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Wow, you're just too nice, I was kinda liking the idea of lv advertising Mike Hart's Heisman candidacySNIPER26;971042; said:If Michigan wins, I'll let you slide.
starBUCKS;971353; said:Can LV plead temporary insanity? No Buckeye in their sain mind would make that bet.
SNIPER26;971352; said:Maybe not completely slide, but something not too bad. I don't want to make any early conclusions, but I think Michigan's gonna roll Minny since Minny is awful, so it's kind of unfair. I know lv was running his mouth (if he proves right, good for him and I'll do it) but if Michigan wins, I have something
Make him pimp GWB instead.HailToMichigan;971347; said:Wow, you're just too nice, I was kinda liking the idea of lv advertising Mike Hart's Heisman candidacy
I think that would have been Mario's last strike..."Based on our review of the entire incident, although our office believes Mr. Manningham may have used poor judgment in not immediately obtaining a refill prescription from his physician, we do not believe this incident rises to the level of a criminal offense." - Monroe County Prosecutor William Nichols in declining to charge U-M football star Mario Manningham with illegal possession of painkillers. Authorities in Monroe County will not bring any criminal charges against University of Michigan star receiver Mario Manningham in connection with a traffic stop last April in which police say marijuana and presciption painkillers were found in a car.
But two other men in the car - former U-M defensive back Johnny Sears Jr., 20, and Deion White, 17, of Warren, Ohio, were charged this week with marijuana possession, a misdemeanor punishable by up to a year in jail and a $2,000 fine, said Monroe County Prosecutor William Nichols.
Both were detained for possessing less than a gram of marijuana after a vehicle that Sears was driving was stopped in Summerfield Township on April 25. Sears started Michigan's first game this season, but was off the team by mid-September without explanation from coach Lloyd Carr.
...Cont'd
It was a game that didn’t need to be played. I think the two schools should have been able to sit down in a room somewhere and agree to a score and outcome that would have been similar to what we saw on Saturday.
In fact, the meeting would have been as predictable as the game…
Martin: Okay…we’d like to have two 100-yard rushers.
Maturi: Of course. That’s a given. Would we also be able to have a 100-yard rusher?
Martin: Would you be running up the middle?
Maturi: Yes?
Martin: Then you’ve got your 100-yard rusher. How many Mallett fumbles do you want?
Maturi: How many ya got?
Martin: Oh no, I’m not falling for that one again. Let’s say two or three. Are you okay with that?
Maturi: That works. Do you mind if we return one for a touchdown?
Mallett, however, is still a quarterback with his foibles. Namely, his amazing inability to not fumble. Michigan has fumbled the ball 20 times this season and Mallett has nine of them. In a part-time role.
And Mallett doesn’t discriminate where or when he’ll fumble. It could be on the snap, it could be on the run, it could even be while standing still. He handles the ball like he thinks he’s an And-1 point guard. There’s probably enough film of him out there to make a sweet mix-tape. The only thing missing is a cool streetball nickname like “The Vanilla Hammer”.
When Mallett wasn’t fumbling, or getting passes batted down, or throwing majestic synthetic pigs through the air to Manningham, he was handing the ball off to running backs Carlos Brown and Brandon Minor.