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Post by oujour76 on May 5, 2017 11:26:41 GMT -5
And due to that superior Big 10 education, there are no capital letters or punctuation gumming up the works.
Sometimes, the words aren't all that matters... The Importance of “Correct Punctuation” Gloria sent John an Email. There was an electrical surge that removed all punctuation from the communications attempt. With no punctuation, this is what and how John read it: Dear John, I want a man who knows what love is all about. You are generous, kind, thoughtful. People who are not like you admit to being useless and inferior. You have ruined me for other men. I yearn for you. I have no feelings whatsoever when we’re apart. I can be forever happy-will you let me be yours? Gloria What, and how, she typed: Dear John: I want a man who knows what love is. All about you are generous, kind, thoughtful people who are not like you. Admit to being useless and inferior. You have ruined me. For other men I yearn. For you, I have no feelings whatsoever. When we’re apart, I can be forever happy. Will you let me be? Yours, Gloria [/quote] Nice. Makes sense.
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Post by oujour76 on May 5, 2017 11:50:36 GMT -5
[/b])[/font] [/quote] And due to that superior Big 10 education, there are no capital letters or punctuation gumming up the works.
[/quote] i just thought et's research lacked some context, and included way too many caps and commas. ha [/quote] Okay by me, but lack of capitalization can cause big misunderstandings.
You can help your Uncle Jack off a horse, or you can help your uncle jack off a horse.
If it's all the same to you...I'm going with Door #1.
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Post by oujour76 on May 5, 2017 11:56:58 GMT -5
Don't care for it either, but money talks. And you know as well as I do our sacred institutions of higher learning are rapt listeners on that subject.
the alma mater certainly exhibited that trait in moving the tcu game to arlington in '18. My alma mater would never do such a thing...as long as we keep that neutral site game in Dallas every year.
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Post by mscott59 on May 5, 2017 12:38:34 GMT -5
[/b])[/font] [/quote] And due to that superior Big 10 education, there are no capital letters or punctuation gumming up the works.
[/quote] i just thought et's research lacked some context, and included way too many caps and commas. ha [/quote] Okay by me, but lack of capitalization can cause big misunderstandings.
You can help your Uncle Jack off a horse, or you can help your uncle jack off a horse.
If it's all the same to you...I'm going with Door #1.
[/quote] lol. if lack of caps ever cause that kind of definition change for me, i deserve the ridicule that it generates.
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mark scott tosu 81
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Post by Deleted on May 5, 2017 13:59:02 GMT -5
Mark, "the gators have managed to be consistently pretty good in the last quarter century." Read more: aolcfboutcasts.proboards.com/thread/29089/why-ohio-dosnt-schedule-games?page=8#ixzz4gEQ1gxf6I'm not going to debate this, but you need to update your talking points about UF like I advised you to do yesterday with FSU and Miami. FSU should be 40 years and Miami should be 37 years, not 30. UF has been good, prominent, since 1980, the year after Charley Pell was hired by Florida. The 80s finished good even with the hammer of NCAA probation from 1986-1989. UF managed to stay above .500 during the probation affected years, not an easy accomplishment. Since 1980, UF is 7th both in wins and winning percentage. UF, like Miami, should be 37 years, not 25. What is missed is UF had some really good teams in the 60s under Ray Graves and in the 20s too. Both decades were good. To sum UF up, most everything from 1906 except the 20s, 60s, and 1980-2016 pretty much sucked in quality of play getting the program started or in game results. The 50s and 70s were decent, but leaned towards decades that sucked.
