Yeah. You got to love what you do. I was told to Google my name at an industry conference to see what my internet footprint was and I saw this and was surprised anyone even remembered I played at Washington.
Glad to see your UW econ degree work out for you.
Haha not just anyone can get in the business school;)
I'm not hatin', I have the same degree. Dash was in a bunch of my classes.
Ben Bandel is doing well. He lives in Seattle still and married a fellow Husky. He followed into his dad footsteps into the construction industry and is currently working his own plumbing business.
I wanted to do business but just could make it through managerial accounting after mat drills at 8am in the morning. Economic was a great back up.
Bob Simmons was one of the coaches I was referring to, but he was put of his element. He couldn't learn our Playbook and when he tried to coach the TEs it was all relating back to when he coached linebacker's at Notre Dame and was the head coach at OK state. It just wasn't relevant. It was Tyrone Willingham helping out the man who helped him into coaching. To go from Gilby to coach Simmons was a huge fall off. I'm glad ASJ was able to restore the proud history of UW tight ends.
One thing I have come to terms with was how Willingham said our teams had lots of potential that we weren't realizing. .. it was 100% true. I myself was placed out of my element from the get go was derailed from my path right away. I was recruited as an athlete, but basically I was the guy on the NCAA video game that is the athlete with speed you put at DE and all of the sudden he is a low to mid 80s player rating. It just wasn't who I was as a football player then.
I love the program and certainly love the success and direction it has gone since Sark took over and now Peterson. Bow down.
Dash! Good to see you here. Hope you can keep posting from time to time. The only credit I'll give Sark is that he wasn't Tyrone Willingham and proved that you could still recruit elite skill players to Washington. Of course, we all know this was true but Willingham told ND/UW fans that times had changed and that elite athletes didn't want to play at those schools anymore. All gibberish of course, and Weis/Sark (two very similar coaches) proved the recruiting myth wrong. Too bad they couldn't coach worth a lick or recruit on the lines.
Ben Bandel is doing well. He lives in Seattle still and married a fellow Husky. He followed into his dad footsteps into the construction industry and is currently working his own plumbing business.
I wanted to do business but just could make it through managerial accounting after mat drills at 8am in the morning. Economic was a great back up.
Bob Simmons was one of the coaches I was referring to, but he was put of his element. He couldn't learn our Playbook and when he tried to coach the TEs it was all relating back to when he coached linebacker's at Notre Dame and was the head coach at OK state. It just wasn't relevant. It was Tyrone Willingham helping out the man who helped him into coaching. To go from Gilby to coach Simmons was a huge fall off. I'm glad ASJ was able to restore the proud history of UW tight ends.
One thing I have come to terms with was how Willingham said our teams had lots of potential that we weren't realizing. .. it was 100% true. I myself was placed out of my element from the get go was derailed from my path right away. I was recruited as an athlete, but basically I was the guy on the NCAA video game that is the athlete with speed you put at DE and all of the sudden he is a low to mid 80s player rating. It just wasn't who I was as a football player then.
I love the program and certainly love the success and direction it has gone since Sark took over and now Peterson. Bow down.
When did Ty say that? Was he saying it about the Rick teams or his teams?
It was a shame what happened to your class. That class was destined to be a monster class with all of it being redshirted. You guys had 3 different head coaches. I don't put any blame on the players.
Comments
I wanted to do business but just could make it through managerial accounting after mat drills at 8am in the morning. Economic was a great back up.
Bob Simmons was one of the coaches I was referring to, but he was put of his element. He couldn't learn our Playbook and when he tried to coach the TEs it was all relating back to when he coached linebacker's at Notre Dame and was the head coach at OK state. It just wasn't relevant. It was Tyrone Willingham helping out the man who helped him into coaching. To go from Gilby to coach Simmons was a huge fall off. I'm glad ASJ was able to restore the proud history of UW tight ends.
One thing I have come to terms with was how Willingham said our teams had lots of potential that we weren't realizing. .. it was 100% true. I myself was placed out of my element from the get go was derailed from my path right away. I was recruited as an athlete, but basically I was the guy on the NCAA video game that is the athlete with speed you put at DE and all of the sudden he is a low to mid 80s player rating. It just wasn't who I was as a football player then.
I love the program and certainly love the success and direction it has gone since Sark took over and now Peterson. Bow down.
Jules Dash > Dash Parr
http://julesdash.com/
Just because Jules Dash > Dash Parr per your hypothesis doesn't mean that Dash Parr /> Dash Crutchley; therefore you do not disagree.
Jules Dash > Dash Parr > Dash Crutchley would have been accepted.
However, we are looking for the first name of Dash, not a the last name of Dash.
So in the end, once again, you are wrong.
You should be used to it by now.
It was a shame what happened to your class. That class was destined to be a monster class with all of it being redshirted. You guys had 3 different head coaches. I don't put any blame on the players.
Indeed, economic was a great backup. Didn't have to jump through the b-school hoops and employers didn't know the difference