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- Nov 27, 2012
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Homer glasses are fully on
/by RUTHLESSNESS
/by RUTHLESSNESS
Thanks Lu, and I agree. I just put him because he was their starter and didn't feel like just writing about their OL. I expect more of this in the game:This is one of your very best jobs. Awesome stuff.
Also, is it irrational to feel confident that our Freshman RB (Gray) has more raw talent than their workhorse (Brown)?
It's true, so it's not irrational.
I thought grades were fine. I could be wrong. The way Golden constantly talks about LB size I assumed they just went in a different direction.Dan I was sh ways under the impression Burgess was a grade casualty. At least that's what was going around at the time. Waters & Burgess was a package deal until Burgess knew he couldn't qualify. Is that incorrect? Nice work!
Couldn't be more wrong.7. If Louisville was a dungeon in Legend of Zelda, they would be:
=
Married first girl that kissed him or still a virgin.
If golden doesn't have these guys fired up and kicking *** then I don't know what to say. We better hit them hard on every ******* play, talk **** after every play. Golden better release the reins and let these kids get their revenge.Heres a little something to add to #2 and that GIF:
By Matt Porter
CORAL GABLES — Because players are human beings and not robots, it was only a matter of time before last year’s Louisville game was discussed.
Cornerback Corn Elder was a freshman during last year’s Russell Athletic Bowl, out for the season with a knee injury. His memories?
“Honestly, I remember them trying to run the score up,” he said. “Just disrespecting us, pretty much.”
After Deon Bush sacked Teddy Bridgewater for a safety on the opening drive, it was all Cardinals. They went up 22-2 at halftime and were still carving up UM’s defense in the final minutes.
“I feel like they were out there talking a lot of trash,” Elder said. “They have a lot of players from here. It was a confidence thing.”
Bridgewater, the former Miami Northwestern High star, threw for 447 yards and three touchdowns. He finished his day with a 1-yard touchdown run early in the fourth quarter. After scoring, he threw up the ‘U’ hand signal and brought his hands across his throat in a slicing motion.
Standing on the sidelines, then-freshman Walter Tucker said he felt “disrespected” when he saw that.
“I looked at it and kind of got mad. I couldn’t do anything because I was on special teams,” he said. “I was a young cat. I just got there. I understood I had to wait my turn.”
They won’t get a chance for revenge against Bridgewater, who now plays for the Minnesota Vikings. They also won’t see Louisville receiver DeVante Parker, who is out 6-8 weeks with a broken bone in his foot. Parker had 142 yards and a touchdown on nine catches in the bowl game.
Elder, who is fighting for a job as a starting cornerback, said his team will draw plenty of motivation from last Dec. 28.
“Oh yeah, of course,” Elder said. “First game, they’re new into the conference. We ended last year with a loss to them. Playing the team you lost to in your last game … that’s a good thing.”
Reading OP's post has me all kinds of salty with Louisville. They are flying up my most hated list alongside Virginia Tech and FSU. We better redeem ourselves and CRUSH this team.
If golden doesn't have these guys fired up and kicking *** then I don't know what to say. We better hit them hard on every ******* play, talk **** after every play. Golden better release the reins and let these kids get their revenge.Heres a little something to add to #2 and that GIF:
By Matt Porter
CORAL GABLES — Because players are human beings and not robots, it was only a matter of time before last year’s Louisville game was discussed.
Cornerback Corn Elder was a freshman during last year’s Russell Athletic Bowl, out for the season with a knee injury. His memories?
“Honestly, I remember them trying to run the score up,” he said. “Just disrespecting us, pretty much.”
After Deon Bush sacked Teddy Bridgewater for a safety on the opening drive, it was all Cardinals. They went up 22-2 at halftime and were still carving up UM’s defense in the final minutes.
“I feel like they were out there talking a lot of trash,” Elder said. “They have a lot of players from here. It was a confidence thing.”
Bridgewater, the former Miami Northwestern High star, threw for 447 yards and three touchdowns. He finished his day with a 1-yard touchdown run early in the fourth quarter. After scoring, he threw up the ‘U’ hand signal and brought his hands across his throat in a slicing motion.
Standing on the sidelines, then-freshman Walter Tucker said he felt “disrespected” when he saw that.
“I looked at it and kind of got mad. I couldn’t do anything because I was on special teams,” he said. “I was a young cat. I just got there. I understood I had to wait my turn.”
They won’t get a chance for revenge against Bridgewater, who now plays for the Minnesota Vikings. They also won’t see Louisville receiver DeVante Parker, who is out 6-8 weeks with a broken bone in his foot. Parker had 142 yards and a touchdown on nine catches in the bowl game.
Elder, who is fighting for a job as a starting cornerback, said his team will draw plenty of motivation from last Dec. 28.
“Oh yeah, of course,” Elder said. “First game, they’re new into the conference. We ended last year with a loss to them. Playing the team you lost to in your last game … that’s a good thing.”