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Post by mscott59 on May 5, 2017 14:41:08 GMT -5
Mark, "the gators have managed to be consistently pretty good in the last quarter century." Read more: aolcfboutcasts.proboards.com/thread/29089/why-ohio-dosnt-schedule-games?page=8#ixzz4gEQ1gxf6I'm not going to debate this, but you need to update your talking points about UF like I advised you to do yesterday with FSU and Miami. FSU should be 40 years and Miami should be 37 years, not 30. UF has been good, prominent, since 1980, the year after Charley Pell was hired by Florida. The 80s finished good even with the hammer of NCAA probation from 1986-1989. UF managed to stay above .500 during the probation affected years, not an easy accomplishment. Since 1980, UF is 7th both in wins and winning percentage. UF, like Miami, should be 37 years, not 25. What is missed is UF had some really good teams in the 60s under Ray Graves and in the 20s too. Both decades were good. To sum UF up, most everything from 1906 except the 20s, 60s, and 1980-2016 pretty much sucked in quality of play getting the program started or in game results. The 50s and 70s were decent, but leaned towards decades that sucked. lmao. you just can't help yourself, can you? in the 60s uf had 3 very good years, but lost 4+ games in 4 out of the other 6 seasons. that's not prominent. same things for the 80s-3 really good years '83--'85, going 27-4-3, but the other 7 seasons saw the gators lose 4 or more games every year, going 49-34. that doesn't equal consistent cfb prominence. that changed w/spurrier's arrival in '90. 9+ wins all 12 years, only 2 seasons where he lost more than 3 games. consistent high level success. that's about a quarter century.
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mark scott tosu 81
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Post by Deleted on May 5, 2017 21:49:54 GMT -5
Mark, "the gators have managed to be consistently pretty good in the last quarter century." Read more: aolcfboutcasts.proboards.com/thread/29089/why-ohio-dosnt-schedule-games?page=8#ixzz4gEQ1gxf6I'm not going to debate this, but you need to update your talking points about UF like I advised you to do yesterday with FSU and Miami. FSU should be 40 years and Miami should be 37 years, not 30. UF has been good, prominent, since 1980, the year after Charley Pell was hired by Florida. The 80s finished good even with the hammer of NCAA probation from 1986-1989. UF managed to stay above .500 during the probation affected years, not an easy accomplishment. Since 1980, UF is 7th both in wins and winning percentage. UF, like Miami, should be 37 years, not 25. What is missed is UF had some really good teams in the 60s under Ray Graves and in the 20s too. Both decades were good. To sum UF up, most everything from 1906 except the 20s, 60s, and 1980-2016 pretty much sucked in quality of play getting the program started or in game results. The 50s and 70s were decent, but leaned towards decades that sucked. lmao. you just can't help yourself, can you? in the 60s uf had 3 very good years, but lost 4+ games in 4 out of the other 6 seasons. that's not prominent. same things for the 80s-3 really good years '83--'85, going 27-4-3, but the other 7 seasons saw the gators lose 4 or more games every year, going 49-34. that doesn't equal consistent cfb prominence. that changed w/spurrier's arrival in '90. 9+ wins all 12 years, only 2 seasons where he lost more than 3 games. consistent high level success. that's about a quarter century. Like I said, UF and Miami = 37 and FSU =40. I intend to call your inaccuracy out every time you put these outdated condescending comments in your posts. You really can't help your we're better than you bucknut attitude can you? I said 1980 for UF and the 60s were good. No, I won't yield on 1980. I count 2 SECs, read my sig, and some sites gave UF a national championship UF doesn't claim like other schools do. In the 60s, UF was 70-31-4 for .68571 under Ray Graves. It's ridiculous for you to pretend that wasn't good. It's really crappy the way you change the narrative to be argumentative and condescending of other programs. Just so you know, there wasn't much difference between UF and tOSU in the 80s. I'd say your sub .500 season along with a couple of more less steller seasons brings the whole we're prominent and you're not question into dispute. UF was piled on with NCAA probation and didn't have a sub .500 season. What was tOSU's excuse? cfbtrivia.com/cfbt_records.php?fry=1980&thy=1989&oppview=1&jrc=on&cres=1&scrview=1&teamname=Ohio%20St.