Favorite team:LSU 
Location:Crowley/Lafayette
Biography:Work alot and watch LSU & Saints as much as I can
Interests:Cruising on my Harley, Woodworking, Wrenching stuff
Occupation:Engineering
Number of Posts:17
Registered on:9/26/2008
Online Status:Not Online

Recent Posts

Message

re: Rollcall:Saints vs. Chiefs Superdome

Posted by Brouss on 9/20/12 at 9:21 pm to
End Zone~~ 3 rows up

:whodat:
I'd say Yes to the intangibles that he brought. He was a special player in his natural ability to play the game. But as they say, there is no I in TEAM. TM7 was able to all out use that natural ability to play his game because of the others around him did there job correctly. Someone will step into that position and will have that same benefit that TM7 had. They will be able to use their skills that will be a benefit to them or it will open up possibilities for someone else on the field to use skills they weren't able to use when TM7 was on the field. It's not the end of the season.

BUT STILL!!!! :banghead:

re: How many of you played Football?

Posted by Brouss on 4/21/12 at 6:23 am to
Took a break from playing during kick off returns...
1985 3-A All-State Honorable Mention DL
5-9 182 lbs
Had lots of fun......
What has the worse long term, irreversible effect? Oil in the marsh grass root system or sand berms that can be torn down if need be? Build the berms, clean up the oil, remove the berms if they are causing damage. Stop the oil first. Pretty much a no brainer to me!!
I came across it following through with an email from the company I work for to write our Representatives and Senators about the halt in Deepwater drilling. I'm fairly concerned about this whole situation.
LINK

Legislative Briefing on the Gulf Oil Spill

In Progress

re: Here come the Layoffs

Posted by Brouss on 6/7/10 at 11:20 am to
MapGuy, I recieved the letter in PDF file form in an email from someone I trust wouldn't send me a bogus letter. I checked the Association website and it doesn't have this letter posted. LINK
All I can say is that this should be of great concern for everyone.

re: How many jobs will

Posted by Brouss on 6/7/10 at 3:16 am to
I guess BP will reimburse for everything lost there too? I'm wondering where I'll be next month or two? This is some heavy stuff to swallow.

re: How many jobs will

Posted by Brouss on 6/7/10 at 3:02 am to
I posted this under another subject on this board. A little information I came across. Its quite scary.

LOUISIANA MID-CONTINENT OIL AND GAS ASSOCIATION

Impacts of President Obama’s Order Halting Work on 33 Exploratory Wells in the Deepwater Gulf of Mexico

The Presidential Order does not affect the 4,515 shallow-water wells, and it does not affect 591 producing deepwater Gulf wells.

Roughly 33% of nation’s domestically produced oil comes from the Gulf of Mexico, and 10% of the nation’s natural gas.

80% of the Gulf’s oil, and 45% of its natural gas comes from operations in more than 1000 feet of water – the deepwater (2009 data).

Suspension of operations means roughly 33 floating drilling rigs – typically leased for hundreds of thousands of dollars per day – will be idled for six months or longer.

$250,000 to $500,000 per day, per rig – results in roughly $8,250,000 to $16,500,000 per day in costs for idle rigs;

Secondary impacts include:

• Supply boats – 2 boats per rig with day rates of $15,000/day per boat - $30,000/day for 33 rigs – nearly $1 million/day
• Impacts to other supplies and related support services (i.e., welders, divers, caterers, transportation, etc.)

Jobs –
Each drilling platform averages 90 to 140 employees at any one time (2 shifts per day), and 180 to 280 for 2 2-week shifts

Each E&P job supports 4 other positions

Therefore, 800 to 1400 jobs per idle rig platform are at risk

Wages for those jobs average $1,804/weekly; potential for lost wages is huge, over $5 to $10 million for 1 month – per platform.

