Fremont Buckeye;2290335; said:I see a verb conflict here from the grammer police.
Grammar. But I'm sure you knew that, being the "police" and all. :tongue2:
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Fremont Buckeye;2290335; said:I see a verb conflict here from the grammer police.
stowfan;2290744; said:Fast forward to the 2:39 mark of this video and tell me the guitar look like Saban absent a hair cut:)
'ORIGINAL' NBA on NBC Theme - Roundball Rock - John Tesh - facebook.com/JohnTesh - YouTube
stowfan;2290744; said:Fast forward to the 2:39 mark of this video and tell me the guitarist looks like Saban absent a hair cut:)
stowfan;2290744; said:Fast forward to the 2:39 mark of this video and tell me the guitarist looks like Saban absent a hair cut:)
'ORIGINAL' NBA on NBC Theme - Roundball Rock - John Tesh - facebook.com/JohnTesh - YouTube
:pirate1:The company which says it provided deer-antler spray, a product which contains a banned substance, to Baltimore Ravens linebacker Ray Lewis also sold its goods to members of the 2012 national championship Alabama football team, according to a co-owner of the company.
And Christopher Key, the SWATS co-owner, told ESPN's Joe Schad on Wednesday he personally witnessed about five Alabama players spray what he sold them into their mouths.
"I showed them how to use it," Key said.
Key said about 20 players purchased the spray at a hotel room in New Orleans leading into the BCS National Championship game against LSU. And he said he sold about 20 more bottles to players at the apartment of an Alabama player 10 days before the game.
Sports Illustrated first reported about the connection between SWATS., an Alabama-based company, and several SEC programs.
The Sports Illustrated story reported that Key filmed a sales pitch to a number of Alabama players two days before the 2012 title game in New Orleans. The article mentioned former Crimson Tide defensive lineman Quinton Dial and current players Adrian Hubbard and Alex Watkins as being part of the sales pitch.
Watkins made a YouTube testimonial for SWATS and Hubbard was filmed in the hotel room saying he had the deer-antler spray, SI reported. Deer-antler spray contains a substance, IGF-1, which is on the NFL's banned list.
JBaney45;2298294; said:http://www.cbssports.com/collegefoo...a-issues-statement-on-deerantler-spray-report
Auburn and LSU also implicated.
Since they sent the letters I assume the substance is also banned by the NCAA..so the question is what did these schools do in terms of reporting it?