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.
Wingate1217;1658266; said:Now Scum fans are resorting to video games and the development of a player in said game to rationalize/defend their opinions that certain players will be better next year.......
To answer the question, HECK YES he will be better. Go ahead and laugh but I put forward as proof "Campus Legend Mode" of ESPN College Football (a game that could teach Les Miles a thing or two about clock management!). In year one you don't have the body, you get hurt more and you blow games as you learn your teams sets, your teammates skills and how much time you have (or don't have) to make a play.
Just like Tate's real life experiences in year one. Oh, and I won the Heisman in year two of the game. Not saying that Tate can match my feat. I *was* playing on year two of what would have been the last L. Carr team (I had to audible the heck out of that guy's moldy offensive play book!).
Yes. Until mid-October...then it's next year.buckeyemania11;1658279; said:is this the year that the BARWIS!!!!1!!1!!! effect finally kicks in?
Buck94;1658219; said:Things are getting interesting in weaselville with regards to the Dorsey/Freep saga....
From the Scout public football forum:
Scout.com: Dorsey and Family was LIED TO BY REPORTERS @.....
Here is a take from a player's parent (page 3), Craig Roh's father:
"As the parent of a UM football player, this makes me livid. It is unimaginable that a "home town" newspaper would take a shot at a recruit like the Free Press did. The last trumped up scandal with the excess practice time was bad enough. It's one thing to take shots at the coach, its another thing to take a shot at an 18 year old high school senior. This is borderline child abuse and clear-cut racism. Do you think they would have done the article on a white kid from Scottsdale, Az?
To give you all another perspective....Craig grew up in a predominately white, high socio economic high school. He's had plenty of opportunities to see the other side of life, in club basketball and other venues.We sent him to a public high school rather than private to give him more real life experience. He could have gone to Stanford or any of the Ivy League schools and been surrounded by smart, "predominately white" football players. That was not his goal or ours as his parents. It was/is our goal that Craig experience a variety of people, cultures, etc. and be able to reach out and help others not as fortunate as him. We believed UM could be the place where he could get great football and experience a wider variety of life.
Dorsey sounds like a kid who has made mistakes, but is ready to move on. I, for one, look forward to my son having the opportunity to be part of his future success in any way that he can help!"
Clearly, you're not "all in".Jaxbuck;1658455; said:How does one make the leap of logic from a kid admitting that he committed multiple robberies to writing about it being a case of child abuse/clear cut racism?
Did the victims of his crimes somehow suffer less because he was under 18 at the time? Did they feel better knowing he was black? If they would have shot him would they have gone to jail for child abuse or a hate crime?
I don't know about you but when I confront burglars in my home the first words out of my mouth usually aren't "Oh thank god its just a juvenile black kid making a poor decision! I thought I was in real fucking trouble there for a minute when I heard the sliding glass door break and walked in and found some strange guy standing in my living room. Hey you want some milk and cookies before you go?"
Jaxbuck;1658455; said:I don't know about you but when I confront burglars in my home the first words out of my mouth usually aren't "Oh thank god its just a juvenile black kid making a poor decision! I thought I was in real fucking trouble there for a minute when I heard the sliding glass door break and walked in and found some strange guy standing in my living room. Hey you want some milk and cookies before you go?"
Buck94;1658219; said:Things are getting interesting in weaselville with regards to the Dorsey/Freep saga....
From the Scout public football forum:
Scout.com: Dorsey and Family was LIED TO BY REPORTERS @.....
Here is a take from a player's parent (page 3), Craig Roh's father:
"As the parent of a UM football player, this makes me livid. It is unimaginable that a "home town" newspaper would take a shot at a recruit like the Free Press did. The last trumped up scandal with the excess practice time was bad enough. It's one thing to take shots at the coach, its another thing to take a shot at an 18 year old high school senior. This is borderline child abuse and clear-cut racism. Do you think they would have done the article on a white kid from Scottsdale, Az?
Buck94;1658219; said:Things are getting interesting in weaselville with regards to the Dorsey/Freep saga....
From the Scout public football forum:
Scout.com: Dorsey and Family was LIED TO BY REPORTERS @.....
Here is a take from a player's parent (page 3), Craig Roh's father:
"As the parent of a UM football player, this makes me livid. It is unimaginable that a "home town" newspaper would take a shot at a recruit like the Free Press did. The last trumped up scandal with the excess practice time was bad enough. It's one thing to take shots at the coach, its another thing to take a shot at an 18 year old high school senior. This is borderline child abuse and clear-cut racism. Do you think they would have done the article on a white kid from Scottsdale, Az?
To give you all another perspective....Craig grew up in a predominately white, high socio economic high school. He's had plenty of opportunities to see the other side of life, in club basketball and other venues.We sent him to a public high school rather than private to give him more real life experience. He could have gone to Stanford or any of the Ivy League schools and been surrounded by smart, "predominately white" football players. That was not his goal or ours as his parents. It was/is our goal that Craig experience a variety of people, cultures, etc. and be able to reach out and help others not as fortunate as him. We believed UM could be the place where he could get great football and experience a wider variety of life.
Dorsey sounds like a kid who has made mistakes, but is ready to move on. I, for one, look forward to my son having the opportunity to be part of his future success in any way that he can help!"
They're buying this hook, line and sinker over there. Many are dreaming of a Miller/DePriest package and Beaver is stoking the flames. Unbelievable.Jerry Seinfeld;1659021; said:A new recruiting year is upon us and hope springs eternal. It's no surprise to see outlandish recruiting class predictions like this one. They are a dime a dozen and surface on every team board out there. Who can blame them? Most recruitniks - including myself - can find themselves dreaming about a best case scenario class:
Scout.com: First Crack at 2011 Class
What makes this one remarkable is that it is more realistic than what the head honcho on that website is selling to his subscribers. Why? Unlike GBW's list, it doesn't include Braxton Miller & Ron Tanner
Besides that whole Ohio State hurdle for Braxton, there's the matter of how UM will look to Braxton:
1) Tate or Devin takes the QB position by storm, leading UM to a successful 8+ win season, guaranteeing a 2-3 year wait for a chance at starting.
2) Tate, Devin & Denard all struggle at the QB position badly enough to leave an opening for Braxton... and a new head coach (or rumblings that such will happen after 2011).
Yes, Braxton to UM makes a lot of sense