Wages lost could be over $165 to $330 million/month for all 33 platforms

Secondary impacts: Many offshore workers live in Louisiana. The state is going to see a decrease in income taxes and sales taxes that would normally be paid by those employees. (The state does not collect a sales tax on oilfield supplies and equipment used offshore.)

Companies Impacted:

Oil Companies Impacted -

Shell has seven (7) exploratory wells that will be impacted

Others include:

Chevron (4)
Anadarko (3)
Marathon (2)
Noble Energy (2)
Eni US Operating Co. (2)
ATP Oil & Gas (2)
Statoil (2)
ExxonMobil (1)
Petrobras America (1)
BHP (1)
BP (1)
Kerr McGee (1)
Murphy (1)
LLOG (1)
Newfield (1)
Hess (1)

The 33 gulf wells where operations are suspended were the ones inspected immediately after the Deepwater Horizon blowout (per Interior Secretary Ken Salazar); in those inspections, “only minor problems were found on a
couple of rigs”. Salazar believes “additional safety measures can be taken including dealing with cementing and casing of wells and significant enhancements and redundancies of blowout prevention mechanisms.
Although these rigs passed the inspections, we will look at standards that are in place.”

Longer term impacts include -

Idle drilling rigs in the Gulf could mean that they will be contracted overseas for work in other locations, and if/when the halt is lifted, rigs will not be available for completing the work in the Gulf.

Loss of tolls on LA Highway 1 resulting from loss of traffic related to deepwater operations; tolls go directly to retiring the bond debt for
construction of LA Highway 1 improvements, and if those tolls are lost, the state of Louisiana – as the other responsible party on the bonds - will have to pay to retire that debt, meaning loss of funding for some other programs in the state’s budget.

A 6-month halt in new drilling would defer 80,000 barrels/day, or 4% of 2011 deepwater Gulf of Mexico production. (Wood MacKenzie)

Higher drilling costs might jeopardize exploration in frontier areas. More immediately, estimates are that seven current discoveries could be rendered sub-economic, putting U.S. $7.6 billion in future government revenues at risk. Proposals to increase the cap on oil companies’ liability for oil spill damages to U.S. $10 billion could exclude U.S. independents from offshore Gulf of Mexico activities. (Wood MacKenzie)

Since these wells are not yet producing, there is no decrease in the available oil supply. However, it could lead to a decrease in the availability of domestic oil, and it is hard to tell how commodity speculators are going to
respond over the next six months; there is the possibility for driving oil prices to levels well over $100 per barrel.

Prepared May 28, 2010, based on most recent data available; will be updated as needed.

re: Here come the Layoffs

Posted by Brouss on 6/7/10 at 2:42 am to
A little information I came across. Its quite scary.

LOUISIANA MID-CONTINENT OIL AND GAS ASSOCIATION

Impacts of President Obama’s Order Halting Work on 33 Exploratory Wells in the Deepwater Gulf of Mexico

The Presidential Order does not affect the 4,515 shallow-water wells, and it does not affect 591 producing deepwater Gulf wells.

Roughly 33% of nation’s domestically produced oil comes from the Gulf of Mexico, and 10% of the nation’s natural gas.

80% of the Gulf’s oil, and 45% of its natural gas comes from operations in more than 1000 feet of water – the deepwater (2009 data).

Suspension of operations means roughly 33 floating drilling rigs – typically leased for hundreds of thousands of dollars per day – will be idled for six months or longer.

$250,000 to $500,000 per day, per rig – results in roughly $8,250,000 to $16,500,000 per day in costs for idle rigs;

Secondary impacts include:

• Supply boats – 2 boats per rig with day rates of $15,000/day per boat - $30,000/day for 33 rigs – nearly $1 million/day
• Impacts to other supplies and related support services (i.e., welders, divers, caterers, transportation, etc.)

Jobs –
Each drilling platform averages 90 to 140 employees at any one time (2 shifts per day), and 180 to 280 for 2 2-week shifts

Each E&P job supports 4 other positions

Therefore, 800 to 1400 jobs per idle rig platform are at risk

Wages for those jobs average $1,804/weekly; potential for lost wages is huge, over $5 to $10 million for 1 month – per platform.

