Shaw is a liar


And pointing it out doesn't make anybody a doog.
Sark should have won that game, and the fake injuries aren't the reason he lost.
But that doesn't change the fact that Stanford has done it before, and it is poor sportsmanship.
In this clip, Stanford is called out by the announcers on national TV for doing it.
Shaw is a liar.
Comments
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It deserved it's own thread.dhdawg said:already been posted
http://hardcorehusky.com/forums/#/discussion/3424/david-shaw-extremely/p2
With a headline pointing out that Shaw is a liar.
And that has nothing to do with Sark being a shitty coach. -
Score Board Baby! He out coached us. (Not that's hard to do.)
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Maybe Shaw's a liar ... So what? Sark is a whiny bitch who should know by now when to STFU but doesn't. Who would you rather have? I like Shaw in this one. Oh, fuck this thread.
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If they faked or not no one will be able to 100% tell...just the the "no" catch on fourth down.
The part the gets me is this:
" ...Skov and Gardner were evaluated on the field. You know -- when play was being held up. "
Get their butts off the field and evaluate them. Keep play moving. -
I agree Sark should have STFU, but Shaw's response is a blatant lie, and I think that is just as sad. This thread is about Shaw, not Sark.AlCzervik said:Maybe Shaw's a liar ... So what? Sark is a whiny bitch who should know by now when to STFU but doesn't. Who would you rather have? I like Shaw in this one. Oh, fuck this thread.
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Sark's is much worse. Shaw could give two shits what Sark thinks, which means he's moving on. Sark is going to be crying about this until gameday, which doesn't help when you have SECWestCoastLite part duex coming to your place.Your_Mom said:
I agree Sark should have STFU, but Shaw's response is a blatant lie, and I think that is just as sad. This thread is about Shaw, not Sark.AlCzervik said:Maybe Shaw's a liar ... So what? Sark is a whiny bitch who should know by now when to STFU but doesn't. Who would you rather have? I like Shaw in this one. Oh, fuck this thread.
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greenblood said:
Sark's is much worse. Shaw could give two shits what Sark thinks, which means he's moving on. Sark is going to be crying about this until gameday, which doesn't help when you have SECWestCoastLite part duex coming to your place.Your_Mom said:
I agree Sark should have STFU, but Shaw's response is a blatant lie, and I think that is just as sad. This thread is about Shaw, not Sark.AlCzervik said:Maybe Shaw's a liar ... So what? Sark is a whiny bitch who should know by now when to STFU but doesn't. Who would you rather have? I like Shaw in this one. Oh, fuck this thread.
Shaw's whiny little bitch press conference and chest thumping using Harbaugh's W record against UW, exaggerated grad rates, and Harbaugh's BCS bowl games says your wrong. Shaw was overly defensive and showed that the fat Tiger Woods actually gives more than two shits. -
Great Dooging as always.LawDawg1 said:greenblood said:
Sark's is much worse. Shaw could give two shits what Sark thinks, which means he's moving on. Sark is going to be crying about this until gameday, which doesn't help when you have SECWestCoastLite part duex coming to your place.Your_Mom said:
I agree Sark should have STFU, but Shaw's response is a blatant lie, and I think that is just as sad. This thread is about Shaw, not Sark.AlCzervik said:Maybe Shaw's a liar ... So what? Sark is a whiny bitch who should know by now when to STFU but doesn't. Who would you rather have? I like Shaw in this one. Oh, fuck this thread.
Shaw's whiny little bitch press conference and chest thumping using Harbaugh's W record against UW, exaggerated grad rates, and Harbaugh's BCS bowl games says your wrong. Shaw was overly defensive and showed that the fat Tiger Woods actually gives more than two shits. -
Shaw's BCS record doesn't change the facts that his presser was way over the top for a guy that "doesn't care what Sark thinks".
He obviously cares a lot. Nobody who didn't care would "press" as much as he did. -
I don't see how you excuse Shaw for doing the same thing Sark did. Shaw is a liar
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Stanford travels to Utah while UW has Oregon this week. That's how, and that's why it's worseRaceBannon said:I don't see how you excuse Shaw for doing the same thing Sark did. Shaw is a liar
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Shaw resorts to classic liar speak, going off about all kinds of unrelated stuff -- only the Furd equivalent of a Doog would believe him.
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Gameday sign: "David Shaw = Fat Tiger Woods"
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Or "Steve Sarkisian = Fat Cher"CokeGreaterThanPepsi said:Gameday sign: "David Shaw = Fat Tiger Woods"
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TierbsHsotBoobs said:
Or "Steve Sarkisian = Fat Cher"CokeGreaterThanPepsi said:Gameday sign: "David Shaw = Fat Tiger Woods"
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Seven looks like he layed off a couple extra doughnuts in the off season and got a little extra excercise as scout team QB.
CoogLJ's lack of comments on Sark's weight speaks volumes. -
His new visors are slimming. God our Coach is a faggot.CuntWaffle said:Seven looks like he layed off a couple extra doughnuts in the off season and got a little extra excercise as scout team QB.
CoogLJ's lack of comments on Sark's weight speaks volumes. -
Fake injuries are traditional in college football going way back in my knowledge to the late 1940's. Mostly in the past, such tactic was used to stop the clock when a team is trying to score late in a game or before halftime and is out of or low on timeouts. Rules have been passed to prevent this and we don't see it much any more. One thing that helped with clock management and helped the fake injuries on offense go away was stopping the clock to more the sticks on first downs.Your_Mom said:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-HeH-cNIcDs
And pointing it out doesn't make anybody a doog.
