true freshman playing on the line = injury plagued career. Give them a year to develop as a redshirt first at least. There are exceptions but for the most part its the rule. Only exceptional freshman should see the field. We throw all way too many on the field too early and they are physically ruined before their careers should have began.
Thank you for crispening my point. Now for a bonus: what is the head coaching duty that if executed effectively, results in having exceptional freshman on your roster capabl of starting?
that's what he said on radio, Fetters then said Kohler, and Tanigawa were on their way to being all pac-12 players before their injuries. Jesus christ u can't make this stuff up
Define fine: The weather can be fine. Good sex is always fine. Expensive consumables are typically fine wine and the food that comes with it. At my age, nearly all women are fine. And sorry, I don't give a shit about fine cars or fine clothes anymore. Fly fishing in Montana or Wyoming will always be fine.
I cannot believe that anybody claiming to know or even sense the basics of football, unless they were a bit limp in the wrist, could describe or proclaim anything " fine.", unless he meant that O-line recruiting in Husky Football for the past five years has been a fine fuck-up.
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I cannot believe that anybody claiming to know or even sense the basics of football, unless they were a bit limp in the wrist, could describe or proclaim anything " fine.", unless he meant that O-line recruiting in Husky Football for the past five years has been a fine fuck-up.
How dare you bring critical thought!