Wages lost could be over $165 to $330 million/month for all 33 platforms

Secondary impacts: Many offshore workers live in Louisiana. The state is going to see a decrease in income taxes and sales taxes that would normally be paid by those employees. (The state does not collect a sales tax on oilfield supplies and equipment used offshore.)

Companies Impacted:

Oil Companies Impacted -

Shell has seven (7) exploratory wells that will be impacted

Others include:

Chevron (4)
Anadarko (3)
Marathon (2)
Noble Energy (2)
Eni US Operating Co. (2)
ATP Oil & Gas (2)
Statoil (2)
ExxonMobil (1)
Petrobras America (1)
BHP (1)
BP (1)
Kerr McGee (1)
Murphy (1)
LLOG (1)
Newfield (1)
Hess (1)

The 33 gulf wells where operations are suspended were the ones inspected immediately after the Deepwater Horizon blowout (per Interior Secretary Ken Salazar); in those inspections, “only minor problems were found on a
couple of rigs”. Salazar believes “additional safety measures can be taken including dealing with cementing and casing of wells and significant enhancements and redundancies of blowout prevention mechanisms.
Although these rigs passed the inspections, we will look at standards that are in place.”

Longer term impacts include -

Idle drilling rigs in the Gulf could mean that they will be contracted overseas for work in other locations, and if/when the halt is lifted, rigs will not be available for completing the work in the Gulf.

Loss of tolls on LA Highway 1 resulting from loss of traffic related to deepwater operations; tolls go directly to retiring the bond debt for
construction of LA Highway 1 improvements, and if those tolls are lost, the state of Louisiana – as the other responsible party on the bonds - will have to pay to retire that debt, meaning loss of funding for some other programs in the state’s budget.

A 6-month halt in new drilling would defer 80,000 barrels/day, or 4% of 2011 deepwater Gulf of Mexico production. (Wood MacKenzie)

Higher drilling costs might jeopardize exploration in frontier areas. More
immediately, estimates are that seven current discoveries could be rendered sub-economic, putting U.S. $7.6 billion in future government revenues at risk. Proposals to increase the cap on oil companies’ liability for oil spill
damages to U.S. $10 billion could exclude U.S. independents from offshore Gulf of Mexico activities. (Wood MacKenzie)

Since these wells are not yet producing, there is no decrease in the available oil supply. However, it could lead to a decrease in the availability of domestic oil, and it is hard to tell how commodity speculators are going to
respond over the next six months; there is the possibility for driving oil prices to levels well over $100 per barrel.

Prepared May 28, 2010, based on most recent data available; will be updated as needed.
Does anyone know how the recruiting of O/L & D/L linemen here compares with other schools? Are we getting the top in the country as far as linemen?

If you don't have a disciplined, executing offensive line up front your not going to do as well on the field, even with top knotch talent in the backfield.

Would anyone agree with me that its possible that if a decline of play by the defensive line would cause a decline of play of the offensive line if the 1st team O/L practices against the 1st team D/L?

You only play in a game as good as you practice. Lack of realistic looks at plays during practice equals bad play during games.

re: Donnie Bozeman

Posted by Brouss on 10/3/08 at 12:54 am to
In 1985, Bozeman Sr. coached at Rayne High School and took the team to a 6-4 regular season and up to the Quarter Finals. Beat Leesville in the Regional Playoff game 20-12 with an Offensive Guard running for 121 yards on two Guard around plays. The Defense held Leesvilles 2 - 1000 yard backs, Charles Buckley and Jeff Steele to a combined 231 yards on 44 carries. In the Quarter Finals game they lost to Wossman 27-6. Not to bad for a team that had 22 dressed out to play ball. He went to St. Ed's afterwards, Not sure what he did at St. Ed's.