiNardo from Vandy, and he left owing them a ton of money. Back then, we were lucky to get any decent coach because the program had stagnated so under Archer and then Hallman. Coach DiNardo did some good things for us and left some great players for Saban to start his first two seasons with.

re: LSU v. Alabama 1984

Posted by Addywalker10 on 2/17/21 at 12:22 pm to
I was there! The game was held up for about an hour because a tornado hit Birmingham. We lost at State the next week 16-14. They had a backup QB form Bogalusa names Orlando McDaniel (I think) and he ran all over us.
It was "the players" in 1986 that cost us getting Steve Spurrier from Duke. We settled for Mike Archer because "the players" wanted him. He won an SEC title with Arnsparger's players, and then proceeded to run the program in the ground.
The 1970 game on the Plains was an especially tough game with conference title implications. Earlier in the season, Texas A&M upset LSU in the finals seconds for the Tigers only loss of the season, and AU was unbeaten and in first place in the SEC. The game was played in the mud after a big rain the night before that continued into Saturday afternoon. Auburn had upset 17th ranked Tennessee (the eventual one loss Sugar Bowl champions) and 16th ranked Georgia Tech. The Plainsmen were averaging 30-points a game but had not faced a defense as tough as the Mike Anderson/Tommy Casanova/John Sage led Tiger D. With a consistent rushing attack led by Art Cantrelle, and a spectacular, last minute 4th Quarter goal line stand, the Bayou Bengals finished off the War Eagles, 20-15. Auburn would lose only once more at home against Georgia and LSU lost a heartbreaking 3-0 game in South Bend against the Golden Domers. The Tigers went on to win the SEC, but lost to eventual National Champion Nebraska in the Orange Bowl, 17-12. Auburn beat the Archie Manning-led Ole Miss Rebels in the Gator Bowl to finish 10-2. Pat Sullivan would win the 1971 Heisman Trophy. LSU finished 9-3, which kept alive the Tigers streak of 9-wins a year from 1969-1973.
Not so. Will just verbalized what 90% of Tiger fans were thinking. That was the most embarrassing performance of an LSU football team that I have seen in 57-years of watching them. The attitude that Coach Miles exhibited that night eventually cost him dearly, we kept him 2-years too long.
I sat in a tornado in Birmingham in 1984 when the Tigers beat Bama 16-14. The authorities temporarily suspended the game, but the bad weather eventually blew over. They completed all 4-quartersof play. The win put LSU in the drivers seat to win the SEC with only one game left to play and that was the next week in Starkville. We went there uninspired and flat offensively, and lost. Their backup QB was from Bogalusa and he ran circles around us and they beat us 16-14, and it cost us the title. We played the Sugar Bowl (UF was on probation) and lost to Nebraska 28-10.

re: LSU would have lost..

Posted by Addywalker10 on 3/3/20 at 1:42 pm to
Tigers would've hung 50 on that confused defense and you know that! The LSU Tigers are THE 2019 NCAA national football champions. You are the Citrus Bowl champs.
LSU wore the "metallic" gold helmets until the late 1950's when they went to a more Yellow hue during Coach Dietzel's tenure. It wasn't until the early to mid 1970's under Cholly Mac when they started wearing the brighter yellow helmets that we see them wear today.
Well, we know that you and all the other sad UCFers will never play in a championship game, much less win it. 40-32.

re: Favorite Burrow TD pass

Posted by Addywalker10 on 1/26/20 at 11:14 pm to
Agree. Those are my two favorite passes of the year. But there were so many to choose from!

re: The *MAGIC* is gone LSU

Posted by Addywalker10 on 1/25/20 at 7:14 pm to
You people still have the Butthurt that the greatest college football team of all time is the 2019 Tigers. Get over it because there's nothing you can do about it, boy. By the way, have you ever even been to Tuscaloosa?

re: LsU is done, it's over

Posted by Addywalker10 on 1/16/20 at 10:58 pm to
Even if we are done, the "little sisters" of the two Mississippi SEC schools, the Maroons, have never been and never will be a threat to us. Now, go back to sleep.
When Clemson didn't shut the door when they were ahead 17-7. LSU had 'em right where they wanted them and immediately scored to make it 17-14, Clemson. We had figured out Venables and Clemson's D and for all practical purposes the rout was on.
Nope. We got hosed by the SEC Officiating crew at A&M and you know it. 50-7. Is that score going to be printed on your Coke cups this year?
Well, they both are taller than Nick Saban.

re: Barrett Sallee is a dolt!

Posted by Addywalker10 on 1/11/20 at 11:47 am to
Barrett Sallee has always been critical of LSU. Some of it was justified when he criticized Les Miles's refusal to change the offensive philosophy at LSU,]. He worked for Auburn in the early 2000's, so his disdain for us may have started there. I heard that interview with Finebaum and he said not one word about our schedule vs Clemson's, our record setting O, or about Dave Aranda's job turning the D around after the Ole Miss game, but crowed all interview about Brent Venables and how we have never seen the D like we will see on Monday. He picked Clemson, 35-31.
I would rate Minnesota at #10, but everything else is exactly the way I rank them.
150-points higher than yours.
Second row, second from the right. The 1972-1976 helmets.
He was the Outland Trophy winner named Barron Jones from Memphis. Does ESPN radio games now.
You simply look for things to bolster your argument. Beating Alabama and their 2nd best QB in the SEC is old news. Winning the West outright was next, then beating Georgia and winning the SEC championship game for the title. Now its on to the CFP and Oklahoma, then Ohio State/Clemson after them. Trust me, our fan base is a lot more focused on the Sooners/the Buckeyes/the Orange Tigers that we are the Citrus Bowl invitees. It appears the Bammers are the ones obsessed with what could have been.
And the "greatest" Alabama ever team lost to LSU 9-6 in the Game of the Century.
LSU's Number-9 will go down as one college football's top-5 best Quarterbacks of all-time. He will certainly be considered as one of the 2 or 3 finest Quarterbacks to have ever played in the Southeastern Conference. He is the 2019 All-SEC first team Quarterback, the SEC Offensive Player of the Year, the Maxwell Award winner, the Walter Camp National Player of the Year,the Davey O'Brien winner, the Walter Camp All-America First Team QB, the Johnny Unitas Golden Arm Award winner, the AP first team All-America QB, the AP National Player of the Year, the SEC Championship Game MVP, and this Saturday evening he will walk away with the Heisman Trophy, in what some have suggested might be the greatest runaway vote of all time. He carried his team on his back in November at Tuscaloosa where he almost single handedly shocked the college football world and beat the G.O.A.T. coach on his own field. That coach's team had won 31-straight games and was 39-1 since September of 2015. Number-9 engineered wins against FIVE Top-10 teams on the day the game was played. He set an all-time SEC passing record for yards and touchdowns. He has led his team to an SEC championship and a number-1 ranking in the CFP. He is the greatest player to ever step foot on the campus of what most college football experts consider as one of the elite football schools in America, LSU. LSU is one of the top 3 or 4 football schools in the SEC. The word 'Hype" is root for 'Hyperbole", which means exaggerated statements. Son, there is nothing fake or unreal or exaggerated about this young man. Ask all of the SEC football coaches. Burreaux is not your average JEAUX, he is one of college football's greatest players of all time. He is an even greater human being. Geaux Tigahs!
Because Jeaux is twice the player that Tua is!