&teamname=FloridaAttachment Deleted The same can be said about the 60s. tOSU had those 2 undefeated teams which is the difference for the decade. The tOSU decade was more hot and cold than consistent. UF had more wins. tOSU had a better winning percentage. cfbtrivia.com/cfbt_records.php?fry=1960&thy=1969&oppview=1&jrc=on&cres=1&scrview=1&teamname=Ohio%20St.&teamname=FloridaAttachment Deleted I was wondering why you didn't say UF wasn't good in the 1920s too: It wasn't hard to find out why. tOSU had a sucky decade by the bucknut standards that came later: cfbtrivia.com/cfbt_records.php?fry=1920&thy=1929&oppview=1&jrc=on&cres=1&scrview=1&teamname=Ohio%20St.&teamname=FloridaAttachment Deleted Finally, using the standards you've thrown at UF, tOSU wasn't good/prominent/elite for the first 50 years of its existence: www.cfbtrivia.com/cfbt_records.php?steam=Ohio%20St.&fry=1890&thy=1940&teamname=Ohio%20St.&oppview=1&jrc=on&cres=1&scrview=1&jpl=on&spl=on&sortby=Year
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Post by lz2112 on May 6, 2017 5:18:41 GMT -5
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Gator Bait!
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Post by cbisbig on May 6, 2017 13:40:04 GMT -5
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ROLL TIDE!
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Post by Buckeye Dale on May 6, 2017 14:45:45 GMT -5
Haven't heard that one in a while...
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Post by cbisbig on May 6, 2017 16:24:07 GMT -5
Haven't heard that one in a while... Tebows' a great guy, he's on the Charleston miner league baseball team down the road from here. Seems to be doing pretty well. He did pretty well vs BAMA....except for his last game Attachment Deleted
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Post by Buckeye Dale on May 6, 2017 16:34:57 GMT -5
Haven't heard that one in a while... Tebows' a great guy, he's on the Charleston miner league baseball team down the road from here. Seems to be doing pretty well. He did pretty well vs BAMA....except for his last game If anyone ever had doubts if he was genuine, those doubts should have been shattered when his Miss Universe girlfriend left him because he wouldn't have sex with her...talk about will power.
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Post by oujour76 on May 6, 2017 18:03:35 GMT -5
Haven't heard that one in a while... Tebows' a great guy, he's on the Charleston miner league baseball team down the road from here. Seems to be doing pretty well. He did pretty well vs BAMA....except for his last game View Attachment Glad he's having fun and I'm sure his team likes the bump in attendance.
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Post by cbisbig on May 7, 2017 6:34:55 GMT -5
Tebows' a great guy, he's on the Charleston miner league baseball team down the road from here. Seems to be doing pretty well. He did pretty well vs BAMA....except for his last game If anyone ever had doubts if he was genuine, those doubts should have been shattered when his Miss Universe girlfriend left him because he wouldn't have sex with her...talk about will power. Wow! Never heard that, surely he's no virgin anymore
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Post by Deleted on May 7, 2017 10:57:58 GMT -5
Tim Tebow in Class A ball - he's improving so will eventually likely move up the ladder - might never make the majors, but is going to give his best shot:
COLUMBIA, S.C. (AP) — Tim Tebow is a big-league hit in the minor leagues. The Heisman Trophy winner and former NFL quarterback has minor league fans around the Single A South Atlantic League flocking to stadiums and jamming ticket lines to see the Columbia Fireflies outfielder and designated-hitter. The Hickory Crawdads sold out four games with the Fireflies, its total of 17,500 for the series surpassing the 15,900 they drew their first eight games. "We had 4,500 people in the stands," Crawdads season ticket holder Christopher Pack said, "and 4,300 were there to see Tim Tebow." People show up in Tebow's NFL jerseys, and Florida Gator outfits, lining up around the rails in this intimate ballparks trying to get autograph or a selfie with Tebow. It may be unclear if he will ever get to "The Show," but one is clear: Tebow is the biggest show currently playing Class A ball. That was apparent last Saturday in the eighth inning against Hickory when Tebow, on his off