Sark should have won that game, and the fake injuries aren't the reason he lost.
But that doesn't change the fact that Stanford has done it before, and it is poor sportsmanship.
In this clip, Stanford is called out by the announcers on national TV for doing it.
Shaw is a liar.
The most infamous example of faking injuries was in 1948 or 1949(?) when Notre Dame used it to beat a great Army team on a last minute drive and touchdown to end the game. The Irish were coached by the legendary Frank Leahy I believe. We didn't have TV in Boise yet, but ND games were broadcast nationally every Saturday and I as an 8 or 9 year old at the time always listened to the play-by-play. I was 8 or 9 years old and as I recall, an Irish player probably a lineman would fake injury on just about every down and stay down until carried off the field while the ND offense huddled and got ready in position on the line to snap the ball when the clock started. The injured Irish players would each stay on the sideline for one or two plays before coming back in to be injured and carried off again. The tactic worked for a score and a major ND win over Army and I haven't had an ounce of respect for Irish football since. I still remember the disgust I had listening to that game even though I was very young and just getting interested in football.
What Stanford is doing is obviously different and done for a different reason than in the past and I suspect other teams will do the same or are doing it now. Rules will have to be changed to either slow the hurry-up offenses down or prevent the fake injuries by not allowing the injured players to return to the field until say...... after the ball changes possession. It's unfortunate, but football coaches will do just about anything to win if they are allowed to and if you don't believe that, just think about the much bigger problem football at all levels is now having with spearing and the resulting injuries. A lot of that dirty play doesn't happen unless it's coached or allowed by coaches at all levels, even in pee-wee ball.
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Shaw finally ends this debate about whether or not Skov had injury:
http://www.seattlepi.com/sports/article/Stanford-coach-clarifies-Shayne-Skov-s-knee-injury-4882418.php
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agreed tailgater.Tailgater said:
Fake injuries are traditional in college football going way back in my knowledge to the late 1940's. Mostly in the past, such tactic was used to stop the clock when a team is trying to score late in a game or before halftime and is out of or low on timeouts. Rules have been passed to prevent this and we don't see it much any more. One thing that helped with clock management and helped the fake injuries on offense go away was stopping the clock to more the sticks on first downs.Your_Mom said:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-HeH-cNIcDs
And pointing it out doesn't make anybody a doog.
Sark should have won that game, and the fake injuries aren't the reason he lost.
But that doesn't change the fact that Stanford has done it before, and it is poor sportsmanship.
In this clip, Stanford is called out by the announcers on national TV for doing it.
Shaw is a liar.
The most infamous example of faking injuries was in 1948 or 1949(?) when Notre Dame used it to beat a great Army team on a last minute drive and touchdown to end the game. The Irish were coached by the legendary Frank Leahy I believe. We didn't have TV in Boise yet, but ND games were broadcast nationally every Saturday and I as an 8 or 9 year old at the time always listened to the play-by-play. I was 8 or 9 years old and as I recall, an Irish player probably a lineman would fake injury on just about every down and stay down until carried off the field while the ND offense huddled and got ready in position on the line to snap the ball when the clock started. The injured Irish players would each stay on the sideline for one or two plays before coming back in to be injured and carried off again. The tactic worked for a score and a major ND win over Army and I haven't had an ounce of respect for Irish football since. I still remember the disgust I had listening to that game even though I was very young and just getting interested in football.
What Stanford is doing is obviously different and done for a different reason than in the past and I suspect other teams will do the same or are doing it now. Rules will have to be changed to either slow the hurry-up offenses down or prevent the fake injuries by not allowing the injured players to return to the field until say...... after the ball changes possession. It's unfortunate, but football coaches will do just about anything to win if they are allowed to and if you don't believe that, just think about the much bigger problem football at all levels is now having with spearing and the resulting injuries. A lot of that dirty play doesn't happen unless it's coached or allowed by coaches at all levels, even in pee-wee ball.
Recent examples include Belich(c)k/the Patriots, the Jets, and the head hunting Saints ( they weren't trying to get a direct competitive advantage but we're trying to knock people out of the game).
Then you have the SI Okie State article that everyone seems to be ignoring ( more of an off the field competitive advantage).
Add to that most of the rest of college football...
Most of these coaches will try to get away with whatever they can... I don't know if Shaw & Hart told them to do it, but they definitely turned the other way. -
One would think that a player and coach from a team of Stanford's calibre wouldn't forget which knee his fake injury was on.priapism said:Shaw finally ends this debate about whether or not Skov had injury:
http://www.seattlepi.com/sports/article/Stanford-coach-clarifies-Shayne-Skov-s-knee-injury-4882418.php -
Is this worse than having a fake girlfriend die?Your_Mom said:
One would think that a player and coach from a team of Stanford's calibre wouldn't forget which knee his fake injury was on.priapism said:Shaw finally ends this debate about whether or not Skov had injury:
L
http://www.seattlepi.com/sports/article/Stanford-coach-clarifies-Shayne-Skov-s-knee-injury-4882418.php -
Shaw is a fine, upstanding, completely honest citizen whose words you should implicitly trust.