leroyjenkins
Choose positivity
Shot-Ginn;1138451; said:Curiously, why #4?
Because Small is in the doggy house, and (temporarily??) got his number taken away. I think he was sporting #82 today!
Upvote
0
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature currently requires accessing the site using the built-in Safari browser.
Shot-Ginn;1138451; said:Curiously, why #4?
I don't get why this matters. You think Terrelle is worried about getting his number closer to his high school number?SEREbuckeye;1138455; said:Remains just as speculation on how long, but Ray Small (former #4) has recently been switched to a number in the 80s. If it stays a permanent change, then the coaching staff would have No. 4 up for grabs on offense - would benefit on kickoffs to have both Coleman (Defense #4) and Small (#82) out there simultaneously.
Who knows though, it all remains speculation, and hear-say untill its confirmed. Not to mention, players switch numbers all the time, Troy Smith is a good example of that.
Bottom Line: We will have to wait till August to see whats permanent.
You used a double contraction. Google should help learn ya where America failed you.Best Buckeye;1138323; said:absolutely not, as denoted by the smiley.
Nor has anyone adressed if n04 is being reserved for Small to re earn.jwinslow;1138466; said:Small being demoted to #82 does not equate to Pryor wanting #4 though, unless you have some foundation for that comment. #1, 2 & 11 were the favorites before he signed.You used a double contraction. Google should help learn ya where America failed you.
BTW, the eye roll is generally a negative emoticon. :) :p are the opposite.
Thanks much for the smilie lesson toojwinslow;1138466; said:BTW, the eye roll is generally a negative emoticon. :) :p are the opposite.
Ohio State football: Ten thoughts on the jersey scrimmage
Posted by Doug Lesmerises April 12, 2008
DOUG LESMERISES
Plain Dealer Reporter
COLUMBUS - Thoughts and observations from Saturday's Ohio State jersey scrimmage, won by the offense 55-44 under a modified scoring system that dooms the defense if it doesn't force turnovers. And there wasn't a single turnover, just four touchdowns - two Todd Boeckman to Brian Hartline passes, a Brandon Saine run, and a crossing route caught by walk-on Ricky Crawford from Antonio Henton.
1. Todd Boeckman stands in the pocket and makes decisions like a quarterback who knows what he's doing. Backups Joe Bauserman and Antonio Henton were much quicker to leave the pocket, in part because the injuries that have decimated the offense line really showed up on the second and third teams. But if being a quarterback is about having control, Boeckman has that, especially compared to the other choices
"I was more poised and confident in my ability to get the ball to the receivers and put our offense in the right situations," said Boeckman, who finished, unofficially, 10 of 20 for 149 yards. "That year experience gives me so much confidence and it's such a lift to me to know I'm the guy out here to lead this team, maybe to great things."
Coach Jim Tressel said Boeckman played "pretty well" and "pretty fair" while he dubbed Henton and Bauserman "pretty average."
Lots of people have said good things about Bauserman, but the former minor league baseball pitcher does a little sidearm sling when he's pressured that looks like it belongs more on a mound.
looks a lot better than those red ones... tebow looked ridiculous with his orange helmet. Corso is still screaming hysterically about how close Tebow came to getting a boo boo on his hand.TheStoicPaisano;1138429; said:NCAA rules committee is looking into instituting it. Tress may have jumped the gun in the interest of safety.
I like him at bothI really liked Terry as a LB in 2006, he was a monster.
Moving him to FB would be... strange. But whatever works.
Where could one go to find info on Ray Small? Hmm....Shot-Ginn;1138492; said:i agree, and why is small in the "doghouse" anyway, specifically?
EJ Underwood's punishment for his nth infraction in 2004 was being shoved to 29 (from 2). Didn't work as he flunked out before the 2005 season...after biting on a Purdue pump-fake to seal our 4th L of the '04 campaign.Oh8ch;1138483; said:Is there precedent for punishment by changing a number? I have never heard of such a thing.
Buckskin86;1138488; said:
Todd Boeckman wore a no-contact black jersey while backups Joe Bauserman and Antonio Henton were fair game for the defenders. But starting safety Kurt Coleman wants a shot at the big guy, asking Tressel when Boeckman would be shedding that black jersey. "Kurt, he always wants to hit somebody," Tressel said. "I said, 'The first time you'll see Todd with a red jersey on is in the locker room on Aug. 30. If you want to hit him in the restroom, go ahead." Told of Coleman's desires, Boeckman wasn't scared. "I can take him one on one," Boeckman said with a smile. "Last year, in practice he got me and I had a black jersey on. So maybe we have a battle going on here."
TheStoicPaisano;1138499; said:EJ Underwood's punishment for his nth infraction in 2004 was being shoved to 29 (from 2). Didn't work as he flunked out before the 2005 season...after biting on a Purdue pump-fake to seal our 4th L of the '04 campaign.
shetuck;1138519; said:I still don't understand why changing (increasing?) a jersey number is any type of punishment. Is there some sort of honor/significance tied to lower jersey numbers?
shetuck;1138519; said:I still don't understand why changing (increasing?) a jersey number is any type of punishment. Is there some sort of honor/significance tied to lower jersey numbers?
A lot of times players have emotional attatchments to their numbers.. such as either wearing it for their entire lives or to honor a family member or friend.shetuck;1138519; said:I still don't understand why changing (increasing?) a jersey number is any type of punishment. Is there some sort of honor/significance tied to lower jersey numbers?