day with the New York Mets affiliate , heard the Crawdads crowd chant his name, hoping that Columbia manager Jose Leger would get him in the game. "It's not something you see all the time," Hickory general manager Mark Seaman said. The welcomed chaos has been evident during Tebow's three road trips in April. In Augusta, Georgia, the GreenJackets front-office staff had to scramble and find enough workers for concessions: 5,830 fans turned out, well above their season's average of 3,190. A few days later in Rome, Georgia, — smack in the heart of Southeastern Conference football territory where the former Florida Gator was a polarizing figure — Tebow and the Fireflies drew 5,105 fans. "That was two-and-half times what they might bring in for a game in mid-April," said Lakewood (New Jersey) BlueClaws communications director Greg Giombarrese said. "That's when I knew this was something different." The Fireflies will play at Lakewood in a four-game set starting May 13. They have sold out of their 6,588 reserve sets for two of the games with very limited seating available for the other two. Giombarrese said, after hearing about the other stops, the BlueClaws would have more than 200 employees at the park to handle the fans — about the amount necessary for its most anticipated games of the year like fireworks nights or other special promotions. Giomborrese anticipates a big weekend because Lakewood, located near the Jersey Shore, is about 90 minutes away from the Mets home, Citi Field. It will be an opportunity for curious New York fans to get a glimpse of the high-profile prospect. "There should be a lot of Mets caps in the stands," Giomborrese said. Teams on the small minor league circuit are looking to capitalize on Tebow's presence while it lasts. The Lexington Legends in Kentucky announced a "Ten Tebow" ticket package for the three series with the Fireflies, starting with a four-game set on Memorial Day weekend. The rival Greenville Drive in South Carolina made the Tebow the focus of a promotion where fans receive fast-food hamburgers should he strikeout three times. Tebow takes it all in stride. He'll typically sign autographs before games, smile and wave to cheering fans, blending his popularity with the work necessary to make the major leagues. "Any time you get support it feels good and people see you, watch you play or shake your hand," Tebow said. "You can't let it affect you, good or bad. You just have to stay locked in and stay focused on the task at hand." Tebow is steadily finding his swing . He homered twice in the season's first weekend, but has not had another since. His average is under .250, yet he's cut down on his strikeouts as he finds a comfortable zone at the plate. The South Atlantic League dates its roots back to Ty Cobb, who played in the league's inaugural game with Augusta in 1904. Stars like Cobb, Hank Aaron, Frank Robinson and Steve Carlton spent time in the "Sally" league on their way to the Baseball Hall of Fame. The league is one where teenagers with potential develop and advance, said South Atlantic League President Eric Krupa, with fans who can say "remember when" once the young stars reach the bigs. Tebow is a dynamic the league does not often get, an established personality with a national fan base. Columbia President John Katz was a budding baseball staffer with the then-Double A Carolina Mudcats when Michael Jordan came to his home state in 1994 with the Birmingham Barons. The frenzy seemed even bigger, Katz said, because Jordan was the NBA's best player still in his prime. "There are some similarities with how people turn out for Tim," Katz said. It's only fitting the Fireflies are benefiting the most from the latest Tebow mania. The Fireflies — the longtime Savannah Sand Gnats before moving to South Carolina in 2016 — lead the league in attendance, averaging 5,027 fans per game. People show up in Tebow's NFL jerseys, and Florida Gator outfits, lining up near the rail for an autograph or a selfie with Tebow. "It's been all positive," Katz said. Tebow, 29, signed with the Mets last summer. His baseball shelf life is shorter than his teammates, some more than a decade younger. Tebow and Katz both say there's no timetable for him to leave the Fireflies — and put an end to the boom South Atlantic League teams are enjoying when he shows up. "We don't know how long this is going to last," said Krupa, the league president. "But we're going to enjoy it while it does."
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